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Thread: Leon Cibié

  1. #1
    Lighting Specialist jaudette3's Avatar
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    Leon Cibié

    I enjoy history but this post may test the outer limits of your geekiness. It's a short write-up on the life of Leon Cibié that I found interesting. Who says the French can't do anything?

    Cheers,
    John

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    Taken from Holden Vintage & Classic

    Leon Cibié

    With a passion for engineering and electricity, Leon Cibie joined a small electrical installation company as an apprentice. At that time, electricity was still a luxury and the lucky few able to afford it called on specialists for its installation.

    He happily became a technician and was highly enthusiastic about all new technologies, particularly those in electrical applications in the aviation and automobile industries. At the beginning of the First World War, he was asked to develop and manufacture lighting systems for night-flying aircraft. He then broke new ground by inventing the world's first mobile lighting system, in which the generator was controlled by a voltage regulator and was used to light-takeoff and landing strips.

    The Cibie company was founded in 1919. At that time, the major industrialized countries, and especially France, were developing their automobile industries. Most manufacturers still produced retail parts for garage owners. Cibie nevertheless accepted the challenge and Renault was its customer for over 20 years.

    Pierre Cibie, Leon's son, was born in 1908. After graduating from Ecole Polytechnique, he became the company's lighting specialist and presented his first lecture in 1929 to the Academy of Sciences. He provided the family business with his technical expertise and knowledge of the law regarding lighting. He was also responsible for developing the European code. He was also an aviation enthusiast and held a pilots license, even winning the Le Touquet aircraft rally when he was 18 years old.

    At the end of the Second World War, the Cibie factory was located in Rue Haxo, in the 20th arrondissement of Paris. At this time, the public was still unaware of the Cibie brand. Following the liberation of France, and the death of Louis Renault, the company was nationalized.

    The Renault 4CV entered production and Cibie was then appointed Renault's sole supplier of production headlamps for all vehicles (for both the Renault 4 and the Juva 4). The factory in Rue Haxo was now too small to keep up with the massive growth in Renault production and it was transferred to Bobigny, where it covers nearly 12,000 m2. In addition to Renault, Cibie's customers now include Peugeot and Simca as well as many others.

    As well as producing headlamps, the company also specializes in producing fog lamps. The first halogen headlamp, which used quartz halogen, dates back to 1966. It was then that Marie Claire Merenda, the daughter of Pierre Cibie, joined the family business and took charge of the communication department. Cibie then became a partner of the leading rally teams in the Cevennes Rally, Monte Carlo Rally, etc.
    Last edited by jaudette3; 01-25-2021 at 12:37 PM.
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  2. #2
    Senior Member 300090's Avatar
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    At 95, Pierre Cibié was still inventing ...

    April 8, 2003:

    Pierre Cibié retired twenty-seven years ago, yet he swims 400 meters three mornings a week and plays golf the other four days!
    Every afternoon, he finds himself in his small office.
    A few white sheets and drawings. He specifies: " It is not a question of working for today, but for in five years. "
    Last year, it again won first prize at the Geneva Invention Show with the Filfree, a wireless electricity system.
    "I have been very spoiled by life," laughs the little man greedily.
    Like a kid, he suddenly wakes up to show you his youngest child. A plastic box patched up with sticker.
    “I called it the Télédyn: we will plug it into his cell phone and when we walk, while moving, it recharges your mobile! "

    Pierre Cibié died in 2006 at the age of 98.

    Google translation of a press article by Par Bertrand Parent dated April 8, 2003.
    Read the original and complete article in French here: https://www.leparisien.fr/societe/a-...2003980066.php

  3. #3
    Lighting Specialist jaudette3's Avatar
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    Thanks for sharing that. I find that most folks involved in automotive lighting are not ordinary.

    Pierre was Leon's son.

    Cheers,
    John
    Lighting Resources for Hardcore Air-Cooled Porsche Enthusiasts”
    ——-
    John Audette - Porsche Lighting Anorak
    AC Shop: BEST-IN-CLASS Air Cooled 911 Lighting Parts => 911BestInClass.com
    AC Site: The Air Cooled 911 Light Resource => AudetteCollection.com
    Instagram: Please Follow => AC Shop Instagram

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