Chase Racing

Chase Racing

thingiverse

Chase Motor Truck Company sprouted its roots from manufacturing farm implements. Aurin M. Chase, a former vice president of the Syracuse Chilled Plow Company, which had been in operation since 1804, initiated production of a one-ton truck featuring an air-cooled, three-cylinder, two-cycle engine. Aurin Chase was financially supported by Paul Bellinger of the Solvay Process Company, Roy Grant of Grant's Hardware, and other prominent Syracuse business figures. That same year, Aurin Chase secured the sale of the Syracuse Chilled Plow Company to Deere & Company. In the early days of automobile manufacturing, Aurin Chase conceived a gasoline-fueled "high wheeler" that could be transformed into either a truck or passenger car. The company's 1912 advertisements showcased the motto: "The emblem of efficiency." According to the company, "Chase trucks are not pleasure cars. They are service vehicles. Due to an increasing number of leading business houses everywhere sending in repeat orders, it is evident that after a thorough study of motor truck efficiency they were satisfied that the Chase truck is the simplest and most efficient light delivery truck available today. A variant can be seen at https://www.myminifactory.com/object/chase-truck-motor-company-moving-car-6317 and https://myminifactory.com/object/oldsmobile-curved-dash-7615 Printing guidelines: Resolution: 0.2mm Infill percentage: 10%

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