Mustang Display Showcases 50 Years of Innovation at
National Inventors Hall of Fame Museum
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Ford and the National Inventors Hall
of Fame Museum will debut a permanent Mustang display that uniquely fuses
50 years of history by combining a 1965 Mustang and a 2015 model – both
split lengthwise – with two functional driver compartments
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Mustang was chosen as a symbol of
automotive innovation over the last 50 years
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Ford Motor Company founder Henry
Ford will be highlighted at the National Inventors Hall of Fame
DEARBORN, Mich., May 03, 2016 – Ford
and the National Inventors Hall of Fame Museum (NIHF) are set to unveil a
one-ofa-kind Mustang that marries a 1965 model to a 2015 model in a unique
side-by-side display for the National Inventors Hall of Fame Museum.
The split-personality Mustang is
part of a new, permanent Intellectual Property Power™ Exhibit at the
National Inventors Hall of Fame museum on the United States Patent and
Trademark Office Campus in Alexandria, Virginia. The Mustang, along with
other exhibits, Museum exhibits, including the Mustang, celebrate the
story of intellectual property and illuminates its significance to
progress, innovation, and culture in America, as well as how trademarks,
patents, and other forms of intellectual property make modern amenities
possible. The interactive display is designed to highlight the importance
of patents and the tremendous march of technology over the decades. It
calls out various patents in the current vehicle, as well as those in the
original pony car.
The NIHF sought out Ford as its
partner for the project because the company has played such an important
part in the long history of American innovation with the Mustang being
such an icon for half a century. Ford and its employee volunteers have
also been involved for the past 20 years with Camp Invention, a program of
NIHF. Camp Invention is one of the nation’s premier summer enrichment
programs and leverages hands-on activities to promote Science,
Technology, Engineering and Math and builds 21st century skills. When
Mustang was launched, no specific styling patents were granted. Only after
the car proved such a huge success – selling more than 1 million cars in
its first 18 months – were styling patents even considered and applied for
over time.
Click on an image below to enlarge
“Everything moved so fast in the
design and run-up to production of the original Mustang that there were no
styling patents issued back then,” says Chris Danowski, Ford director of
technology commercialization and intellectual property licensing. “Now
look at the current car; 2015 Mustang Convertible alone was granted 36
styling patents, which ensure the unique look stays with the car. It also
has many unique functional patents for things like the airbag
structures, 911 Assist® and so many other technologies baked right in.”
In 1965, Mustang utilized more than
100 of Ford’s existing functional patents. Those patents reflect some of
the touches customers loved back then, including a rear-seat speaker and a
power convertible top. Normal conveniences we now take for granted were
also involved, like Patent 3,271,540 – the origin of
Ford’s self-canceling turn signal.
Today, Mustang is a wellspring of
creative design and engineering. The car introduced the first passenger
knee airbag system packaged inside the glove box door, with 15 patents
granted. It debuted electronic line-lock, along with standard launch
control – designed to help bracket racers achieve more consistent
performance at the drag strip. Mustang incorporates features specific to
modern times, with patented relief in the seat cushion to allow a wallet
or phone in an occupant’s back pocket to protrude further into the seat
for more comfort.
Many of these patents and more will
be illustrated in the display, crafted by Classic Design Concepts, which
combines about 60 percent of the driver’s compartment of the original
Mustang and about 60 percent that of a new pony car – both including the
console area and technology of their times. The left side consists of a
reproduction 1965 left-hand-drive Mustang licensed for modern production
by Ford and built to the same specifications as the
original car – in itself an example of the licensing benefits of
intellectual property. The other side is a right-hand-drive 2015 Mustang
that is sold in several of the 150 countries where the car is now
available.
Visitors to the museum will be able
to sit in either side of the car and directly compare features and styling
details; From the AM radio, roll-up window, vent air window, and optional
retractable color keyed and seat belts available in 1965, to the working
touch screen display in the 2015 model. Some patents and other
intellectual property will be displayed on accompanying monitors and over
speakers. Visitors to the display will also be able to hear the sounds of
the original 1965 Mustang V8 engine and a 2015 Mustang V8 engine at idle.
At the May 4 unveiling ceremony,
Ford Motor Company founder Henry Ford will also be highlighted at the
National Inventors Hall of Fame.
The National Inventors Hall of Fame is the premier non-profit
organization in America dedicated to honoring legendary inventors whose
innovations and entrepreneurial endeavors have changed the world. Founded
in 1973 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office and the National
Council of Intellectual
Property Law Associations, the Hall of Fame will have 532 Inductees with
its 2016 Induction. The National Inventors Hall of Fame is located in the
Madison Building on the campus of the United States Patent and Trademark
Office, at 600 Dulany Street, Alexandria, Va. Admission is free. For more
information
on the National Inventors Hall of Fame, including Inductee nomination
forms and a full listing of Inductees, please visit www.invent.org.
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