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1958 Daimler-Benz takes over
Auto Union GmbH |
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At the instigation of leading entrepreneur
Friedrich Karl Flick, Daimler-Benz AG acquired the majority
of and, subsequently, the remaining shares in Auto Union
GmbH on 24 April 1958. From this date until the end
of 1967, Auto Union was a fully owned subsidiary of
the Stuttgart-based Daimler Group. |
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1957 NSU returns to car manufacturing |
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Following an absence of almost thirty
years, NSU returned to car manufacturing in 1957. The
company deliberately opted for a small car, designed
for average earners and motorcycle owners. The NSU Prinz
was unveiled at the 1957 German Motor Show and, from
this date on, started to offset the losses on the collapsing
motorcycle market. |
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1955 NSU is the world's biggest
cycle manufacturer |
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In 1955, NSU Werke AG in Neckarsulm proudly
announced a total production volume of 342,583 two-wheeled
vehicles (including 45,747 bicycles). This made NSU
the world's leading manufacturer of two-wheelers. At
the same time, motorcycle euphoria had reached its climax.
As their wealth increased, customers became more and
more demanding about their personal mode of transport.
The car became the new people's dream in the economic
miracle years. |
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1953 DKW "Sonderklasse"
with three-cylinder engine |
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Auto Union launched a new three-cylinder
model in time for the 1953 German Motor Show. This went
by the name of "3=6 Sonderklasse". It was
developed before the war in Chemnitz and was supposed
to go into volume production in 1940. The name 3=6 referred
to the fact that a three-cylinder two-stroke engine
had the power characteristic of a six-cylinder four-stroke
engine thanks to twice the number of combustion cycles.
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1951 NSU motorcycle sets world
record |
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As early as 1945, a modest number of
motorcycles were built again at NSU in Neckarsulm. Within
just a few years the plant developed to become one of
the most important manufacturers in this sector. NSU
motorcycles were state of the art. On 12 April 1951
the motorcycle racer Wilhelm Herz succeeded in setting
a new world record on a section of the Munich-Ingolstadt
autobahn by reaching a speed of 290 km/h on a supercharged
500 cc NSU racing motorcycle. |
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1950 The first DKW passenger
car after the war |
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In August 1950 Auto Union produced its
first post-war passenger car. This was the DKW Meisterklasse
F 89 P, and was available as a saloon and a four-seater
Karmann convertible. Since the facilities in Ingolstadt
were not adequate for the production of this model,
Auto Union used the premises of the company Rhein-metall-Borsig
AG in Düsseldorf. DKW vehicles were built there
until the end of 1961. |
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1949 A new start in Ingolstadt:
Auto Union GmbH |
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Loans from the Bavarian state government
and Marshall Plan aid helped a new car manufacturing
plant to be set up in Ingolstadt. Auto Union GmbH was
established in Ingolstadt on 3 September 1949. Based
on established DKW principles - front-wheel drive and
two-stroke engine - production of a small but sturdy
125 cc motorcycle and a DKW delivery van started the
same year. |
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1948 Dismantlement and expropriation |
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On the orders of the Soviet military
administration in Germany, the Saxon plants of Auto
Union were dismantled in 1945 as reparations. Following
this, the company's entire assets were expropriated
without compensation. On 17 August 1948 Auto Union AG
of Chemnitz was deleted from the Commercial Register. |
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1959 Start-up of the new plant
in Ingolstadt |
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With Auto Union having stopped all motorcycle
production activities in autumn 1958, its new car plant
in Ingolstadt went into operation in the summer of 1959.
This was one of the most modern production facilities
in Europe. In 1962 the Auto Union plant in Düsseldorf
was sold to Daimler-Benz. |
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