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Darlington Motor Factors

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160 North Road
Darlington, Co. Durham
DL1 2EJ



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motor

1. a comparatively small and powerful engine, esp. an internal-combustion engine in an automobile, motorboat, or the like.
2. any self-powered vehicle.
3. a person or thing that imparts motion, esp. a contrivance, as a steam engine, that receives and modifies energy from some natural source in order to utilize it in driving machinery.
4. Also called electric motor. Elect.a machine that converts electrical energy into mechanical energy, as an induction motor.
5. motors, stocks or bonds in automobile companies.
1. centrifugal, motor, efferent , motorial
usage: conveying information to the muscles from the CNS; "motor nerves"
2. motive, motor, causative
usage: causing or able to cause motion; "a motive force"; "motive power"; "motor energy"
1. drive, motor, travel, go, move, locomote
usage: travel or be transported in a vehicle; "We drove to the university every morning"; "They motored to London for the theater"
1. pertaining to or operated by a motor.
2. of, for, by, or pertaining to motor vehicles: motor freight.
3. designed or for automobiles, their drivers, or their passengers: The hotel has a motor lobby in its parking garage for picking up and discharging passengers.
4. causing or producing motion.
5. Physiol.conveying an impulse that results or tends to result in motion, as a nerve.
6. Psychol., Physiol. Also,motoric.of, pertaining to, or involving muscular movement: a motor response; motor images.

factors

1. factor, cause
usage: anything that contributes causally to a result; "a number of factors determined the outcome"
2. component, constituent, element, factor, ingredient, part, section, division
usage: an abstract part of something; "jealousy was a component of his character"; "two constituents of a musical composition are melody and harmony"; "the grammatical elements of a sentence"; "a key factor in her success"; "humor: an effective ingredient of a speech"
3. factor, number
usage: any of the numbers that form a product when multiplied together
4. divisor, factor, integer, whole number
usage: one of two or more integers that can be exactly divided into another integer; "what are the 4 factors of 6?"
5. agent, factor, broker, businessperson, bourgeois
usage: a businessman who buys or sells for another in exchange for a commission
6. factor, independent variable, experimental variable
usage: an independent variable in statistics
7. gene, cistron, factor, sequence
usage: a segment of DNA that is involved in producing a polypeptide chain; it can include regions preceding and following the coding DNA as well as introns between the exons; it is considered a unit of heredity; "genes were formerly called factors"

darlington

Darlington is a town in the ceremonial county of County Durham, England, and the main population centre in the Borough of Darlington. Darlington has a population of 97,838 as of 1997. On 1 April 1997, the Borough of Darlington became a unitary authority area, which separated it from the non-metropolitan county of Durham for administrative purposes.
Darlington is known for its associations with the birth of railways. This is celebrated in the town at Darlington Railway Centre and Museum. The world''s first passenger rail journey was between Shildon and Stockton-on-Tees via Darlington, on the Stockton and Darlington Railway in 1825.

The town later became an important centre for railway manufacturing, with three significant works. The largest of these was the main line locomotive works, known as North Road Shops, opened in 1863 and closed in 1966. Another was Robert Stephenson & Co. , who moved to Darlington from Newcastle upon Tyne in 1902, became Robert Stephensons & Hawthorns in 1937, were absorbed by English Electric around 1960, and closed by 1964. The third was Faverdale Wagon Works, established in 1923 and closed in 1962, which in the 1950s was a UK pioneer in the application of mass-production techniques to the manufacture of railway goods wagons.
To commemorate the town''s contribution to the railways, David Mach''s 1997 work "Train" is located alongside the A66, close to the original Stockton-Darlington railway. It is a life-size brick sculpture of a steaming locomotive emerging from a tunnel, made from 185,000 "Accrington Nori" bricks. The work had a budget of £760,000.
The Great North Road, now known as the A1, used to run directly through the centre of Darlington. The road has since been diverted to the west of the town; the original route is now the A167 via North Road in the town centre. The £5.9 m five-mile A66 Darlington Eastern Bypass opened on November 25, 1985 and is currently undergoing major reconstruction in an effort to reduce congestion at rush hour. The Darlington Eastern Transport Corridor, linking Central Park north-east of the town centre to a new roundabout on the A66, was opened in the summer of 2008. The A1 Darlington Bypass opened in May 1965.