Convertible
The King Midget was produced from 1946 through 1970 by the Midget Motors Corporation. While Civil Air Patrol pilots during WWII, Claud Dry and Dale Orcutt made plans for their post-war enterprise. Their goal was to build a lightweight, inexpensive, basic kit car. The design was so simple that it had a 1-speed automatic transmission of their own design. Power was supplied to only one rear wheel, eliminating the need for a differential.
In 1946, the King Midget MK I sold for a mere $270. What the purchaser received was an instruction manual, chassis, springs, axles, steering and patterns for a sheet metal body. The kit did not come with an engine; that was up to the buyer to supply. Any air-cooled 1-cylinder powerplant would do. A completely assembled car was available at a higher price and included a 6-horsepower Wisconsin engine. By 1956, the Midget Motors Corporation had surpassed the MK I with the larger, more powerful MKII that was available in either kit or assembled form, the latter priced at about $550.
Plans were laid that year to introduce the MKIII, the still larger version on a wheelbase stretched from 72 to 76.5 inches. This King Midget came with 4-wheel hydraulic brakes for the first time and a more powerful engine rated at 9.2 horsepower. They sold for just under $900 when the price of one of the newly introduced economy cars from Detroit was around $1,800.
The introduction of the Rambler from American Motors during late 1957 and Falcon from Ford, Lark from Studebaker, Corvair from Chevrolet and similar small cars from Detroit the next year kept King Midget production low for a total of about 5,000 built through the end of production in 1969 due to bankruptcy.