Buda Engine Co.
Buda Engine was founded in 1881 by George Chalender in Buda, Illinois to make equipment for railways. Later based in Harvey, Illinois, Buda from 1910 manufactured engines for industrial, truck, and marine applications. Early Buda engines were gasoline fueled. Later, diesel engines were introduced, utilizing proprietary Lanova cylinder head designs, injection pumps and nozzles. These were known as Buda-Lanova diesel engines. Buda Engine Company was acquired by Allis-Chalmers in 1953. The Buda-Lanova models were re-christened "Allis-Chalmers diesel".
Buda began by manufacturing railroad maintenance of way tools and equipment, switches, switch stands and signal devices. By the end of the century, Buda was producing a line of hand cars and velocipedes, and eventually moved into the motorcar business also. Velocipedes were equipped with single-cylinder, air-cooled engines and motorcars were equipped with 2-cylinder opposed "pancake" air-cooled engines. The motorcar production was later either sold or licensed to Fairbanks-Morse, which continued production. Truck, tractor, bus, and marine engines continued in production by Buda who eventually was taken over by Allis-Chalmers.
Buda's engines were water-cooled, in-line four, six, or eight-cylinder models. Buda advertisements in the early 1900s proclaimed Buda as "Pioneer of the cast-in-block" method. Their engines featured long stroke, enclosed valves, noiseless timing gears, and self-contained oiling system. Early four-cylinder gasoline-fueled models produced 30 to 60 bhp. Later six-cylinder diesel Buda-Lanova engines exceeded 200 bhp.
Their principal competitors were Hercules, Waukesha, Continental Motors, Wisconsin, Lycoming, Rutenber, Hall-Scott, LeRoi, Weidely, and Herschell-Spillman.
The four-cylinder Buda gasoline engine was favored by many early truck manufacturers, who were converting horse-drawn vehicles to self-propelled models. In 1918 a 42-hp version was fitted to the American-built M1917 light tank, a licensed copy of the Renault FT. By the late '20's, trucks were getting larger and required larger engines, such as Buda's six-cylinder models. As diesel engines grew in popularity in the 1930s, Buda responded with four and six-cylinder diesel engines.
Users
Kenworth's early models (1922-1925) featured Buda four-cylinder gasoline engines as standard equipment. Buda six-cylinder gasoline engines were offered by Kenworth until the late 1930s. Other truck manufacturers that used Buda engines included Acorn (made in Chicago 1923-1930), Air-O-Flex (Detroit 1919-1920), Armleder (Cincinnati 1909-1936), Atco (Kankakee IL 1920-1923), Barber (New York City 1917-1918), Bell (Ottumwa IA 1919-1923), Betz (Hammond IN 1919-1929), Brown (St Cloud & Duluth MN 1922-1924), Clydesdale (Clyde OH 1917-1938), Coleman (Littleton CO 1925-1943), Columbia (Pontiac MI 1916-1925), Commerce (Detroit 1917-1932), Concord (Concord NH 1917-1933), Day-Elder (Irvington NJ 1919-1937), Dearborn (Chicago 1919-1924), Dependable (East St Louis IL 1918-1923), Double Drive (Benton Harbor MI 1922-1930), Douglas (Omaha 1917-1931), Eagle (St Louis 1920-1928), Fremont-Mais (Fremont OH 1914-1915), Fulton (Farmingdale NY 1916-1925), Gary Motor Truck (Gary IN 1916-1927), Gotfredson (Detroit Michigan & Walkerville Ontario 1923-1948), Hawkeye Truck (Sioux City IA 1915-1933), Hug (Highland IL 1921-1942), Hurlburt (New York City 1912-1927), International Harvester (1925-195?),[1] Jumbo (Saginaw MI 1918-1924), Kalamazoo (Kalamazoo MI 1913-1924), Kleiber (San Francisco 1914-1937), Lehigh (Allentown PA 1925-1927), Maccar (Allentown PA 1914-1935), MacDonald (San Francisco 1920-1942), Relay (Lima OH 1927-1933), Rogers Una-Drive (Sunnyvale CA 1919-1922), Rumley (LaPorte IN 1919-1928), Sandow (Chicago Heights IL 1915-1928), Service (Wabash IN 1911-1932), Sisu (Finland 1938–1941), Stewart (Buffalo NY 1912-1941), Sullivan (Rochester NY 1916-1923), Thomas (New York City 1916-1917), Tiffin (Tiffin OH 1913-1923), Titan (Milwaukee 1917-1932), Trabold (Johnstown PA 1911-1932), Transport (Mt Pleasant MI 1919-1925), Traylor (Allentown PA 1920-1928), Walker-Johnson (East Woburn MA 1919-1923), and Watson (Conastoga NY 1917-1925).
Buda-Lanova engines were also used by the Whitcomb Locomotive Company of Rochelle IL. Two Buda-Lanova model DCS 1879 6 cylinder supercharged Diesel engines (6.75 bore x 8.75 stroke, 325 hp @ 1,200 rpm) were installed in both 65-DE-14a and 65-DE-19a Diesel electric centercab locomotives that were purchased by the Army and shipped over to Africa and Europe during WW II, helping Whitcomb to earn the Army-Navy "E" award.[2][3] These engines suffered from poor cooling and cracking in the cylinder heads and resulted in many locomotives being disabled while waiting for new heads.[4]
Chicago-based Condor offered Buda-Lanova diesels in their 1939 & 1940 trucks. Ag-tractor manufacturers, such as Massey-Harris (see Massey Ferguson), Cockshutt, and Oliver used Buda engines. Bus, taxi, and motorcoach makers such as Bridgeport, Luxor, and Pennant (see Barley Motor Car Co.) all used Buda engines. From 1925-1930, California coach operator, El Dorado, re-fitted new four-cylinder White buses with six-cylinder Budas. Firetruck builders Seagrave Fire Apparatus, Duplex, and American LaFrance used Buda engines. Buda engines were also used in electric generators, fire pumps, sawmills, cotton gins, and feed mills. Gardner-Denver used Buda engines in their air compressors. Buda-Lanova diesels were used by Australian Navy and U.S. Coast Guard in the 1940s. Parts are still available from Buda Engine Company in Shreveport, LA.
One vessel used by the Australian Navy in WW2, HDML 1321 is still afloat and working as a tourist dive boat based in Darwin. See http://www.gunsofmuschu.com/hdml1321.html and http://www.gunsofmuschu.com/exploits.html
References
- ↑ Crismon, Frederick W. (2002), International Trucks (2 ed.), Minneapolis, MN: Victory WW2 Publishing, p. 62, ISBN 0-9700567-2-9
- ↑ Military Railway Service, U.S.A. Equipment Data Book, Locomotives, Freight Cars and Misc. Rolling Stock, p. 16-18 http://www.rypn.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=200418#p200418
- ↑ Whitcomb Locomotive Works
- ↑ The Yankee Boomer, August 9, 1945, p. 6 http://www.rypn.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=201221#p201221
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