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Vintage Mercury Outboard Motors.oddball.sales-service Lighted Clock,boat Graphic For Sale
With the baseball season starting I will be very busy. If you have questions it may take acouple of daystoo to get back with you. I will be sure and answer any questions before sale ends.
What a great looking small countertop clock measuring only inches
17 1/4 wide and 10 1/4 tall. Made to set on a shelf or hang on a wall.
MAKE NO MISTAKE, I have no history on this clock. Just bought it
this past weekend from a reputable dealer. See photos and ask questions and judge for
yourself. The advertising glass is reverse painted and not a decal.Good
condition overall.Runs, lights up and keeps
time. Has a new cord. The cabinet may clean up some but assume it will not and there will be no dissapointments. Any problems with the ad glass is just reflections and shadows OTHER than a couple of small scratches that I have shown in the photos. These should be able to be touched up if you wanted to as they are not in the graphics.
Made by Price Brothers of Chicago and New York. No matter what, This is a Great, beautiful clock/sign that will be
the centerpiece of any lakeside cabin. This is a WELL made sign. Made of metal and glass with a beautiful detailed aluminum strip with a red groove holding in the glass.
This is out of my field so see photos and ask questions as what you see is the exact item you will receive.POSTAGE INCLUDESDOUBLE BOXED FULLY INSURED SHIPPING IN THE USA.
YES I will ship to Japan. Just pay any additional postage.......
Sold just as found. As is where is so know what you are offerding on. Stated postage is for the continental United States Only. Foreign postage will be more and calculated at the end of the sale. No returns for any reason after 14 days.
Mercury Outboard Motors
History
Stumbling into the outboard
business… the best mistake ever Carl
Kiekhaefer was a young engineer fresh out of college. With financial help from
his father, he bought a dying outboard motor manufacturing company in Cedarburg,
Wis. He never intended to get into the outboard business. His plan was to make
magnetic separators for the dairy industry. But included in the assets of the
company were 300 defective outboards that had been rejected by a large mail
order retailer. Carl needed cash to keep his new business running, so with a
small crew, he rebuilt the motors and sold them back to the mail order company.
The engines performed so well that the buyer placed an order for more. Soon a
second firm asked him to design and build an alternate-firing twin cylinder
model. The Kiekhaefer Corporation was in business.
Outboards weren't new in 1940. Unfortunately,
they weren't reliable either. Working on his own designs for his fledgling
outboard motor business, Carl Kiekhaefer developed features for quick, powerful,
dependable boating power: a rubber water pump rotor that tolerates sand, silt,
and vegetation; a one-piece streamline housing that protects drive shaft,
waterline, and exhaust from exposure to the elements; and a reed valve induction
system. All were part of a new vision for outboards. He called them Mercury,
after the fleet-footed messenger of the Roman gods.
At the 1940 New York Boat Show, Kiekhaefer
displayed his engines for the first time. In his homemade tradeshow booth, Carl
accepted orders for more than 16,000 motors, and the marine industry changed
forever.
In December 1941, the United States entered
World War II. American factories shifted production from commercial to military
products. At the Kiekhaefer Corporation, expansion plans ground to a halt.
Nationwide, factories were converted to manufacture equipment for the war
effort.
Doing what it could to survive, the tiny
company sought government contracts. The government needed air-cooled, two-man
chainsaws for the army, and Carl accepted the challenge. Kiekhaefer had never
before manufactured a chainsaw, and for nearly 20 years army engineers had tried
to develop a portable power saw to replace the heavy, cumbersome models then in
use. But in just two months, Kiekhaefer completed a new machine. In a test, the
saw powered by the Mercury engine cut through a 24-inch green log in 17 seconds,
as opposed to 52 seconds for its nearest competitor. The chainsaw contract was
awarded to Kiekhaefer Corporation.
Throughout World War II, Kiekhaefer
Corporation was a mass producer of chainsaw engines, and by the end of the war,
they were the largest builder of chainsaws in the world. The company also
manufactured products that took to the air with two-cycle engines for drone
aircraft, and the company became a recognized authority on radio-controlled
aircraft.
Post-war boating
boom Before the war, an outboard
motor was mainly a device to propel a fisherman's boat. A 6-horsepower was
considered big. But immediately after the war, times were changing. With more
money and more leisure time, tens of thousands of families were discovering
boating. Water skiing, once deemed a pastime for daredevils, became a popular
family sport, and one that required even greater horsepower. Kiekhaefer
anticipated the boom in recreational boating and the increasing demand for
larger and more powerful outboard motors.
At the 1947 New York Boat Show, Mercury
introduced "Lightning," a two-cylinder alternate firing design of 19.8 cubic
inches. Rated at 10 horsepower, it outperformed competitive engines rated twice
as powerful. To back up his performance claims, Carl displayed two Lightnings
that ran a total of 75,000 miles - an early taste of the company's passion for
testing.
The explosion in consumer demand fueled
expansion, and in 1948, Kiekhaefer built the prototype of the engine he had been
promising since before Word War II, the Mercury Thunderbolt. It was a larger,
more powerful outboard to meet the growing demands of the post-war boating boom.
Thunderbolt was the industry's first four-cylinder-in-line, two-cycle,
40-cubic-inch engine. It delivered a whopping 40 horsepower - well in excess of
its advertised 25 horsepower.
Racing into
history To promote his outboard
business, Carl Kiekhaefer entered the sport of stock car racing. Driving large
but powerful Chrysler 300s, his team's mechanical innovations and attention to
detail culminated in two national championships - both the NASCAR and AAA
circuits - claiming the largest collection of stock car racing trophies ever won
in a single season and stunning the racing community. Among their innovations
were the first dry paper air filters, which are standard in automobiles
today.
Kiekhaefer's stock car team dominated the
NASCAR circuit, setting a new record in the Daytona Beach "Flying Mile" at
nearly 140 mph in the new Chrysler 300B. His teams would win a phenomenal 80
percent of all races entered, without a single driver injury, and would never be
charged with an infraction of the rules. But because he was such an overwhelming
competitor (at one point winning 16 races in a row) race fans turned against the
Kiekhaefer team. Deeply hurt, Carl Kiekhaefer withdrew from stock car racing at
the end of the 1956 season.
In 1957, the company began operations at a
1,400-acre undeveloped Florida lake - a new testing area away from prying eyes.
To keep the location a secret, Carl Kiekhaefer referred to it as "Lake X" when
speaking with outsiders, and the name stuck.
That same year, the Mark 75 was introduced,
the industry's first six-cylinder, 60-hp outboard. At Lake X, two Mark 75s set a
world endurance record, each propelling a family-sized runabout over 50,000
miles in 68 3/4 days of continuous night-and-day running. Refueling on the run,
they maintained an average speed of 30.3 miles per hour.
The 1960s was a decade of tremendous growth
and innovation for Kiekhaefer Marine. In 1961, Kiekhaefer merged with Brunswick
Corporation, whose 125 years of leisure business leadership brought capital for
sustained growth around the world.
The revolutionary MerCruiser engine was
introduced at the Chicago Boat Show that same year, offering the first
sterndrive unit of over 100 hp. It combined the power and economy of inboard
engines with the flexibility and maneuverability of outboard drive units.
MerCruiser outsold all other sterndrive brands combined, and eventually captured
an incredible 80 percent of the worldwide market. Within the next few years,
Kiekhaefer also unveiled the first 100 and 125-horsepower outboards, and also
introduced the distinctive "phantom black" cowl that has become Mercury's
trademark.
Carl Kiekhaefer resigned as president of the
company in 1969, and shortly thereafter the company's name was officially
changed from Kiekhaefer Marine to Mercury Marine.
Set the standard, then surpass
it… that's the Mercury way In the
early 1970s, a Mercury Twister II racing outboard set a world outboard speed
record of 136.381 mph, breaking the old mark by more than 5 mph. And the company
continued to break records around the world. The new Mariner Outboard was
introduced in Australia and proved itself quickly, setting a new endurance speed
record in 1975 during a 546-mile run from Sydney to Brisbane. An 18-hour running
time slashed more than nine hours off the previous record. In 1976, Mariner
Outboards were introduced in Europe and the United States; in conjunction with
the American debut, three Mariner-powered boats ran up the Mississippi River
from New Orleans to Chicago for a total of 4,500 boat miles.
Improvements to Mercury products continued to
set standards for the industry: refining fuel efficiency on high-horsepower
outboards, introducing comprehensive one-hand controls on an outboard tiller,
creating higher performance MerCruisers for sport boat owners seeking additional
power, and creating sophisticated production outboards with electronic fuel
injection (EFI) that would deliver the correct fuel mixture for all conditions.
With its reputation for quality, innovation and durability, Mercury solidified
its position as the prestige brand for marine propulsion.
Responding to the demand for bigger, faster,
more efficient engines, in 1993 the company introduced a new product line, the
Sport Jet 90, on Bayliner and Sea Ray boats; it was an instant hit, starting an
industry stampede into jet boats. Two years later, Sport Jet introduced a 120-hp
model, the perfect engine for towing skiers, knee boarders and tubers. And, with
the introduction of the Sport Jet 175V6, V-6 power became available in a
mini-jet engine.
In 1996, Mercury and Mariner astounded the
marine industry when it introduced 200-hp, OptiMax direct fuel-injected,
two-stroke outboard engines. This new technology injected a high-pressure
mixture of fuel and air directly into each cylinder, providing greatly improved
fuel economy, smoother running and a reduction in hydrocarbon and carbon
monoxide emissions that exceeded government proposals for the year
2006.
The following year, Mercury took a chance
with this "experimental" technology by entering production Mercury OptiMax
engines in the grueling "24 Hours of Rouen" international boat race in Rouen,
France. Nowhere has Mercury's superiority been more evident than at high speeds
on rough water! The OptiMax engines finished first in the low emissions class,
and fourth and fifth overall, behind Mercury Racing engines in a display of
racing dominance. In subsequent years, Mercury OptiMax teams have continued to
dominate the race at Rouen. In an unparalleled history-making performance in
2000, Mercury Racing swept the French endurance race, setting course records and
demonstrating racing's future with low emissions two-stroke technology. Mercury
OptiMax-powered boats took first, second and fourth place overall, beating
larger displacement traditional race engines of all competitors.
In a testament to his vision and contribution
to motorsports, in 1998 the late Carl Kiekhaefer was inducted into the
Motorsports Hall of Fame of America at the Motorsports Museum in Novi, Mich.
Mercury Marine continues his legacy of innovation and superiority in the
manufacturing of marine propulsion products and accessories. As the largest
division of Brunswick Corporation, Mercury has facilities across the United
States and throughout the world, with over 6000 employees and over 7000 dealers
worldwide.
The company is integrally involved in
conservation issues and also supports fishing, boating, boat racing and
watersports activities. Together Mercury employees and dealers are proud of
their unmatched record of leadership, innovation, and service. Around the world,
Mercury Marine remains The Marine Experts