1907 - 1925 1926 - 1938 1939 -1945 1946 - 1948 1949 - 1958 1959 - 1964


1926 to 1938: First success

Joseph-Armand returns to Valcourt in 1926 to open his own garage. His father lends him money, and his family helps build the garage. He's only 19, but his remarkable ability to solve any mechanical problem, whether dealing with cars, bench saws, or agricultural pumps, earns him an outstanding reputation throughout the region. His success allows him to pay back his father's loan by 1929.

A concern through his youth is the isolation of Quebec villages in winter, which prevented motorized travel. Joseph-Armand takes advantage of his seasonal business to put his genius to work seeking a solution to snowbound winters.


Untiring research

The challenge is to design a motorized vehicle light enough to travel on snow, and equipped with a motor, traction, and suspension adapted to the changing consistency of snow. For 10 years Joseph-Armand toils determinedly on the project, often late at night and even on Sundays. His trials and research multiply, eating into his savings and attracting mockery from observers when partial advancements end in failure. But his intuitive and reasoned methodology leaves no room for doubt and sarcasm. Year after year, he develops a variety of prototypes by adapting automobiles.

Car motors are too heavy for the light vehicles he wants to design, so in 1933 he builds a lighter 45-kg motor fitted on new prototypes for one or two persons. But the new motor tends to overheat, and the inventor has to return to the car engines ­ and the design of heavy vehicles.


Joseph-Armand's son Yvon dies of peritonitis at the age of two in the winter of 1934, when the family is unable to get him to the hospital for treatment. Urged on by the pain of his loss, Joseph-Armand increases his efforts to overcome rural isolation in winter. The next year he uses a cogged gear wheel, the sprocket made of wood covered with rubber, to pull the track. The latter is comprised of two rubber bands connected by steel cross-links. This revolutionary sprocket wheel/track system is at long last the solution for snow travel.


1935 Vehicle



Patent and production

The 1935 sprocket wheel/track system is Joseph-Armand Bombardier's first major invention. Being aware of its importance and familiar with trade laws, he requests a patent from Ottawa on December 19, 1936. Six months later, on June 29, 1937, he receives a positive response from the Patent Office. Triumph! Joseph-Armand's efforts are finally recognized, and his dreams are within grasp.

A difficult choice now awaits him: should he exploit the patent himself or sell it at a handsome profit to an automobile manufacturer? The visionary entrepreneur opts to develop his patent in Valcourt, and in so doing becomes an industrialist. The Garage Bombardier was expanded and transformed into a production plant and will now operate year round, bringing jobs and prosperity to the small town.

The first seven production snowmobiles emerge from the new factory in the winter of 1936-37. They bear name B71 ­ B for Bombardier and 7 for the number of passengers ­ and are well received by customers. But the inventor is always seeking to improve his products. He notices that an excessive amount of snow and ice accumulates in the vehicle's wheel spokes. Joseph-Armand solves the problem by assembling a press that makes solid wheels, showing once again his capacity for innovation and self-sufficiency, as well as his preoccupation with quality. The first B71 snowmobiles equipped with solid wheels appear in 1940.


Personalized sales

Demand drives production upward over the following years, and Joseph-Armand strengthens that demand by giving vehicle demonstrations. He can be seen winding his way around the province in his B71 snowmobile, showing its potential ­ and his keen business sense.

While touring the province, Joseph-Armand parks his B71 snowmobile near the offices of local newspapers ­ ensuring he gets free publicity.



Joseph-Armand and a B71, 1936


  View a B71 in action!

 


Garage Bombardier


In 1929, Joseph-Armand Bombardier marries Yvonne Labrecque. 


1928 vehicle, with a metal track on the two rear wheels.


1931 vehicle, with a cotton track on rear wheels.

 


Sprocket wheel system: cogged wheels encased in rubber which drive two rubber treads linked by steel cross bars.


The first customers for the B71 snowmobile are rural veterinarians and doctors, innkeepers, and funeral directors.


A B71 snowmobile for
Perfection Ice Cream.

 

 

return | next
 
Home | General Information | Search | FAQ | Contact Us | Français
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Legal Notice © 1997 - 2008, Musée J. Armand Bombardier. All rights reserved.
Email
: info@museebombardier.com