In 1924, Huber became Technical Director of the
Bureau Technique Pescara where he supervised the design of nearly 30 different sizes and types of
free-piston engine and acquired the nickname "Mr Free Piston". The first was the AC-2, running on petrol (
gasoline). The second was the AC-3, which was similar but ran on
diesel fuel. Eighteen types of free-piston engine were built and tested. In 1932, Huber read a book by
Professor Lomonosov about
diesel locomotives. He also heard of a proposal by
Petro Shelest for
turbines driven by compressed air. This information gave him the idea of developing the
free-piston gas turbine. Several of these were designed but not built. Finally, in 1938–39, the world's first free-piston generator was built. It used two G-30 (SEME) in 1939) until 1962. During his time there, thousands of free-piston engines had been sold. Huber continued to work on free-piston engines until at least 1967. Huber was a pioneer in the development of
common rail fuel injection in the 1960s. ==Patents==