(1894)
Agricultural machinery Richard Hornsby & Sons grew into a major manufacturer of agricultural machinery at their Spittle Gate Works. The firm went on to produce
steam engines used to drive threshing machines, and other equipment such as
traction engines: their portable steam engine was one of their most important products and the market leader. A farm was obtained nearby, where all their new products were tested before being produced.
Hornsby Akroyd Engine (1905):Four-stroke, 14 HP running at the
Great Dorset Steam Fair in 2008 Work with
Herbert Akroyd Stuart in the 1890s led to the world's first commercial
heavy oil engines being made in Grantham (from 8 July 1892). Other engineering companies had been offered the option of manufacturing the engine, but they saw it as a threat to their business, and so declined the offer. Only Hornsbys saw its possibilities. The first one was sold to the
Newport Sanitary Authority (later to be re-bought by Hornsby and displayed in their office). In 1892, T.H. Barton at Hornsbys enhanced the engine by replacing the vaporiser with a new
cylinder head and increased the
compression ratio to make the engine run on compression alone. This Hornsby-Akroyd oil engine design was hugely successful: during the period from 1891 through 1905, a total of 32,417 engines were produced. They would provide electricity for lighting the
Taj Mahal, the
Rock of Gibraltar, the
Statue of Liberty (chosen after Hornsby won the oil engine prize at the
Chicago World's Fair of 1893), many
lighthouses, and for powering
Guglielmo Marconi's first trans-Atlantic radio broadcast.
First tractor Hornsbys are credited with producing and selling the first oil-engined tractor (similar to modern-day tractors) in Britain. The
Hornsby-Akroyd Patent Safety Oil Traction Engine was made in 1896 with a 20 hp engine. In 1897, it was bought by Mr. Locke-King, and this is the first recorded sale of a tractor in Britain. Also in that year, the tractor won a Silver Medal of the
Royal Agricultural Society of England. That tractor would later be returned to the factory and fitted with a
chain-track.
Heavy oil military tractor tractor (1903) Following military traction engine trials in 1902, the military authorities were looking for a tractor that could do what the steam tractor achieved without its demands on fuel and water. In 1903 the military held a competition with £1000 first prize for a tractor that must weigh under 13 tons ready for the road, could haul 25 tons for 40 miles at 3 mph average speed including gradients of 1 in 18, and should be capable of 8 mph with half load and be able to climb 1 in 6 slopes towing that half load. Other conditions included winch capability of 15 tons, and ability to cross 2 feet of water. The results of the trial were reported in The Automotor Journal. When the trials were held only one vehicle attended, the Hornsby Heavy Oil Tractor. Not only did it win the £1000 prize for meeting the criteria laid down, but it received a bonus of £180 for completing 58 miles towing its 25-ton load before requiring fuel or water. Unlike the earlier single cylinder tractor made by Hornsby, this was a twin cylinder, with the cylinders at an angle to each other in a vertical plane and sharing a common crankshaft. The engine ran at 350 rpm and had a governor which operated by cutting the fuel supply in a hit and miss method, though the driver could override the governor for "spurts". The framing was of conventional steam
traction engine type, with rear wheels 7 foot diameter, the front wheels 42 inches diameter. The cylinders were each 13 inch diameter and 18 inch stroke. Starting was by compressed air after pre-heating the vaporisers with bunsen torches. Sliding spur gears offered forward speeds of 1.5, 3, 5 and 8 mph, and a reverse.
Chain tracked tractor Later, a
chain track was added to a
heavy oil engined
tractor. It had been developed by Hornsby's chief engineer and managing director,
David Roberts: the track was patented in July 1904. The following year Roberts demonstrated his tractor unofficially to the British Army's
Mechanical Transport Committee, with a formal demonstration staged at
Grantham in February, 1906, at which the machine outperformed a conventional
wheeled tractor. A lightweight version of the tracks was also fitted to a
Rochet-Schneider motor car. In July 1907, an improved chain track was demonstrated at the British Army's HQ at
Aldershot. Roberts explained that he had plans for a trailer, also fitted with a chain track, on which a gun could be mounted. Roberts completed his tracked trailer and demonstrated it to the
Royal Artillery in November of the same year. Holt Company photographer Charles Clements was reported to have observed that the tractor crawled like a
caterpillar and Holt seized on the metaphor. "Caterpillar it is. That's the name for it!" There was a further demonstration at Aldershot in 1908, at which King
Edward VII was present. The tractor and trailer with dummy gun in place are considered to have performed impressively, crossing various types of obstacles and ground, and the demonstration became national news. A horse team that became bogged down was easily hauled out of the mud by Roberts's machine. The Mechanical Transport Committee was amongst those that considered the system to have great potential. A newspaper suggested that this was "the germ of a land fighting unit when men will fight behind iron walls". Roberts was awarded a £1000 prize from the War Office for his machine's performance in travelling without stopping. Hornsby sold his patents to Holt for £4,000 in 1911. Holt later merged with
C. L. Best and became the
Caterpillar Tractor Company. When the
First World War broke out, Britain had to purchase caterpillar tractors from Holt to tow the Army's heavy guns, and the designers of the tank had to start from scratch, basing their ideas on imported American machines. Hornsby's chain-track played no direct part in the development of the tank, although Lt-Col.
R. E. B. Crompton, who later had an important role in its creation, had been present at some of the early trials and was influenced to some extent by the Hornsby. In the event, the first British tanks had no sprung suspension, and the track plates were an improved version of those of another American vehicle, the Bullock tractor. Central to British tank development was William Foster & Co., agricultural machinery manufacturers, based at Lincoln, only about 25 miles from Hornsby's. ==First commercial film==