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1938 First crash and rollover
tests |
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From 1938 Auto Union AG carried out systematic
rollover and crash tests, one of the first manufacturers
in the motor-vehicle industry to do so. Various DKW
models with sheet-metal, wooden and plastic bodyshells
were tested in order to examine the various ways in
which these bodies behave in a rollover. |
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1937 Speed records in the
Streamliner racing car |
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The Auto Union racing cars were high-tech
products in their time. They stood for supreme achievements
in motor-vehicle construction that concentrated above
all on high-performance engines, aerodynamic design
and the systematic use of lightweight construction.
The Auto Union car with streamlined fairing and an output
of 545 horsepower was the first to exceed a speed of
400 km/h on a normal road. |
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1936 A new head office in
Chemnitz |
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In 1936 the group management of Auto
Union, which had previously directed the company from
Zschopau, moved into its new main office building in
Chemnitz. In the same year, central facilities for design,
development and testing were set up in Chemnitz |
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1934 The Auto Union grand
prix racing cars |
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The new Auto Union received its greatest
popularity boost with the success of a racing car design
that was based on plans by Ferdinand Porsche. The six-cylinder
engine was installed behind the driver which had a very
beneficial effect on the vehicle's aerodynamics. |
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1933 The first Audi with front-wheel
drive |
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At the 1933 Berlin Motor Show, Auto Union
AG presented the new Audi, its first standard-size passenger
car with front-wheel drive. The company used a kind
of modular design principle for the first time and the
Wanderer six-cylinder engine. |
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1932 Auto Union AG is established |
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On 29th June 1932, the four Saxon motor-vehicle
brands Audi, DKW, Horch and Wanderer joined forces to
create Auto Union AG, which had its head office in Chemnitz.
The new company group was consequently able to serve
all market segments, from light motorcycles to luxury
saloon cars. |
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1931 The first volume-built
car with front-wheel drive |
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In August 1928 J. S. Rasmussen acquired
the majority of shares in Audiwerke AG. He had the DKW
small car with front-wheel drive produced in large numbers
at this company in Zwickau from 1931. This car also
had a wooden body covered in imitation leather and the
typical DKW two-stroke engine. This design formed the
basis for one of the most successful German small cars
of the 1930s, over 250,000 of which left the Zwickau
plant up to 1942. |
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1941 Armaments production |
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With the development and production of
special vehicles for military purposes, Auto Union became
an important supplier of vehicles to the armed forces
in the mid-1930s. Following the outbreak of war, civilian
production was interrupted in May 1940. After this,
the company produced exclusively for military purposes. |
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