RE: Auto Union: Audi's ancestor

RE: Auto Union: Audi's ancestor

Friday 2nd February 2007

Auto Union: Audi's ancestor

With a rare Auto Union GP car about to be auctioned, Andrew Noakes looks back at the 75 year-old company’s history.


C Type at Goodwood
C Type at Goodwood

Audi’s ancestor, Auto Union, was formed 75 years ago this year and, with a rare Auto Union Grand Prix car going under the hammer on 17 February, we look back at the company’s history.

Ever wondered why Audi’s logo consists of four rings? Something to do with quattro four-wheel drive, maybe, or four-cylinder engines? Not even close. Audi’s interlinked four rings actually stand for the four German car manufacturers which merged together to form Auto Union in 1932, 75 years ago.

August Horch with his 853 in 1936
August Horch with his 853 in 1936
Hans Stuck hillclimbing in a 1934 A Type
Hans Stuck hillclimbing in a 1934 A Type
Jørgen Rasmussen
Jørgen Rasmussen
Rosemeyer and Muller's 1937 C Type at Donington
Rosemeyer and Muller's 1937 C Type at Donington
Bernd Rosemeyer in a C Type at Donington in 1937
Bernd Rosemeyer in a C Type at Donington in 1937
Nuvolari in a 1938 D Type
Nuvolari in a 1938 D Type
DKW Junior and Auto Union 1000 in the 1960s at the Brandenburg Gate
DKW Junior and Auto Union 1000 in the 1960s at the Brandenburg Gate
1960 Audi F103 S - ding dong
1960 Audi F103 S - ding dong
D Type, C Type and A Type
D Type, C Type and A Type

August Horch founded two of those companies. The first, simply called Horch, began trading in 1899. Though the cars Horch built were widely admired, the company’s finances were always shaky and in 1909 Horch fell out with the firm’s board of directors. Forced out of the company he had created, Horch began again with a new car company which he called Audi, based on the Latin translation of his name. While the Horch company introduced a new line of lower-priced cars powered by 66-degree V8 engines, Audi built four- and six-cylinder cars which proved successful in the long-distance sporting trials of the day.

United in the 1930s

The other two car makers involved in Auto Union were Wanderer and DKW. Wanderer began in 1911 with small four-cylinder cars and later a more luxurious six, while the DKW steam equipment company founded by Dutch engineer Jørgen Skafte Rasmussen in 1916 branched out into motorcycles, and then front-drive two-stroke cars.

In 1928 Rasmussen bought Audi, and in 1932 Audi, DKW and Wanderer were brought together with Horch under the umbrella of Auto Union – though all four brands continued to build cars under their own names. It wasn’t until 1934 that Auto Union really hit the headlines.

That year a new Grand Prix racing formula came into effect, with no specific limit on engine size but stipulating a maximum car weight of 750kg.

A radical mid-engined design by Ferdinand Porsche was adopted by Auto Union and developed with funding from the new Nazi government, and it made its public debut at the Berlin Motor Show early in 1934. Its cigar-like shape, low build and supercharged 4.4-litre V16 engine (developing 295bhp) made it the talk of the show.

But the Auto Unions, proudly carrying the new four-ring logo, flattered to deceive: at their race debut that May two of the three cars retired with mechanical problems, and the third was beaten by a pair of Alfa Romeos. The cars came good, fittingly, in the German Grand Prix at the Nürburgring, where Hans Stuck won comfortably.

More race wins and a series of victories in prestigious European hill-climbs cemented a triumphant debut season.

Auto Union wins on-track

For 1935 the V16 Auto Union was refined into a ‘B-type’, with new exhaust systems, modified suspension and larger 4.95-litre engines producing 375bhp. The rival Mercedes-Benz W25s – front-engined straight-eights, also built with a share of German government funding – had even more power and dominated the season, winning five of the seven major races that year. Daimler-Benz then developed a short-chassis car to reduce weight, but in the process ruined their cars’ handling; Auto Union surged back to the fore with a C-type car with a big-bore 6.0-litre engine developing 520bhp. Bernd Rosemeyer dominated the season in his C-type, and continued the good form into 1937 and the final year of the 750kg formula.

The new Grand Prix rules for 1938 stipulated a minimum weight of 800kg, and a maximum engine size of three litres supercharged or 4.5-litres ‘unblown’. Ferdinand Porsche was now busy designing what would become the Volkswagen, so a new Auto Union D-type was drawn up by Austrian engineer Robert Eberan von Eberhorst.

Eberan moved the driver and engine closer to the centre of the car, removing the central fuel tank of the C-type and instead mounting horizontal fuel panniers either side of the cockpit.

A new 3.0-litre V12 engine was designed, with a camshaft on each bank of cylinders to operate the exhaust valves and a shared intake cam in the centre of the ‘V’, and a new magnesium supercharger. The new V12 generated 460bhp, despite its much-reduced capacity. With de Dion suspension replacing the previous rear swing-axles and a more helpful driving position, the D-type was considerably easier to drive on the limit than the earlier Auto Unions.

But the team was rocked by the death of Bernd Rosemeyer in a record attempt, and it was late in the season before the great Tazio Nuvolari recorded the first D-type wins. Nuvolari and Hans Stuck added more victories in 1939, before Europe descended into war.

Post-war blues

Auto Union’s Zwickau home was part of the post-war East Germany, and the company re-established itself in Dusseldorf (while the Zwickau works later built motorcycles and then the Trabant). Two-stroke front-wheel drive cars based on pre-war designs were sold under the DKW name, with some success.

In 1959 the company came under the control of Daimler-Benz, which revived the Auto Union name for a new two-stroke road car and then set about developing a modern four-cylinder, four-stroke engine for a new family of cars while at the same time moving production to a new factory at Ingolstadt. The new engine saw service in heavily revised version of the last of the DKWs – but it carried the Audi name, which had not been seen since before the war. By then Daimler-Benz had started to worry about Auto Union’s viability, and had sold the company in stages to Volkswagen.

The new owner ‘retired’ the DKW name, and concentrated on a more modern and more upmarket Audi brand – with front-wheel drive, water cooling and more luxurious accommodation than any VW could offer.

Today’s Audis, technically advanced and meticulously manufactured as they are, can’t claim more than the vaguest of links with the Auto Unions of the past.

But Audi is, at least, proud of its heritage.

It owns an impressive collection of real and recreated Auto Union racers, including a 1938 D-type – similar to the 1939 car which Christie’s will auction at Retromobile in Paris on 17 February. That car is valued at 8.8-12million euro (up to £8million) and is expected to break the current record for a car sold at auction, £5.5million by a Bugatti Royale sold by Christie’s in 1987.

Worth remembering the next time you see a four-ringed badge…

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Copyright © Andrew Noakes 2007

Author
Discussion

r5gttgaz

Original Poster:

7,897 posts

225 months

Friday 2nd February 2007
quotequote all
Article said:
Horch began again with a new car company which he called Audi, based on the Latin translation of his name.


I thought it was called Audi as in Auto Union Deutsche Industrie?

mafioso

2,369 posts

219 months

Friday 2nd February 2007
quotequote all
So, what sort of 0-60 are we talking here!? Top speed? Would skinny tyres like them struggle to put the power down??

rcarr

944 posts

215 months

Friday 2nd February 2007
quotequote all
0-60 in you wouldn't believe and top speed c180mph.

FourWheelDrift

89,361 posts

289 months

Friday 2nd February 2007
quotequote all
rcarr said:
0-60 in you wouldn't believe and top speed c180mph.


190mph at Reims, Spa (long straights). Could get up to 170mph on Starkeys Straight (when it was longer) for the Donington British Grand Prix in 1937.

Eric Mc

122,681 posts

270 months

Friday 2nd February 2007
quotequote all
The closed wheel streamlined version used in the record attempts (on autobahns, not deserts) achieved over 240 mph.


Edited by Eric Mc on Friday 2nd February 13:14

fourwheelsteer

869 posts

257 months

Friday 2nd February 2007
quotequote all
I think Horch means "hear" and Audi "listen". If you think about audio equipment, what is it for?

900T-R

20,405 posts

262 months

Friday 2nd February 2007
quotequote all
fourwheelsteer said:
I think Horch means "hear" and Audi "listen".



Not quite, one is German for 'listen' and the other its translation into Latin. When August Horch left the company he founded, he obviously couldn't use his own surname for his new venture anymore so went for this instead.

drgp

202 posts

219 months

Friday 2nd February 2007
quotequote all
Does anyone know what the estimate is on this car?

I know that the merc silver arrows have been changing hands privately for over £20m for some years. But what about these?

Marquis_Rex

7,377 posts

244 months

Friday 2nd February 2007
quotequote all
Kind of OT:I read somewhere that the original tooling for the Great classic Detroit car manufacturer Rickenbacher was sold to Audi in the 1920s, after Studebker and other American manufacturers drove Rickenbacher sales down by launching an agressive advertising campaign critisizing the cars: The Rickenbacher was fitted with 4 wheel brakes- which alot of other Detroit manufacturers didn't have- the others stated that it was dangerous to have 4 wheel brakes as the car could topple over forwards end over end laugh

rcarr

944 posts

215 months

Friday 2nd February 2007
quotequote all
drgp said:
Does anyone know what the estimate is on this car?

I know that the merc silver arrows have been changing hands privately for over £20m for some years. But what about these?



Supposedly the last 1 to be sold was Colin Crabbe's one in the 70s, he sold it to a certain Mr B. Ecclestone for an undisclosed sum. Apparently my lecturer from Cranfield Uni drove that same car in the 60s! Lucky so and so!

ettore

4,284 posts

257 months

Friday 2nd February 2007
quotequote all
rcarr said:
drgp said:
Does anyone know what the estimate is on this car?

I know that the merc silver arrows have been changing hands privately for over £20m for some years. But what about these?



Supposedly the last 1 to be sold was Colin Crabbe's one in the 70s, he sold it to a certain Mr B. Ecclestone for an undisclosed sum. Apparently my lecturer from Cranfield Uni drove that same car in the 60s! Lucky so and so!


Well this one was last sold for about £10M. I can`t remeber when but it wasn`t that long ago. I think the estimate is around £6.5M but, at this level that is nothing more than a figure to quote in the literature!

Redneck Rocket

998 posts

212 months

Friday 2nd February 2007
quotequote all
Official estimate from Christie's is £11.5m. There is some speculation that sale has pretty much already been arranged, but that the 'buyer' has agreed for it to go to auction for Christie's benefit. But then, it's only speculation...

Belleair302

6,908 posts

212 months

Friday 2nd February 2007
quotequote all
One Mr B. Ecclestone has caused a stir because he purchased the old chassis to one of these cars and had it rebuilt using more modern materials, thus upsetting purists. There was an article a couple of months ago about this car in Octane I believe and the HGPCA and VSCC are not happy! FYI bernie has the most amazing collection of racing cars anywhere and keeps many of them at Biggin Hill. Ferrari's are a passion!

Zebs

30 posts

216 months

Saturday 3rd February 2007
quotequote all
Belleair302 said:
One Mr B. Ecclestone has caused a stir because he purchased the old chassis to one of these cars and had it rebuilt using more modern materials, thus upsetting purists. There was an article a couple of months ago about this car in Octane I believe and the HGPCA and VSCC are not happy! FYI bernie has the most amazing collection of racing cars anywhere and keeps many of them at Biggin Hill. Ferrari's are a passion!



I live in Biggin Hill, indeed there is a building on the airfield, visable from the road with bars all over the windows that is Bernie's "lockup". I would love to have a look inside, if he let me he could have a root around my garage in return!

Brink

1,505 posts

213 months

Sunday 4th February 2007
quotequote all
fourwheelsteer said:
I think Horch means "hear" and Audi "listen". If you think about audio equipment, what is it for?


Horch => Horchen : v. listen, pay attention, hark, give heed (from Babylon German e-Dictionary).

Audi : has no meaning in German, since it's a latin word.

Belleair302

6,908 posts

212 months

Sunday 4th February 2007
quotequote all
I understand from yesterday's telegraph mtoring section that this car is being sold by a Japanese software collector...could go for over 3.75 million pounds....but just think of the servicing costs if you ever ran it!

nic

30 posts

272 months

Tuesday 6th February 2007
quotequote all
Nice article, Andrew!

BTW: Rasmussen wasn't Dutch, but Danish.

Born: 30.06.1878 in Nakslov/Dänemark
1902 Study at the Technikum Mittweida and Engineer School in Zwickau
Dead: 12.08.1964 in Kopenhagen/Dänemark

dinkel

27,109 posts

263 months

Wednesday 7th February 2007
quotequote all


lick

Marquis_Rex

7,377 posts

244 months

Wednesday 7th February 2007
quotequote all
dinkel said:


lick

But still wrong wheel drive and with the engine and gearbox mounted between the 4 rings

dinkel

27,109 posts

263 months

Wednesday 7th February 2007
quotequote all
It looks glorious for a car with a setup like that.