Who invented first snowmobile?
Joseph-Armand Bombardier
Who invented Bombardier?
Joseph-Armand Bombardier
Joseph-Armand Bombardier was the inventor of the snowmobile (artwork by Irma Coucill). In 1936, Joseph-Armand Bombardier introduced his first commercial snowmobile, the B7 auto-neige. First snowmobile (courtesy Bombardier Inc).
The founder of the Ski-Doo company, Joseph Bombardier, began experimenting with snow vehicles in 1920. His initial goal was to create a propeller-driven snow plane, but quickly turned his attentions to land-based tracked vehicles. He created the world's first snowmobile in 1935.
Did You know? In 1940 a snowmobile cost about $1,000; the same price as a basic car at the time. J. Armand Bombardier built 1,900 tracked vehicles for the military during the Second World War.
Carl Eliason of Sayner developed the prototype of the modern snowmobile in the 1920s when he mounted a two-cylinder motorcycle engine on a long sled, steered it with skis under the front, and propelled it with single, endless track. Eliason made 40 snowmobiles, patented in 1927.
Where did Joseph-Armand Bombardier die?
Sherbrooke, Canada
(French pronunciation: ​[bɔ̃baÊdje]) is a Canadian business jets manufacturer. Bombardier manufactures several series of corporate jets, Global 7500, Global Express, Challenger 600, Challenger 300, and Learjet 70/75.
Joseph-Armand Bombardier was born on April 16, 1907, in Valcourt, in the Eastern Townships of Quebec, Canada. No one in this peaceful farming village could have foreseen the exceptional destiny that lay ahead for the newborn.
In 1935, he developed a winter vehicle that was easy to manoeuvre in all snow conditions. This was something Bombardier knew was needed in rural settings, having lost his own son one winter when his family was unable to transport the sick child to a hospital.
In 1926, he established himself as a garage owner in Valcourt, devoting his spare time to researching and developing vehicles that could travel on snow. That same year, the inventor became an entrepreneur and founded L'Auto-Neige Bombardier, which was incorporated in 1942.
In the Arctic, the snowmobile changed the hunting, herding and trapping patterns of the Inuit. The vehicle largely replaced the dogsled. The snowmobile also gave Canadians a new form of winter recreation. This encouraged winter tourism and the year-round use of cottages.
Communication/Entertainment
| Invention | Description |
|---|
| Television Camera | Invented by F.C.P. Henroteau in 1934 |
| Telephone | Invented in 1876 by Alexander Graham Bell |
| Telephone Handset | Invented by Cyril Duquet in 1878 |
| Tone-to-Pulse Converter | Invented by Michael Cowpland in 1974, to use rotary phones in modern button phone systems. |
Ski-Doo
| Ski-Doo XRS 800 |
|---|
| Product type | Snowmobile |
|---|
| Owner | Bombardier Recreational Products |
| Country | Canada |
| Introduced | 1959 |