Adler (cars and motorcycle) explained

Adler was a German bicycle, automobile and motorcycle manufacturer from 1880 until 1957. The 'Adler' name is German for 'eagle'. Adlerwerke vormals Heinrich Kleyer (‘Adler Works formerly [known as] Heinrich Kleyer’) was a German manufacturer established by Heinrich Kleyer in Frankfurt am Main.

The factory in Frankfurt-Gallus still exists and was restored in the late 1990s for use as an office building. It also houses the Gallustheater and a restaurant.

History

The Adler factory produced bicycles (from 1880), typewriters, sewing machines motorcycles, aircraft and calculators in addition to cars. Before World War I, the company used De Dion two- and four-cylinder engines in cars that ranged from 1032 cc to 9081 cc; beginning in 1902 (the year Edmund Rumpler became technical director),[1] they used their own engines as well. These cars, driven by Erwin Kleyer and Otto Kleyer (sons of the company founder Heinrich Kleyer) and by Alfred Theves won many sporting events. In the 1920s, Karl Irion raced many Adlers; popular models of the period included the 2298 cc, 1550 cc, and 4700 cc four-cylinders and the 2580 cc six-cylinders. A few of the Standard models, built between 1927 and 1934, featured Gropius-designed coachwork. The Adler Standard 6, which entered volume production in 1927, had a 2540 cc or 2916 cc six-cylinder engine, while the Adler Standard 8 which appeared a year later use a 3887 cc eight-cylinder engine. The Standard 6, first seen in public at the Berlin Motor Show in October 1926 was the first Continental European car to use Lockheed hydraulic brakes (the Triumph 13/35 offered them in the UK in 1924 and Duesenberg offered them in the US in 1920), when it was fitted with an ATE-Lockheed system. 1927 to 1929 Clärenore Stinnes was the first to circumnavigate the world by car, in an Adler Standard 6.[2]

In December 1930, Adler assigned the German engineer Josef Ganz, who was also editor-in-chief of Motor-Kritik magazine, as a consultant engineer. In the first months of 1931, Ganz constructed a lightweight Volkswagen prototype at Adler with a tubular chassis, a mid-mounted engine, and independent wheel suspension with swing-axles at the rear. After completion in May 1931, Ganz nicknamed his new prototype Maikäfer (May Beetle). After a shift in management at Adler, further development of the Maikäfer was stopped as the company's new technical director Hans Gustav Röhr concentrated on front-wheel driven cars.

In the 1930s, the company introduced front-wheel drive Trumpf and Trumpf-Junior models, ranging from 995 cc to 1645 cc four-cylinder flat-head sv engines. These gained many successes in races, including in the Le Mans race. The 1943 cc Favorit, the 2916 cc six-cylinder Diplomat (featuring 65 hp (48 kW) at 3800 rpm, and the 1910 cc four-cylinder and 2494 cc six-cylinder models (with Ambi-Budd and Karmann bodywork) were all rear-driven; these were built until World War II. The last new car introduced by Adler was the 2.5 Liter of 1937; it had a six-cylinder engine producing 58 hp (43 kW). Thanks to a streamlined body designed by Paul Jaray, this car could run at 125 km/h (78 mph).[3]

After World War II, a decision was made to not resume automobile construction. Motorcycle production resumed in 1949 and continued for eight years, leading to the production of the MB 250S. As part of war reparations to the Allies, Adler motorcycle designs were ceded to Britain; however it is an urban myth that the Adler designs formed the basis of Ariel's[4] Arrow and Leader models. Increasingly, Adler focused on the manufacture of office equipment. The company associated with Triumph to form Triumph-Adler, and was taken over by Grundig in 1957, then later by Olivetti.[5] In 1969 Adler was acquired by Litton Industries.

In 1993, Olivetti sold Adlerwerke AG, which is still listed on the stock exchange, with the entire historical factory premises in Frankfurt to real estate investor Roland Ernst and construction company Philipp Holzmann. The existing typewriter production was initially relocated and finally discontinued in 1998; the site with the listed buildings was sold separately to subsidiaries of the investors. In 1999 HBAG Real Estate (formerly Kühltransit AG) took over 98.3 percent of the shares of Adlerwerke AG from the financially troubled Philipp Holzmann AG.

Adlerwerke AG changed its name to Adler Real Estate in 2002 and have been active in real estate project development since then.

Car models

Typ Construction Time Cylinders Capacity Power Top speed
Vis-à-Vis 1900–1903 1 400 cc 2,6 kW (3,5 PS) 300NaN0
450NaN0 1900–1903 1 510 cc 3,3 kW (4,5 PS) 350NaN0
80NaN0 1901–1903 1 865 cc 5,9 kW (8 PS) 400NaN0
24/28 PS 1904–1905 4 inline 4,016 cc 20,6 kW (28 PS) 650NaN0
8/12 (8/14) PS 1904–1906 2 inline 2,008 cc 8,8–10,3 kW (12–14 PS) 500NaN0
4/8 PS 1906–1907 2 V 1,032 cc 5,9 kW (8 PS) 550NaN0
5/9 PS 1907–1909 2 inline 1,134 cc 6,6 kW (9 PS) 600NaN0
8/15 PS 1907–1910 4 inline 2,011 cc 11 kW (15 PS) 550NaN0
11/18 PS 1907–1910 4 inline 2,799 cc 13,2 kW (18 PS) 550NaN0
23/50 PS 1909–1912 4 inline 5,800 cc 42,6 kW (58 PS)
19/45 PS 1909–1912 4 inline 4,840 cc 35 kW (48 PS)
13/30 PS 1909–1912 4 inline 3,180 cc 25,7 kW (35 PS)
10/28 PS 1909–1912 4 inline 2,612 cc 22 kW (30 PS)
K 7/15 PS 1910–1913 4 inline 1,768 cc 11 kW (15 PS) 600NaN0
30/70 PS 1911–1914 4 inline 7,853 cc 51 kW (70 PS) 1150NaN0
35/80 PS 1911–1914 4 inline 9,081 cc 62,5 kW (85 PS)
K 5/13 PS 1911–1920 4 inline 1,292 cc 9,6–10,3 kW (13–14 PS) 550NaN0
20/50 PS 1912–1914 4 inline 5,229 cc 40 kW (55 PS) 1050NaN0
15/40 PS 1913–1914 4 inline 3,866 cc 33 kW (45 PS) 900NaN0
9/24 PS 1913–1914 4 inline 2,313 cc 17,6 kW (24 PS) 700NaN0
25/55 PS 1913–1914 4 inline 6,457 cc 44 kW (60 PS)
KL 6/16 PS 1913–1920 4 inline 1,551 cc 11,8 kW (16 PS) 600NaN0
12/30 PS 1914 4 inline 3,115 cc 25,7 kW (35 PS)
9/24 (9/30) PS 1921–1924 4 inline 2,298 cc 17,6–22 kW (24–30 PS) 650NaN0–750NaN0
12/34 (12/40) PS 1921–1924 4 inline 3,115 cc 25–29 kW (34–40 PS) 850NaN0
18/60 PS 1921–1924 4 inline 4,712 cc 44 kW (60 PS) 1000NaN0
6/22 PS 1922–1923 4 inline 1,550 cc 16 kW (22 PS) 750NaN0
10/50 PS 1925–1927 6 inline 2,580 cc 37 kW (50 PS) 900NaN0
18/80 PS 1925–1927 6 inline 4,704 cc 59 kW (80 PS) 1000NaN0
6/25 PS 1925–1928 4 inline 1,550 cc 18 kW (25 PS) 800NaN0
Standard 6 1927–1928 6 inline 2,540 cc 33 kW (45 PS) 850NaN0–900NaN0
Standard 8 1928–1933 8 inline 3,887 cc 51–59 kW (70–80 PS) 1000NaN0–1050NaN0
1928–1934 6 inline 2,916 cc 37 kW (50 PS) 850NaN0–900NaN0
Favorit 1929–1933 4 inline 1,943 cc 25,7 kW (35 PS) 800NaN0
Primus 1,5 A 1932–1934 4 inline 1,504 cc 23,5–24,2 kW (32–33 PS) 900NaN0
Trumpf 1,5 AV 1932–1934 4 inline 1,504 cc 23,5–24,2 kW (32–33 PS) 950NaN0
Favorit 2U 1933–1934 4 inline 1,943 cc 29 kW (40 PS) 900NaN0
1933–1934 6 inline 2,916 cc 44 kW (60 PS) 1000NaN0
Achtzylinder 1933–1934 8 inline 3,887 cc 59 kW (80 PS) 1050NaN0
Trumpf Sport 1933–1935 4 inline 1,645 cc 34,5 kW (47 PS) 1150NaN0
Primus 1,7 A 1933–1936 4 inline 1,645 cc 28 kW (38 PS) 950NaN0
Trumpf 1,7 AV 1933–1936 4 inline 1,645 cc 28 kW (38 PS) 1000NaN0
Diplomat 1934–1938 6 inline 2,916 cc 44–48 kW (60–65 PS) 1000NaN0–1050NaN0
1934–1941 4 inline 995 cc 18,4 kW (25 PS) 900NaN0
1935–1937 4 inline 995 cc 20,6 kW (28 PS) 1100NaN0
Trumpf 1,7 EV 1936–1938 4 inline 1,645 cc 28 kW (38 PS) 1020NaN0
Primus 1,7 E 1937–1938 4 inline 1,645 cc 28 kW (38 PS) 1000NaN0
Adler 2.5-litre 1937–1940 6 inline 2,494 cc 42,6 kW (58 PS) 1250NaN0
1938–1939 6 inline 2,494 cc 59 kW (80 PS) 1500NaN0
2 Liter 1938–1940 4 inline 1,910 cc 33 kW (45 PS) 1100NaN0

Galleries

Adler motorcycles

External links

Notes and References

  1. Lyons, Pete (January 1988). "10 Best Ahead-of-Their-Time Machines". Car and Driver. Vol. 49, no. 1. p. 73.
  2. Winter, Michael. PferdeStärken: die Lebensliebe der Clärenore Stinnes. Reinbek bei Hamburg: Rowohlt Taschenbuch, 2001. .
  3. Odin, L. C. World in Motion 1939: The Whole of the Year's Automobile Production. Manila: Belvedere Publishing, 2015. ASIN: B00ZLN91ZG. (E-book.)
  4. Ariel was owned by BSA
  5. http://cybermotorcycle.com/euro/brands/adler.htm History web-page