
Share of the Ben-Hur Motor Company, issued 26. October 1916
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The Ben Hur Touring Car from McClure's Automobile Yearbook 1917–18.
The Ben-Hur Motor Company was incorporated in 1916 in the state of Delaware, with the cars being built by L. L. Allyn in Willoughby, Ohio.
Features
- Chassis with a wheelbase of 126 inches
 - Buda six cylinder engine with splash and forced feed oiling system
 - Bosch high-tension ignition magneto
 - Westinghouse separate motor for starting
 - Disc clutch and selective sliding gear set with three speeds forward and reverse
 - 19 gallon gasoline tank is mounted on rear with a two-gallon reserve tank
 - Timken axles are used in front and rear with wire wheels on which 35x4 tires are mounted.[1]
 
Prices
- Five and seven-passenger touring - $1875 (equivalent to $42,828 in 2022)
 - Seven-passenger Sedan - $2750 (equivalent to $62,814 in 2022)
 - Four-passenger Roadster - $1875[2]
 
Ben-Hur exhibited a cloverleaf roadster at the 1917 New York Auto Show.[3] In February 1918 Allyn announced that between 30 and 40 cars had been shipped to dealers, and that plans called for five to ten cars a week for the time being, owing to the difficulty in securing bodies. The company had a factory with a capacity of building 20 cars per day. A meeting was scheduled in March to increase capitalisation, but by May 1918 the company was in receivership.[4]
Notes
- ↑ Automobile Journal, Volume 42. 1916.
 - ↑ Automobile year book. McClure's Magazine, Automobile Dept. 1917.
 - ↑ "Auto Show Breaks Records For Sales" (PDF). The New York Times. January 13, 1917. Retrieved 4 December 2012.
 - ↑ Kimes, Beverly Rae (1996). Standard Catalog of American Cars: 1805-1942. Iola, Wisconsin: Krause Publications. p. 1612. ISBN 0-87341-428-4.
 
External links
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