https://auto-zer.com/uploads/peugeot...phaeton-02.jpg
has some similarities and were made in various styles i think
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https://auto-zer.com/uploads/peugeot...phaeton-02.jpg
has some similarities and were made in various styles i think
Surely one of the most distinguishing features is the driving position and the fact that there is a passenger seat in front of the driver.
Think someone's photoshopped the horse out [emoji848]
I have circled where the lettering is, enlarge the image you provided, and you will firstly see 4V at the end, and follow back from there for other lettering. Looking at it again this morning before what looks to be clifford, is, or what appears as, Michel. The a we use for Michael commonly today looks to be missing. There was much flamboyance too with the way writing occurred back then. Generally you would say the writing is cursive ( the keyboard and typewriter before it are to blame, for the boring writing we see today :) ) and the h has a extension toward what might be the e
It has just occurred to me that if the front flap does fold up, that the two projections on the bottom might be rear view mirrors. :rolleyes:
Time displacement .....
Thanks everyone for your input, I finally found it (not quite sure how, more than a bit of luck involved).
May I present the 1901 Arrol Johnston
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...e2aeb8e0_o.jpg
Yes that's it for sure, a good find may though be a 1902 model as pictured here, but not a lot of difference, but is the Dog cart model they produced.