engine -designed, "APU-style" two-stroke starter motor for a
Jumo 004 turbojet engine Before the advent of the starter motor, engines were started by various methods including wind-up springs,
gunpowder cylinders, and human-powered techniques such as a removable
crank handle which engaged the front of the crankshaft, pulling on an airplane propeller, or pulling a cord that was wound around an open-face pulley. The hand-crank method was commonly used to start engines, but it was inconvenient, difficult, and dangerous. The behavior of an engine during starting is not always predictable. The engine can kick back, causing sudden reverse rotation. Many manual starters included a
one-directional slip or release provision so that once engine rotation began, the starter would disengage from the engine. In the event of a kickback, the reverse rotation of the engine could suddenly engage the starter, causing the crank to unexpectedly and violently jerk, possibly injuring the operator. For cord-wound starters, a kickback could pull the operator towards the engine or machine, or swing the starter cord and handle at high speed around the starter pulley. Even though cranks had an
overrun mechanism, when the engine started, the crank could begin to spin along with the crankshaft and potentially strike the person cranking the engine. Additionally, care had to be taken to
retard the spark in order to prevent
backfiring; with an advanced spark setting, the engine could
kick back (run in reverse), pulling the crank with it, because the overrun safety mechanism works in one direction only. Although users were advised to cup their fingers and thumb under the crank and pull up, it felt natural for operators to grasp the handle with the fingers on one side, the thumb on the other. Even a simple backfire could result in a broken thumb; it was possible to end up with a
broken wrist, a
dislocated shoulder or worse. Moreover, increasingly larger engines with higher
compression ratios made hand cranking a more physically demanding endeavour. The first electric starter was installed on an
Arnold, an adaptation of the Benz Velo, built in 1896 in
East Peckham,
England, by electrical engineer H. J. Dowsing. In 1903,
Clyde J. Coleman invented and patented the first electric starter in America . In 1911,
Charles F. Kettering, with
Henry M. Leland, of Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company (
DELCO), invented and filed for an electric starter in America. (Kettering had replaced the hand crank on
NCR's
cash registers with an electric motor five years earlier.) One aspect of the invention lay in the realization that a relatively small motor, driven with higher voltage and current than would be feasible for continuous operation, could deliver enough power to crank the engine for starting. At the voltage and current levels required, such a motor would burn out in a few minutes of continuous operation, but not during the few seconds needed to start the engine. The starters were first installed on the
Cadillac Model Thirty in 1912, with the same system being adopted by
Lanchester later that year. These starters also worked as
generators once the engine was running, a concept that is now being revived in
hybrid vehicles. Although the electric starter motor was to come to dominate the car market, in 1912, there were several competing types of starter, The Dodge used a combined starter-generator unit, with a
direct current dynamo permanently coupled by gears to the engine's crankshaft. A system of electrical relays allowed this to be driven as a motor to rotate the engine for starting, and once the starter button was released the controlling switchgear returned the unit to operation as a generator. Because the starter-generator was directly coupled to the engine it did not need a method of engaging and disengaging the motor drive. It thus suffered negligible mechanical wear and was virtually silent in operation. The starter-generator remained a feature of Dodge cars until 1929. The disadvantage of the design was that, as a dual-purpose device, the unit was limited in both its power as a motor and its output as a generator, which became a problem as engine size and electrical demands on cars increased. Controlling the switch between motor and generator modes required dedicated and relatively complex switchgear which was more prone to failure than the heavy-duty contacts of a dedicated starter motor. While the starter-generator dropped out of favour for cars by the 1930s, the concept was still useful for smaller vehicles and was taken up by the German firm
SIBA Elektrik which built similar system intended mostly for use on motorcycles, scooters, economy cars (especially those with small-capacity
two-stroke engines), and marine engines. These were marketed under the 'Dynastart' name. Since motorcycles usually had small engines and limited electrical equipment, as well as restricted space and weight, the Dynastart was a useful feature. The windings for the starter-generator were usually incorporated into the engine's flywheel, thus not requiring a separate unit at all. The
Ford Model T relied on hand cranks until 1919; during the 1920s, electric starters became near-universal on most new cars, making it easier for women and elderly people to drive. It was still common for cars to be supplied with starter handles into the 1960s, and this continued much later for some makes (e.g.
Citroën 2CV until end of production in 1990). In many cases, cranks were used for setting timing rather than starting the engine as growing displacements and compression ratios made this impractical. Communist bloc cars such as Ladas often still supported crank-starting as late as the 1980s. For the first examples of production German turbojet engines later in World War II,
Norbert Riedel designed a small two-stroke, opposed-twin gasoline engine to start both the
Junkers Jumo 004 and
BMW 003 aircraft gas turbines as a form of
auxiliary power unit to get the central spindle of each engine design rotating — these were usually installed at the very front of the turbojet, and were themselves started by a pull-rope to get them running during the startup procedure for the jet engines they were fitted to. Before
Chrysler's 1949 innovation of the key-operated combination ignition-starter switch, the starter was often operated by the driver pressing a button mounted on the floor or dashboard. Some vehicles had a pedal in the floor that manually engaged the starter drive pinion with the flywheel ring gear, then completed the electrical circuit to the starter motor once the pedal reached the end of its travel. Ferguson tractors from the 1940s, including the
Ferguson TE20, had an extra position on the gear lever that engaged the starter switch, ensuring safety by preventing the tractors from being started in gear. ==Electric==