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  2. Hurst Performance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurst_Performance

    Hurst Performance was originally named Hurst-Campbell. The company was established in 1958 as an auto repair shop when George Hurst and Bill Campbell were both young men. The original shop was located on Glenside Ave. in Glenside, Pennsylvania. They later moved to a large building on the corner of Street Road and Jacksonville Road in Warminster ...

  3. GKN Automotive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GKN_Automotive

    GKN Automotive is a multinational manufacturer of driveline components, all-wheel drive systems and plug-in hybrid systems for the automotive industry. [2] It employs around 25,000 people across 47 manufacturing facilities and 6 technology centres in 19 countries. [3] In 2018, Melrose Industries [2] acquired GKN Ltd and renamed it GKN ...

  4. Car controls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Car_controls

    While the modern turn signal was patented in 1938, [13] electric turn-signal lights date back to 1907. [14] As of 2013, most countries require turn signals to be included on all vehicles driven on public roadways. The turn signal lever is usually activated by a horizontal lever protruding from the steering column.

  5. Electronic gear-shifting system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_gear-shifting...

    Electronic front derailleur (Shimano Di2) An electronic gear-shifting system is a method of changing gears on a bicycle, which enables riders to shift with electronic switches instead of using conventional control levers and mechanical cables.

  6. Drive by wire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drive_by_wire

    The modern drive by wire paradigm dispenses with mechanical backups, and relies on redundancy, fail-operational systems, and other safety and security measures: computational redundancy through lockstep CPUs; functional redundancy through modular design where the failure of one module is compensated by an identical module, for example by torque ...

  7. Fluid Drive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluid_Drive

    The M4 Vacamatic had two forward speeds and reverse. There was a manual Pull-Cable to lock out the underdrive in the early models. From 1949–1952, Dodge models with the conventional 3-speed Fluid Drive carried front fender emblems that said "Fluid Drive." The M6 Models had emblems that proudly proclaimed "Gyromatic."