Tuesday, April 18, 2017

1950 DKW F8 German Owners Manual


In 1945 there were 65,000 DKW cars still registered for the road in Germany. The fact that DKWs were not seized for military use during the war meant that the new Auto Union company had a substantial ready made market for repairs, service and spare parts and this lifeline carried the company through the immediate post war years. This is a 1950 reprint of the 1938 DKW F8 owners manual. In 1950 DKW had only just started production of the Schnellaster van (August 1949) and the new DKW F89P Meisteklasse wouldn't be ready until later that year. 



























Monday, April 17, 2017

1919 Slaby-Beringer Elektrowagen


DKW's pre-war car designs can trace their origin to the 1919 Slaby-Beringer Elektrowagen. Rudolf Slaby had been an aeronautical engineer during the First World War, but like many others was forced to try his hand in other industries after the Treaty of Versailles banned Germany from building aircraft. Slaby developed a small electric motor which he installed in a simple cyclecar. The cyclecar's body was self supporting plywood box.

Slaby joined forces with his cousin, Hermann Beringer, to begin building a saleable version and began shopping it around. They managed to secure a large export contract to Japan along with some small domestic sales. Unfortunately the fledgling company was adversely hit by the German economic crisis and was plunged into insolvency.

The largest domestic order of Elektrowagens was from DKW owner, Jorge Rasmussen, who ordered 20 cars in 1920. Rasmussen saw an opportunity in Slaby-Beringer's crisis and offered to buy out the company. Both Slaby and Beringer took shares in the Rasmussen Group of companies and Slaby became the chief engineer at DKW's newly formed automobile division. The Elektrowagen would form the basis of the first series of DKW cars culminating in the P-15 of 1928.