Automobiles Messier | |
Foundation: | 1925 (as an automobile manufacturer) |
Defunct: | 1931 |
Location City: | Montrouge, Paris |
Location Country: | France |
Key People: | George Messier |
Industry: | Manufacturing |
Products: | Automobiles, pneumatic engineering (subsequently) aircraft landing gear |
Messier was a French automobile manufacturer, based at Montrouge, on the southern edge of Paris, from 1925 till 1931.[1] [2] [3] [4]
George Messier owned a factory for "pneumatic equipment" at least as early as 1920. He also developed a type of air suspension for automobiles. In 1920 he created the company Messier Automobiles and marketed the air suspension. From 1925 he produced automobiles on his own account, using the Messier name. In 1931 Messier abandoned automobile production in order to concentrate primarily on aircraft landing gear after having built and flown the Messier Monoplace Laboratorie monoplane, to test a retractable bicycle type undercarriage.
At least one source claims that Messier's air suspension was the basis for the revolutionary Hydropneumatic suspension of later Citroën models including, most notably, the 1955 DS.[1] The inventor of the Hydropneumatic suspension, Paul Magès, was born in 1908,[5] so it is feasible that he had heard of the Messier system, but rather than air, Magès used compressed nitrogen as the springing mechanism and pressurized oil for damping.
The notable feature of the cars was their air suspension. The engines were bought from specialist engine manufacturers. The first cars used a 4-cylinder engine from CIME. There was a racing model powered by a overhead camshaft unit while Touring and Limousine bodied 4-cylinder cars were fitted with a overhead camshaft unit. In October 1924 the manufacturer took a stand at the 19th Paris Motor Show, preparing to market his small cars during the 1925 model year. They were advertised as "voitures sans ressorts" (cars without springs), highlighting the unconventional pneumatic suspension.[6] In place of springs the cars featured above each front wheel pneumatic tubes of compressed air, each of diameter. Similar tubes were fixed in place of the rear suspension, shorter than the tubes at the front, but also slightly thicker, each having a diameter.[7] By October 1928, it was clear from the cars exhibited on the Messier stand at the 22nd Paris Motor Show that the manufacturer had "changed class".[8] There were 6-cylinder cars with engine capacities of and and 8-cylinder models of developing and producing .[8] The largest engines came from Lycoming Engines of Pennsylvania,[8] while engines from other American suppliers were also used.
The 8-cylinder "Messier Type H" was offered with two alternative wheelbase lengths of respectively and .[8] Many of the 50 built were fitted with ambulance bodies.