100 years of Audi
Audi - a premium brand
with a proud history
The
company underwent a change of name from Audi NSU Auto Union AG to AUDI AG in 1985.
Ever since then, the company and the products it builds have shared the same name.
The company's headquarters were moved back to Ingolstadt. Audi's subsequent progress
has witnessed a sensational range of technical innovations
By
WAVE Team
from Belgrade, SERBIA
AUDI
AG is able to look back on an exciting and varied past - its tradition of automotive
and engine manufacturing extends back into the 19th century. It all began with
the activities of August Horch, one of Germany's pioneering personalities of automotive
construction. After graduating from the Technical University of Mittweida, Saxony,
Horch took his first job at Carl Benz, in Mannheim, initially working in the Engine
Manufacturing Department and then becoming Head of the Motor Vehicle Construction
Department. He set up business on his own in 1899, establishing Horch & Cie.
Motorwagen Werke in Cologne on November 14 of that year.
Horch moved to
Saxony in 1902, first to Reichenbach and then to Zwickau in 1904, where the company
was transformed into a stock corporation. Following a difference of opinion with
the Board of Management and Supervisory Board, August Horch left the company in
1909 but straight away established a second car company in Zwickau. Because his
surname was already in use and was protected by trademark, he chose its Latin
translation for the name of the new company. So "horch!" - or "hark"
- became "audi!". The idea of using the Latin imperative form was supplied
by the son of one of August Horch's business partners; the boy, well-versed in
Latin, had overheard the discussion about the quest for a new company name. In
subsequent correspondence with him, August Horch even signed his letters with
the words "Kind Regards - Audi-Horch". Audi Automobilwerke GmbH itself
became a stock corporation in December 1914.
The
Audi brand established a tradition of sporting accomplishments at the very outset.
Thanks to his victorious involvement in the Austrian Alpine Run between 1911 and
1914, August Horch succeeded in making Audi a household name internationally within
the space of just a few years. The notably successful Audi Type C 14/35 hp even
acquired the nickname "Alpine Conqueror". After the First World War
August Horch withdrew from the company and moved to Berlin to work as an independent
automotive expert.
First left-hand-drive vehicle in Germany
In
1921 Audiwerke AG took the motoring world by surprise by unveiling the new Audi
14/50 hp Type K, Germany's first left-hand-drive car. In making this move, Audi
spread its net beyond merely engine and suspension technology and began to channel
more energy into the areas of driving safety and ease of operation. The Type M,
with a six-cylinder engine, followed in 1923 and the first eight-cylinder Audi
model, the Audi Imperator, appeared in 1927.
In
August 1928 Jörgen Skafte Rasmussen, owner of Zschopauer Motorenwerke/DKW, acquired
a majority interest in Audiwerke AG, the following year merging the Zwickau-based
company with his own business empire. When the global economy plunged into crisis
in October 1929, sales of large car models with six and eight-cylinder engines
collapsed. Rasmussen responded by commissioning Audi to develop a small DKW car
with front-wheel drive, and this model was launched highly successfully in 1931.
The Audi plant also assembled DKW Front models, in a measure designed to protect
jobs.
Four rings - symbol of a merger
At the behest of
the State Bank of Saxony, which realised that its investment in Saxony's car industry
was in peril, Audiwerke, Horchwerke and Zschopauer Motorenwerke/DKW merged to
form Auto Union AG on June 29, 1932. The new entity simultaneously concluded an
agreement with Wanderer Werke on the purchase and lease of Wanderer's automotive
division. The new group chose Chemnitz for its registered office. The symbol of
this merger was four rings, the design that serves as the Audi logo to this very
day.
Following its creation, Auto Union AG was the second-largest motor
vehicle group in Germany. The brand names Audi, DKW, Horch and Wanderer were retained.
Each of the four brands within the group was assigned a specific market segment:
DKW for motorcycles and small cars, Wanderer for midsize cars, Audi for cars in
the deluxe midsize segment, and Horch for luxury cars at the top end of the market.
To raise its public profile, in 1934 the new company decided to get involved in
motor racing at the very highest level - Grand Prix - and over the next few years
saw its Auto Union "Silver Arrow" models clinch countless races, championships
and world records on racetracks around the world.
The Audi brand - the
first ring in the new alliance of companies
One
of the keys to the success of the still young Auto Union was the allocation of
a specific market segment to each of the individual brands in order to create
a coordinated model range. Specifically for the Audi brand, this prompted the
development of the Audi Front Type UW, a midsize car through which the new group
was for the first time able to make use of synergy benefits.
The principal
feature of the new Audi was its front-wheel drive. DKW's experience in the domain
of front-wheel drive had simply been translated into a midsize vehicle. Its power
unit was a Wanderer 2-litre, six-cylinder engine developed by Ferdinand Porsche,
the body of the saloon version came from Horch's body shop, and the Cabriolets
were built by the renowned Dresden coachbuilder Gläser.
The Audi Front
Type UW - the designation means a Type U with Wanderer engine - finally went into
production in the early part of 1933. One year later, Audi's production operations
were transferred to the nearby Horch plant in order to free up capacity at the
Audi plant for the rising production output of DKW Front models. With technically
revised features and equipped with a tuned-up 2.3-litre Wanderer engine, the new
Audi Front 225 was unveiled at the 1935 Berlin Motor Show and remained on the
market until 1938. The successor model, the Audi 920, likewise exhibited the hallmark
features of a modular system. The chassis, which had now reverted to conventional
rear-wheel drive, and the modern-styled body were largely borrowed from the six-cylinder
Wanderer W 23 model. This elegant car had a straight-six OHC engine developed
by Horch, while the rear axle adopted the DKW floating-axle principle. The first
specimens of the new car left the production line at Auto Union's Horch plant
in December 1938. The Audi 920 rapidly became a hit with customers.
This
success was brought to an abrupt halt with the outbreak of the Second World War.
Production of civilian vehicles was slashed and the group's operations switched
to the production of armaments. The last Audi of this era was completed in April
1940. There would not be another for a quarter of a century.
A new start
in Ingolstadt
In 1945, after the war had ended, Auto Union AG's premises
were located in the zone occupied by the Soviet forces, who expropriated its assets
and dismantled the plant; the company was removed from the Commercial Register
of the city of Chemnitz in 1948. Certain members of Auto Union's senior management
had already moved to Bavaria at the end of the war, and in late 1945 a depot for
Auto Union parts was set up in the historic garrison city of Ingolstadt. These
tentative efforts to relaunch operations led to the founding of a new company
named Auto Union GmbH on September 3, 1949, with the purpose of upholding the
automotive tradition of the four rings.
The first products with the four-ring
badge built in this era were well-established DKW models with two-stroke engines.
These basic but robust and reliable cars and motorcycles were just right for the
austere circumstances of the post-war years. The DKW F 89 L rapid delivery van
and the DKW RT 125 W motorcycle were unveiled at the Hanover Export Fair in early
1949. These models established automotive manufacturing in Ingolstadt. In parallel,
the company was working on a DKW car, which went into production at a new plant
in Düsseldorf in summer 1950.
From 1954 onwards, Friedrich Flick gradually
acquired a large stake in the equity of Auto Union GmbH. His strategy was to find
a strong partner for Auto Union in the medium term. In April 1958, Daimler-Benz
AG acquired 88 percent of Auto Union's shares and in the following year the Ingolstadt
company became a fully-owned subsidiary.
The rebirth of the Audi brand
In
persisting with two-stroke engines, the company saw sales of DKW models gradually
dwindle throughout the early 1960s. Daimler-Benz responded to the situation by
commissioning the engineer Ludwig Kraus, its appointed Technical Director in Ingolstadt,
to adapt Daimler's own four-cylinder, four-stroke engine for use in the new DKW
F 102 model. This new Auto Union model appeared on the market in 1965, the brand's
first post-war car with a four-stroke engine. Along with this dawning of a new
era, it was felt that the time was ripe for a new product designation. It thus
came about that the traditional name Audi was resurrected. The Auto Union "Audi
Type", which initially carried no further model designation, was widely advertised
and became a resounding success. This car line remained in production until 1972,
undergoing a few technical and optical modifications along the way.
But
a new era had dawned in Ingolstadt in another sense, too, because the company
had become part of the Volkswagen Group in 1965. The new bosses forbade Ingolstadt's
engineers from developing models of their own. Their grand plan was to use Ingolstadt's
production capacity for building the VW Beetle. But they had reckoned without
Ludwig Kraus, at that time Head of Development and member of the Board of Management,
who decided to proceed with the development of a new Audi model on the quiet.
The resulting model, which the group management in Wolfsburg ultimately sanctioned,
was first presented to the international press in Ingolstadt in November 1968.
Its name: Audi 100. The Audi 100 was the first vehicle to have shaken off all
genetic links with the former DKW models. The huge success of this new Audi proved
its creators right. The Audi 100 also helped Auto Union to preserve its separate
identity.
Vorsprung durch Technik
In 1969 Volkswagenwerk
AG engineered the merger of Auto Union GmbH and the Neckarsulm-based NSU Motorenwerke
AG. The new company now became known as Audi NSU Auto Union AG and had its registered
office in Neckarsulm. The extensive range of Audi and NSU models covering a wide
variety of engines and drive concepts prompted the coining of a new advertising
slogan in 1971, and one that has effectively been the company's mission statement
ever since: "Vorsprung durch Technik".
It
was entirely in this spirit that the first-generation Audi 80 (B1 series) was
launched in 1972, with a glittering array of new technical features such as an
OHC engine series and self-stabilising steering roll radius. By the time production
of this first generation ceased, over one million units had been built.
1974
saw the appointment of Ferdinand Piëch as Ludwig Kraus' successor, initially as
Head of Technical Development. Over the "Piëch era" Audi was transformed
into a highly innovative car manufacturer. This period also witnessed the gradual
raising of the Audi brand's positioning. The five-cylinder engine (1976), turbocharger
technology (1979) and quattro four-wheel drive (1980) are eloquent testimonies
to the success of this drive.
The company underwent a change of name from
Audi NSU Auto Union AG to AUDI AG in 1985. Ever since then, the company and the
products it builds have shared the same name. The company's headquarters were
moved back to Ingolstadt. Audi's subsequent progress has witnessed a sensational
range of technical innovations: fully galvanised bodies, the most aerodynamic
volume-built saloon of its time, the broad-based use of petrol engines with exhaust
turbocharging, the development of economical direct-injection diesel engines,
the aluminium body, the first hybrid vehicles, petrol direct injection and the
manufacture of luxury-class cars with eight and twelve-cylinder engines are just
some of the many mileposts that document the emergence of the Audi brand as a
manufacturer of premium cars.
(Published: 18.07.2009.)