In its first full year of production, 1909, about 18,000 Model Ts were built.
It would make today's supercomputers as obsolete as Model Ts.
By 1915 Ford had built a million of his Model Ts; by 1925 more than 9,000 were being assembled in a single day.
In a world mostly without mechanized cultivators, Model Ts filled a vacuum.
Its durability was phenomenal, and many Model Ts and their parts remain in running order nearly a century later.
Model Ts are the most basic brass car, with good parts availability, and they are fun to drive.
The first few hundred Model Ts had a water pump, but it was eliminated early in production.
Between 1908 and May 26, 1927, a total of 15,007,033 Model Ts had been produced.
The first Model Ts were built in this building.
Until the development of the assembly line, which mandated black because of its quicker drying time, Model Ts were available in other colors, including red.