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Encyclopedia > Zundapp
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A Zündapp KS750 Wehrmacht sidecar from the 1940s.

Zündapp was a famous German motorcycle brand. The company was originally founded in 1917 in Nuremberg by Fritz Neumeyer, together with the Friedrich Krupp AG and the machine tool manufacturer Thiel under the name "Zünder- und Apparatebau G.m.b.H." as a producer of detonators. In 1919, as the demand for weapons parts declined after World War I, Neumeyer became the sole proprietor of the company and two years later, he diversified into the construction of motorcycles. The company folded in 1984.


The first Zündapp motorcycle was the Z22 in 1921, the "Motorrad für Jedermann" (motorcycle for everybody), a simple and reliable design that was produced in large series. Zündapp's history of heavy motorcycles began in 1933 with the K-series. They introduced the closed engine case, a novelty at the time. (The "K" stands for "Kardanantrieb", i.e. fully suspended drive, which these models featured.) The series encompassed models from 200 to 800 cc displacement and was a major success, increasing Zündapp's market share in Germany from 5% in 1931 to 18% in 1937. From 1940 on, Zündapp produced more than 18'000 units of the KS750, a sidecar with a driven side wheel and a locking differential for the German Wehrmacht.


After World War II, the company gradually shifted to producing smaller machines, for instance the "Bella" scooters. The last of the heavy motorcycles, and incidentally also one of its most famous models, was released in 1951: the KS601 (the "green elephant") with a 598 cc two cylinder engine.


From 1957 to 1958 the company also produced the Zündapp Janus microcar.


In 1958 the company moved from Nuremberg to Munich. Subsequently, the company developed several new smaller models, gave up the development of four-stroke engines and only produced two-stroke models. Initially, Zündapp scooters and mopeds sold well, but later sales declined, and in 1984, the company was bankrupt and closed.


External links


en:Zundapp


  Results from FactBites:
 
Zundapp KS601 (756 words)
Zundapp KS601 for the first time, folks ask "What kind of BMW is that?" It can be difficult to convince them that, while BMW's success with the opposed twin did not escape the attention of Zundapp's engineers, the KS601 and its ancestors evolved exclusively on Zundapp-Werke drafting tables.
Intended strictly as a sidecar machine the KS750's conventionally geared transmission, as opposed to the hallmark Zundapp duplex chain tranny, was shifted via two hand levers on the side of the gas tank.
To fully dispel the myth that Zundapp is a derivative of BMW, much less an inferior copy, the heavy sidecar KS750's were so superior to BMW's offering that the German government compelled BMW to copy the important technical details, against their strident protest.
1958 Zundapp Janus (248 words)
In late 1954 it became shockingly evident that the recovering population was ready for more refined weatherproof vehicles, and the entire motorcycle industry was in a tailspin.
Zundapp realized wisely that they could not afford a lengthy development process, and would look at outside help.
By summer 1958 it was obvious that the situation was not viable and the factory was sold to Bosch.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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