Sheppee

Last updated

The Sheppee was an English steam automobile manufactured in York by the Sheppee Motor Company run by Colonel Francis Henry Sheppee, son of Lieutenant-Colonel Francis Faulkener Sheppee (1835-1913). [1] After long service with the army in India, Colonel F.H. Sheppee created the Sheppee Motor Company in Thomas Street, York around 1902. The firm mainly made steam-driven commercial vehicles but in 1912 at least two passenger cars were made with 25 hp engines and flash boilers. In 1913, they announced they had got a site on the Birmingham Road near Worcester where they would build a new factory for production of their 3-ton steam wagons. [2]

Contents

After WW1, the company moved away from commercial vehicles into production of a motor add-on for bicycles, plus they were involved in innovations in washing machines and conveyor belt systems, and then into automation in the glassware industry. In all these areas they protected their innovative designs with numerous patents, and these reveal a name change for the company circa 1939 to Sheppee Motor and Engineering Co Ltd.

Sheppee Steam Wagons

Unlike most steam wagons, the Sheppee wagon used a boiler developed along the lines of the Serpollet steam car. This type of boiler is known as a flash boiler, in which water is boiled within tubes and not within a large pressure vessel. This allows far faster start-up and can produce very high pressure, high-temperature superheated steam (up to 450 Celsius), the handling of which places demands upon the boiler tubes and also the materials, engineering, and lubrication of the engine. In 1908 an article in Commercial Motor detailed the boiler and engine design for their 2-ton chassis, and both single acting and double acting engines had been designed, the latter developing 50 bhp. [3] Although flash boilers have many advantages, they need a control system for both the water feed into the boiler and the heat input - in this case by paraffin fuelled burners. If the boiler tubes overheat then they can fail due to the high pressures within, though unlike a conventional boiler this doesn't lead to a steam explosion, as the amount of contained water is small. Two vehicles supplied to Natal in 1910 were described in Commercial Motor magazine, where it was claimed that a burst tube could be replaced in 30 minutes. [4] These wagons had twin cylinder double acting engines driving a countershaft via spur gears, which together with the differential were contained within the crankcase. The engine was in the middle of the chassis, and the boiler under the bonnet at the front. There were no change speed gears, but there were controls for reversing and varying the steam cut-off, though the mechanism for doing this is not explained.

During the development of their boiler, control system, and steam engines a considerable number of patents were filed. The early patents from 1904 were co-authored by John Henry Sheppee with John Edward Gibbs (GB190414240, GB190427735, GB190427736, GB190427737, GB190427738, GB190515105, GB190612308, GB190614870, GB190614872), with others named on patents being Francis Faulkner Sheppee (his father) (GB190606570), Edward Cyril Bowden-Smith (GB190613384, FR378514, GB190711171, GB190720179), Maurice Walker Shippey (GB190809492, GB191013098), Edgell William Sheppee (his brother)(GB191303237, GB191303236) and Samuel George Jowitt (from GB191423737 through to 1939, though these related to other developments). Another patent without co-authors (GB190810851) reveals that the use of the high pressure, high temperature steam required the steam engine to use poppet valves (as used in internal combustion engines) - there were also problems with cylinder castings cracking due to thermal expansion stresses which were overcome by using cylinders that were tubular sandwiched between cylinder head castings, with the valves operating in the head/s.

In 1913, they announced they had developed the design to a point where they would go into larger-scale production in a new factory in Worcester. One of their 3-ton steam wagons had now done 20,000 miles without any recent troubles, and they were now confident they had overcome the technical challenges of using highly superheated steam. [2]

In August 1913, it was announced that the price for the Sheppee 3-ton steam wagon was £610 for the standard model, and £630 for the colonial model. With net 3 tons load it was claimed on give-and-take roads in Yorkshire the fuel consumption was 0.25 gallons of paraffin per mile. [5] Further details of the 3-ton Sheppee steam wagon revealed that the production vehicle used a twin-cylinder double acting engine with "mushroom" valves. The boiler was paraffin fuelled with a secondary pressurised tank, so that the main tank could be refilled without stopping the engine. There was an encased chain drive from the crankshaft to the countershaft, and the countershaft contained the differential, with chain drive to the back wheels. Brakes were provided on the countershaft, and there were also internal expanding drum brakes on the rear wheels. [6]

In the 1980s castings to make a model stationary steam engine were produced by Chelston Model Engineering based on an engine by Samuel G. Jowitt, which was in appearance a single cylinder stationary engine using poppet valves. As Samuel G. Jowitt worked for Sheppee, and use of poppet valves in steam engines is unusual, the engine design may originally be tied in to development work at Sheppee.

Sheppee Cykelaid

In 1919 Sheppee patented "Improvements in Motor Wheel attachments for cycles and the like" (GB141866) and then in 1920 they launched the Cykelaid, a motorised petrol-driven bicycle attachment replacing the entire front fork and wheel assembly with a powered unit. The Cykelaid made its debut on Stand No 49 at the Cycle & Motorcycle Show, Olympia, in 1920. [7] The original engine was 51mm bore by 51mm stroke (104 cc), but at the 1922 show the revised model had a bore of 55mm and a stroke of 56mm giving 133 cc. [8] [9] Sheppee also sold complete bicycles (for ladies and gents), tricycles, invalid-tricycles and Chater-Lea tandems fitted with the Cykelaid. [10] The production of the frames for the complete machines was probably contracted out, and from an account in November 1922, we know the frames for the Cykelaid exhibits for the 1922 Olympia show were made by Robert Parker's of Spencer Street, Hull. [11]

The following is taken from Grace's Guide:

In production the complete power unit was carried on a special front fork, with the 104 cc two-stroke engine on the left with its main-shaft run through the wheel spindle to a flywheel. Ignition was by chain-driven Runbaken magneto bolted upside-down to the crankcase base, and transmission was by chain up to a counter-shaft carrying a clutch and then back to the wheel by a second chain. The firm offered a package of wheel, engine unit and front fork or the choice of complete ladies' or gents' machines. The complete Cykelaid could be purchased for £50. The specification included an Eadie coaster brake, rear hand-operated brake, number plate, rear stand and Brooks saddle. The wheels were 28″×1.75″, shod with Dunlop Roadster tyres. Alternatively, the complete front fork assembly was available for £32, as a conversion of an existing bicycle. The early versions were not fitted with a front brake and, as mentioned above, the complete machine was fitted with two independent rear brakes. Presumably, when buying the front fork unit to convert an existing bicycle, one was also expected to fit an additional rear brake to the machine. Although the engine was lubricated by the petroil mixture, an additional oil tank was fitted. An oil pump driven by the front wheel hub delivered a measured supply of oil to the engine's main bearings. It would, therefore, be inadvisable to allow the engine to run for a long period with the clutch disengaged, since this would cut off the supply of oil to the crankshaft. None of the available options proved to be very popular with the buying public.

1922

Late that year modifications were made and the machine appeared as the New Cykelaid with simplified ignition and a pump system in place of petroil lubrication. Capacity was increased to 133cc and girder forks were added. The wheel size was reduced to 26″×2″. Protection for the rider was improved by fitting deep valences to the mudguard and by lengthening the exhaust pipe. A front brake was now fitted. The 133 cc two-stroke engine fitted to the left of the front wheel, chain drive via a counter-shaft and a flywheel magneto on the right that was driven by the main-shaft running through the wheel spindle. Although the performance was quite adequate, it had become outdated.

1925

A dummy-rim rear brake was adopted.

1926

The last year of production.

Note: The engine unit increased the weight of a cycle by 35 lb. It was claimed that it would propel a bicycle at speeds from 3 mph to 20 mph and that a 100-mile journey could be completed on a full tank of fuel.

Sheppee Motor and Engineering

The Sheppee Motor and Engineering Co Ltd was created in 1932, with F.H. Sheppee as permanent governing director. [12] It began to manufacture various products, including washing machines and conveyor belts - both areas in which it held patents. One example of a washing machine still exists today in the museum in York. Sheppee Engineering was a leading force in the area, providing bespoke solutions to the local industry.

It was in 1938 when Sheppee Engineering took a new direction that would remain with the company to this present day. The company was requested to find a solution for a local bottle maker, National Glass in York, to automate the handling process of newly formed bottles and with that, Sheppee Engineering developed the glass bottle industries first automated glassware handling equipment.

Sheppee International

Glassware handling proved to be the success story that Colonel Francis Sheppee had been searching for, and this catapulted the business forwards. The company grew and soon had to expand its premises and acquired adjacent land on James Street in York, where the company operated until in 1993, when Sheppee Engineering Ltd. hit financial difficulty and fell into liquidation. The management team bought the company under the new name Sheppee International Ltd.

Today operating from Elvington in York, Sheppee International is a supplier of ware handling equipment for the glass container industry. [13]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Geared steam locomotive</span> Steam railway locomotive with a geared transmission

A geared steam locomotive is a type of steam locomotive which uses gearing, usually reduction gearing, in the drivetrain, as opposed to the common directly driven design.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Singer Motors</span> British motor vehicle manufacturer

Singer Motors Limited was a British motor vehicle manufacturing business, originally a bicycle manufacturer founded as Singer & Co by George Singer, in 1874 in Coventry, England. Singer & Co's bicycle manufacture continued. From 1901 George Singer's Singer Motor Co made cars and commercial vehicles.

The Scott Motorcycle Company was owned by Scott Motors (Saltaire) Limited, Saltaire, West Yorkshire, England and was a well-known producer of motorcycles and light engines for industry. Founded by Alfred Angas Scott in 1908 as the Scott Engineering Company in Bradford, Yorkshire, Scott motorcycles were produced until 1978.
Initially started in a rented workshop, Alfred moved the business to Hirstwood Works, Hirstwood Road, Saltaire. This building is still standing and has industrial use.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Caprotti valve gear</span>

The Caprotti valve gear is a type of steam engine valve gear invented in the early 1920s by Italian architect and engineer Arturo Caprotti. It uses camshafts and poppet valves rather than the piston valves used in other valve gear. While basing his design on automotive valves, Caprotti made several significant departures from this design to adapt the valves for steam. Having agreed a joint-venture with Worcester-based engineering company Heenan & Froude from 1938, Heenan & Froude fully acquired Caprotti post-World War II in 1947.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Thornycroft</span> English vehicle manufacturer

Thornycroft was an English vehicle manufacturer which built coaches, buses, and trucks from 1896 until 1977.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">New Hudson (company)</span>

The New Hudson Cycle Co. was originally started in 1890 by George Patterson, and manufactured 'safety' bicycles in Birmingham. In 1903 they produced their first motorcycle, but times became tough for Patterson after one of his sons died in WW1 and the other lost a leg. The family sold the factory to HJ Bructon after WW1, and in 1920 the company was reformed as New Hudson Ltd.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rudge-Whitworth</span> British bicycle, motorcycle and sports car manufacturer

Rudge Whitworth Cycles was a British bicycle, bicycle saddle, motorcycle and sports car wheel manufacturer that resulted from the merger of two bicycle manufacturers in 1894, Whitworth Cycle Co. of Birmingham, founded by Charles Henry Pugh and his two sons Charles Vernon and John, and Rudge Cycle Co. of Coventry.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Douglas (motorcycles)</span> British motorcycle manufacturer

Douglas was a British motorcycle manufacturer from 1907 to 1957 based in Kingswood, Bristol, owned by the Douglas family, and especially known for its horizontally opposed twin cylinder engined bikes and as manufacturers of speedway machines. The company also built a range of cars between 1913 and 1922.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Richard Garrett & Sons</span> British vehicle manufacturer

Richard Garrett & Sons was a manufacturer of agricultural machinery, steam engines and trolleybuses. Their factory was Leiston Works, in Leiston, Suffolk, England. The company was founded by Richard Garrett in 1778.

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to automobiles:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Straker-Squire</span> Automobile manufacturer

Straker-Squire was a British automobile manufacturer based in Bristol, and later Edmonton in North London.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Steam wagon</span>

A steam wagon is a steam-powered truck for carrying freight. It was the earliest form of lorry (truck) and came in two basic forms: overtype and undertype, the distinction being the position of the engine relative to the boiler. Manufacturers tended to concentrate on one form or the other.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Humber Motorcycles</span>

Humber Limited was a pioneering British motorcycle manufacturer. Humber produced the first practical motorcycle made in Britain by fitting one of their Humber bicycles with an E. J. Pennington two-horsepower motor in 1896.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Osborn Engineering Company</span>

Osborn Engineering Company was a British manufacturer of motorcycles, which sold its machines under the OEC brand name.

The Advance Motor Manufacturing Company was a British motorcycle and engine manufacturer established in 1905. As well as supplying aircraft engines to the pioneering monoplane developers, Advance engines were also used by Captain Robert Scott to power Antarctic snow sleds. After the end of the Second World War the company was sold to Sheepbridge Engineering and became a motor supplies organisation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Quadrant (motorcycles)</span> British motorcycle manufacturer, 1901–1928

Quadrant was one of the earliest British motorcycle manufacturers, established in Birmingham in 1901. Famous for their big singles, Quadrant pioneered many innovations that proved important for motorcycle development but struggled after the First World War and the company was wound up in 1928.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cunningham Steam Wagon</span> Defunct American motor vehicle manufacturer

The Cunningham Steam Wagon was a product of the Massachusetts Steam Wagon Company of Pittsfield, Massachusetts, in the United States. The firm was established in December 1900, with the intention of manufacturing the products that the Cunningham Engineering Company of Boston, Massachusetts, planned to develop. Instead, they built a small steam powered truck with four wheel drive. Production ceased at the end of 1901.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Steam motor</span>

A steam motor is a form of steam engine used for light locomotives and light self-propelled motor cars used on railways. The origins of steam motor cars for railways go back to at least the 1850s, if not earlier, as experimental economizations for railways or railroads with marginal budgets. These first examples, at least in North America, appear to have been fitted with light reciprocating engines, and either direct or geared drives, or geared-endless chain drives. Most incorporated a passenger carrying coach attached to the engine and its boiler. Boiler types varied in these earlier examples, with vertical boilers dominant in the first decade and then with very small diameter horizontal boilers. Other examples of steam motor cars incorporated an express-baggage or luggage type car body, with coupling apparatus provided to allow the steam motor car to draw a light passenger coach.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">MÁV Class 601</span> Class of Hungarian Mallet-type locomotives

The MÁV class 601 is a class of Hungarian four cylinder Mallet -type locomotives, which was designed to haul long and very heavy cargo on very steep railway tracks. With their 22.5 meter length and 2200 KW power, they were the largest and most powerful steam locomotives which have ever built before the First World War in Europe.

The Turner Manufacturing Company was an engineering company based in Wolverhampton, England. Among their products were steam and petrol cars, small boat engines, the Turner winch, a range of diesel engines made in the 1940s and 1950s, the Yeoman of England agricultural tractor, and truck transmissions - the latter leading to their eventual takeover.

References

  1. Georgano, N. (2000). Beaulieu Encyclopedia of the Automobile. London: HMSO. ISBN   1-57958-293-1.
  2. 1 2 "A Revival in Superheated Steam", Commercial Motor, 23 January 1913
  3. "The Sheppee Steam Lorry", Commercial Motor, 3 December 1908
  4. "The Sheppee Superheated-Steam Vehicle", Commercial Motor, 8 December 1910
  5. "The Sheppee Three-tonner", Commercial Motor, 14 August 1913
  6. "More about the new Sheppee Steamer", Commercial Motor, 14 August 1913
  7. "The Olympia Show", The Motor Cycle, 2 December 1920, p724
  8. "Forecast and Guide to Olympia", The Motor Cycle, 23 November 1922, p768
  9. "The Olympia Show", The Motor Cycle, 30 November 1922, p845
  10. Advert, The Sphere, 23 May 1925, p63
  11. "Candidates and Motorists Questions", Hull Daily Mail, 17 November 1922, p2
  12. New Companies, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencier, 15 April 1932, p16
  13. Knowlson, Laura (3 December 2013). "Enterprise pays off for Sheppee International". York Press. Retrieved 28 November 2017.