The year 2013 saw a number of significant automotive and racing milestones honored. Aston Martinโ€™s 100th anniversary and the Corvetteโ€™s 60th, by themselves occupied much of the automotive worldโ€™s attention; but there was another anniversary in 2013 that came and went with nary a whisper. Once I realized this, I was actually a bit surprised because it could be argued that the subject of this anniversary was responsible for more cumulative racing wins than perhaps any other racing company. The company I speak of is Weber Carburetors, which turned 90 years old in 2013.

Edoardo Weber was born in Torino, Italy, to Swiss parents, on November 29, 1889. In 1913, he received a mechanical engineering degree from the Universita degli Studi di Torino and subsequently went to work for Fiat in Bologna. Scarcely a year later, in 1914, Weber took up a position as a service manager for a local Fiat dealer. Because gasoline prices were extremely high in Italy during this time period, Weber soon turned his engineerโ€™s mind to the task of wrestling better fuel economy out of engines, in particular those powering Fiatโ€™s trucks. Weber soon devised a kerosene conversion kit for trucks, and by 1920 began producing these for sale. While his fledgling business enterprise was devoted to economy, he also fostered a passion for motorsport, which he actively pursued, highlighted by a 3rd place finish in the 1920 Circuito di Mugello Formula Libre race at the wheel of a Fiat 501.

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