7 VALVE-IN-HEAD NOW RECOGNIZED LEADED SEMAPHORE SAFETY SIGNAL THAT HELPS ELIMINATE ACCIDENTS. Latest Motor Development Declared Triumph. MANY ADVANTAGES NOTED Superiority Over Old Type Motors in - All Respects Declared Clearly Demonstrable. THE UNIVERSAL THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN. PORTLAND. DECEMBER 28. 1919. The story of the valve-in-head motor is brimful of interest to motor ists everywhere. Today in the world of gasoline motors the only motor that is on the increase is the valve-in-head. Only two prominent manufac turers in 1914 used the valve-in-head motor. One was the Buick Motor company, pioneer builders of valve-in-head motors. The majority of people, including thousands of auto mobile owners, are bewildered when the subject of internal combustion en gine comes up for discussion. For a comparison of valve-in-head motors with the "T" and "L" types, perhaps the simplest illustration is the hotel hallway. Take this hallway for example. All the doors leading to the various rooms are closed. At the end of the hall are two windows,. also closed. Open the door of the last room on the left. Two windows are on the far side of the room. Here we have a typical "L" head motor. The hallway itself Is the cylinder and the room on the left at the end of the hall is the valve chamber, or pocket, as it is called. The two windows on the far side of the room are the valves, one an inlet valve and the other an outlet valve. T-Head Motor Explained. Atr in order to reach the hall has to enter the window of the room, pass through the room out the door into the hall. In the L-head motor the gas enters the valve, passes through the valve chamber or pocket and "then into the cylinder proper. To get a concrete idea of a T-head motor all that is necessary Is to open the door on the opposite side of the hall. A T-head motor has two valve chambers or pockets, the intake valve being on one side of the cylinder and the outlet valve on the other side Just as in the hallway. Now close the doors on both the rooms, leaving no inlet or outlet to the hall way except the two windows at the head of the hall. Here we have the valve-in-head motor. These windows play the part of the valves. Tha'.'s what the term means the valves are in the head of the motor, Just as the two windows are at the head of the hall. It is easy to see how much easier it is to let the air in and out of that hall through these two windows than it would be through the windows at the far sides of the adjacent rooms. Now to apply these principles: Why does the valve-in-head motor give more power for the same amount of fuel? Step No. 1 in the production of power in an automobile engine is the introduction of vaporized gas into the upper end of the cylinder. This gas enters through the intake valve. Meanwhile the piston head returning under momentum from its previous downward stroke compresses this gas. At the highest point of compression the electric spark explodes. When the electric spark Jumps from one of the terminal wires in the spark plug to the other terminal an eighth of an inch away the compressed gas is set on fire and explodes. Explosion Drives Piston. This explosion equals violent ex pansion. The gas struggles in every direction to get out of the cylinder. From every point save one it is hurled back. The piston head is the one spot on tbe surface that yields under the strain. Unable to withstand the at tack it is forced downward. The drive shaft revolves, the rear axle turns, the wheels spin and the automobile is off. Getting the dead gas out of the cyl inder after the explosion is another important matter. After each explo sion in the cylinder there is a residue of dead gases. The inside of the cyl inder walls must be constantly lubri cated so that the piston will work up and down with the least possible fric tion. Some of the lubricating oil is burned with each explosion and this leaves a residue of carbon in the cyl inder. It is the duty of the piston head in the up and down stroke following the explosiono push all of those dead gases, including the carbon, out of the cylinder. If they are not pushed out they mix with the next charge of gasoline vapor and weaken it, dimin ishing the power of the next explo sion. ' In the L and T-head motor .these gases have to turn corners, as it were, in order to escape. First they must go to the valve chambers and thence to the outlet, the exhaust valve. In variably In these types of motors a portion of these gases fail to get out. The valve opens for only the smallest fraction of a second. You cannot be gin to see it with the naked eye. Only One Place to Go. Naturally some of the gas gets "left" some of the time. But In the valve-in-head motor the gases do not get left owing to the fact that the exhaust valve is directly in the top of the cylinder Just like the window at the head of the hallway. Consequently when the piston starts upward these gases take a straight shoot for the opening with no corners to turn and no projections to stop them or cran niea or pockets to retard their flight. This means that in the, vaive-in-head motor the cylinders are always clean. In the L and T types it is im possible to make the inside of the vaive chambers or pockets smooth There are little projections and ranch. nesses and these catch and hold the carbon deposits. These deposits be come- heated. When they are red hot they Ignite the incoming charges of gasoline vapor before the proper time The gas is exploded before it is com pressed, burned, but without any re sultant power. This Is pre-ignition All automobile men know Hat for best results it is necessary to have quick and complete explosion. To e-et this it is necessary to have the spark plug as near the gas as possible. In an L and T type of motor the flame has to travel a great deal farther than In the valve-in-head for the sim pie reason that the diameter of the combustion chamber Is greater. In the valve-in-head motor ihis diameter is simply the diameter of the cylinder itself, while in the other two types the flame has to travel to the far corners of the valve chambers or pockets. An automobile motor is a heat en gine. A theoretically perfect motor wouia oe one in which an extremelv high temperature could be maintained in the metal cylinders. It is not prac tical, however, to operate an automo bile motor with its cylinder surfaces overheated. Consequently a cooling device is provided. The cylinder walls are surrounded by a hollow jacket, which is kept full of water. In this cooling operation a number of heat units are necessarily wasted and destroyed. But the smaller the surface of the cylinder walls to The Ford Car Proves Its Power Under the most adverse conditions through the worst storms and snows- in thirty years the Ford Car has again proved its power and efficiency throughout the state of Oregon. THIS SIGNAL LETS MOTBIST BEHIND KNOW WHAT MAN AHEAD IS UOIKG TO DO. Dr. E. DeWitt Connell (left) and E. D. Birkholz (right), general agent in Oregon and southwestern Wash ington for the Kobzy semaphore signal, demonstrating one of the signals Mr. Birkholz has Just Installed on Dr. Con.nell's car. The semaphore with "stop" Is up in the picture. The signal also has semaphores for "right" and i "left," which are thrown into position by touching a lever on the steering wheel. Mayor Baker, Chief of Police Jenkins and Public Safety Commissioner Coffin are using these semaphores. be cooled the greater the efficiency of the motor. In the L and T types, with side pockets cast into the cylinders for the Insertion of the inlet and exhaust valves, the combustion chamber is en larged by the exact amount of extra surface in these pockets, and these pockets must be as perfectly water jacketed as the remainder of the cyl inder wall. The result Is a greater amount of cooling surfaceand the consequent greater loss of heat units. The valve-ln-head motor develops more power than the L and T types of the same size owing to the fact it has no valve chambers or pockets and presents less surface to the cool ing agent and therefore loses fewer heat units. DUAL VALVES WIN PRAISE LOXDOX TIMES SPEAKS HIGH LY OF FIERCE-ARROW. MANY TRUCKS OPERATING TOTAL FOR 24 STATES SHOWS TO BE 314,029. Writer in Famous English -Paper Declares Performance of Car Justifies Reputation. Honest approval of the famous dual valve six models produced by the Pierce-Arrow Motor Car company of Buffalo, N. Y., is given by a critic writing in the November 4 issue of the London Times under the heading of "New American Motor Cars." Be cause of the pride taken by the Brit ish in their own quality automobiles, the opinion is of unusual interest. The critic says: "The Pierce-Arrow is familiar by name to most people at home as one of America's best-known productions. It is essentially a car in which all consideraMons of price, within rea sonable limits, have been submerged in favor of luxury of appointments and perfection of running. "The six-cylinder engine has a dou ble valve system, two inlet and two exhaust valves being set on opposite sides. A conservative and unusual feature is the three-pair casting. Two separate systems of battery ignition are fitted, the magneto having been abandoned. The gearbox provides four forward speeds, instead of the usual three. "The car is exceptionally well sprung and well balanced. Several sharp corners were purposely taken at high speeds and at each the sta bility was very noticeable. Weight distribution has been carefully stud ied. Acceleration, high clfmbing and flexibility were alike excellent in the Pierce-Arrow. The Pierce-Arrow shows high quality in its class and its per formance Is commensurate." The performance of the dual-valved engine, with its increased power and flexibility, recently has neen refined by the introduction of a dual-ignition system. Another improvement is in the transmission, which permits of easier firear-shlfting. These Figures Are Only From States Requiring Seperate Reg istration of Trucks. There are 314.021 motor trucks In the 24 states which make a separate tabulation of commercial vehicles, according- to statistics gathered by the B. F. Goodrich Rubber company. The other states make no distinction between passenger cars and trucks in their registration records, making a national total impossible to compile. However, it is estimated that the pinnd total will reach more than 700.000. , This estimate Is based on average estimates for all states which keep no record of trucks. Among tbe states with heavy truck registry are: New York, Illinois, California, Iowa, Indiana, Minnesota and Missouri. The states which record trucks sep arately and their registration follow: Ohio S7.000 Massachusetts 88.150 Pennsylvania 3ft.tlf Michigan 30.!7!i New Jersey MM Connecticut 1B.340 Kaneaa lu.noo Tennessee 10.(KM Maryland 9.8KI Wisconsin 9.7011 Alabama 9.230 South Carolina : Kentucky 7,789 North Carolina 8.BOO Rhode Island 6.30O Florida 6.175 Georgia 6.00O Maine 5.219 Utah 4.478 West Virginia 4.670 New Hampshire 8,000 Vermont 2.115 Missouri .... 1.600 Total 814,029 Oregon, Incidentally, has 5158 trucks, besides 3604 Ford trucks. It is not in the foregoing list because truck registrations are not kept sep arate from those of passenger cars. TRUCKS FAST OUSTING HORSE Stables in New York City Reduced From 10,547 to 7030. Investigations carried out by the sanitary bureau of the New York de partment of health show that the motor truck is rapidly emptying the stables of the nation. These statis tics are part of a survey being made by the sales department of the Clydesdale Motor Truck company of Clyde. Ohio, preparatory to an inten sive sales campaign. In 1917 the bureau found that there were 10,547 stables In New York city. In 1919 these has been reduced to T9I0. In the same time the number of horses had been reducel from 108.036 to 75. 170. A decade ago the passenger car took one btg job from the horse, and now the truck is robbing him of his last opportunity for service. Upholstery Cleaner. There is no better agent for clean ing leather upholstery than the old fashioned formula: Raw linseed oil and turpentine mixed in proportions of two of the former to one of the latter. For cloth upholstery, which is so much used in closed car work, the best cleaning agent is plain cold water and a solution of three-quar ters of an ounce of common salt and two ounces of either grain or wood alcohol. The mixture Is rubbed on the cloth with a sponge and dampened in the solution. PAIGE KEPT ON RUNNING COAL- STRIKE DIDN'T STOP OUTPUT AT DETROIT. Battery of Automobile Motors Kept Machinery in Operation AH the Time. Operation of Its entire plant by means of passenger automobile mo tors was an emergency method adopt ed by the Paige-Detroit Motor Car company during the recent coal crisis which made it possible to obviate a complete shutdown. The Paige was the first of a com paratively few big Detroit plants that continued to turn out cars and keep a large force of men at work through out this period. When it became known that the Paige plant could operate only to the extent of two-fifths of its normal current consumption, plans were, hastily made to equip a number of "Six" motors and transmissions with the necessary attachments to connect with the various machinery units. Within 24 hours the battery of mo tors was fitted with pulleys, placed in position, belted to the overhead shaft, lng and ready to go. Qn the day that government restriction on soft coal went into effect, the emergency power plant was put into operation and for the entire period kept the Patge fac tory in operation. In spite of pulling a capacity load at a speed of 800 revolutions, day after day, the "-65" motors performed 100 per cent efficiently, making II possible for the company to keep at work. Speckled Varnish. The varnish of a new car Is likely to become speckled after Its first ex perlence with rain. These tiny spots are not easy to get off, but It is al ways possible, to render them less noticeable by applying a mixture of raw Unseed oil and malt vinegar, sup plemented by a considerable appltca tion. of "eltjow grease." MORE EVIDENCE BRUTE STRENGTH That prime necessity in a motor truck is built right into the rt, Tmc Heppner, Or. f "Also Buy a Master" TRUCK 112, 2, 3y2 and 5 Tons INTERNAL GEAR TEMKEN WORM t Two Drives Oregon Motor Car Co. Distributors BROADWAY AT BURNSIDE -j MORE EVIDENCE You watched them every day doing their utmost at a time when E ractically all other means of transportation were tied up or crippled y the storms. You saw Ford Cars everywhere, always doing, always helping. They compelled your admiration of their power, their sturdy strength and their indomitable energy. You realized, as never before, that the Ford Car more than earns its way wherever it goes. The Ford Car is the most efficient and economical transportation the world has ever known. That is why there are over three and one-half million Ford Cars now in use. That is why more than a million more will be bought this year. The demand is greater than ever, because of what it has done and is doing in the world's great work. Get this wonderful Car working for you. It will increase your earning power, double your time, add to your efficiency and improve your health. It is not an expense or a luxury even to the wage earner. It is a personal and business asset to every owner. Don't be without it any longer. Place your order now and make sure of delivery before the overwhelming Spring demand begins. Runabout $500 Touring Car $525 Self-Starter $75 Extra Trucft Chassis $600 These prices f. o. b. Detroit Coupelet $750 Sedan $875 For Sale by the Following Authorized City Dealers: Francis Motor Car Co. East 13th and Hawthorne Talbot & Casey East Ankeny and Grand Rushlight & Penney East Third and Broadway Wm. L. Hughson Co. Broadway and Davis Robinson-Smith Co. Sixth and Madison Palace Gaiage Co. Twelfth and Stark A $25.00 Deposit Places Your Order on File Dashboard Clock Reflects Car Owner's Character.' If It Is Hot Kept Wound, Look Out for PorcelfnlarH In Other Thing-. THE cluck which adorns the dash board of the modern motor car seems, at times, to be on the point of Joining the Dodo and the nickel In oblivion. Why? It's usually like a homely girl at a dance It doesn't get any attention. No one seems to remem ber to wind it. Of course a number of automobiles do not come equipped with clocks. and then others seem to be consid ered incomplete without one. As a means of ascertaining the time they are about as useful as a weath- ervane atop a lightning rod on a calm day. The reason is obvious too many people are in the habit of pulling the old timepiece out of their pockets, or looking for the hour with a grace ful, flip ot tbe wrist and they don't tune up the stock clock. Then why worry? Because it's an Indication. Or what? It shows about how much attention an owner pays to his car. Of course, one can't take a fleeting glance at all the clocks in the auto mobiles of the world and class all owners as careless because their clocks happen to be stopped. But generally the man who forgets to wind his clock forgets to take a look at some of the more vital things. He may start out on a trip 'With out water in his radiator. And then again he may lose a license tag and not know it. Or he may have a weak tire: or a leaky radiator; or something else. Doesn't it figure out? Doesn't it come out the same way In the way of motor cars as In other things? And It is one way of finding out whether there is carbon in the cylinders of the man's car, for The chap who forgets little things. as a rule overlooks more important things, too. GOOD-YEAR WORKERS LUCKY They Get Luncheons in Company Restaurants at Low Prices. Industrial concerns are making greater etrides toward providing em ployes with plain, wholesome food at prices close to cost. Some compa nies serve lunch only while others provide three meals where the fac tory is operated In three shifts. More than 8000 employes are fed each day at the restaurants of the Goodyear Tire & Rubber company. Even at low prices the October revenue -was $61. 000. The last fire months saw an In crease of 50 per cent In business. Ulllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll: ! Time Flies There's a true old saying, "Time waits for no man." If you want to keep pace with progress during 1920, drive a BMXOl This sturdy, speedy car "has everything" comfort, power, beauty, ECONOMY. Just let us show you with a trial spin. Use the . phone NOW for an appointment. I W. H. WaDingford Co. Oregon and Southern Washington Distributors for the "Briscoe- and "Liberty Six" Sixteenth and Alder Phone: Bdwy. 2492 E i?IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIillllllllllllllllllllllllilliilllllllllllllllillilllllllirf; Are You Open to Conviction? WATCHING the lid on the teakettle bob up and down resulted event ually in the application of steam for power purposes. Watching: the operation of the Mack truck chassis in our salesroom will re sult in your learning why we can truthfully say the Mack is the most thoroughly engineered truck. The possibility of deriving power from steam was scoffed at. Harnessing Niagara to generate electric energy was ridiculed. There may be some who say we can not prove the merits of Mack trucks are all we claim for them. These are the ones we are looking for. The more "expert" they may be the more welcome will be their reception. We can show you so many reasons why Mack trucks are the best trucks that you will acknowledge it. AH we ask is a chance, so come in and see the Mack truck chassis on its side, electrically operated and all working parts exposed. INTERNATIONAL HACK CORP. Tenth and Davis Streets. Broadway 691.