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Horch

Horch (German pronunciation: [hɔʁç] (listen)) was a car brand manufacturer, founded in Germany by August Horch & Cie at the beginning of the 20th century.

Horch AG
IndustryAutomotive
Founded1904
Defunct1932
1959
Fatemerged with DKW, Wanderer, and Audi to form Auto Union
SuccessorAuto Union (1932–1969)
Audi NSU Auto Union (1969–1985)
Audi AG (1985–present)
HeadquartersZwickau, Saxony, Germany
Key people
August Horch, founder
ProductsLuxury cars
Charles de Gaulle's 1936 Horch 830 BL convertible, Bundeswehr Military History Museum, Dresden

It is one of the predecessors of the present day Audi company, which itself resulted from the merger of Auto Union Aktiengesellschaft (AG) and NSU Motorenwerke in 1969. Auto Union AG in turn was formed in 1932, following the merger of Horch, DKW, Wanderer and the original Audi Automobilwerke GmbH Zwickau, established by August Horch in 1910.

In 2021, Audi reused the Horch name as a flagship trim level for the Audi A8 in China to compete with the Mercedes-Maybach S-Class.[1]

History at a glance

 
August Horch in his car (1908)
 
Horch hood ornament (1924)
 
Horch 670, 12-cylinder luxury cabriolet (1932)
 
Horch 930 V Phaeton (1939)

August Horch and his first business partner Salli Herz established the company on November 14, 1899 in the district of Ehrenfeld, Cologne in Cologne.[2] August Horch had previously worked as a production manager for Karl Benz. Three years later, in 1902, he moved the company to Reichenbach im Vogtland. On May 10, 1904 he founded the Horch & Cie. Motorwagenwerke AG, a joint-stock company in Zwickau (Kingdom of Saxony). The city of Zwickau was the capital of the South Western Saxon County and one of Saxony's industrial centres at that time.

After troubles with the Horch chief financial officer, August Horch founded a second company on 16 July 1909, the August Horch Automobilwerke GmbH in Zwickau. He had to rename the company because Horch was already a registered brand and he did not hold the rights to the name. On 25 April 1910 the name Audi Automobilwerke was entered in the company's register at the Zwickau registration court. Audi is the Latin translation of horch, from the German verb "horchen", which means "listen!" (compare English "hark"). The Audi name was proposed by a son of one of Horch's business partners from Zwickau.[3]

In 1932 both companies from Zwickau (Horch and Audi) merged with Zschopauer Motorenwerke J. S. Rasmussen (the DKW brand) and the Wanderer car-production facilities to become the Auto Union corporation of Saxony. The Silver Arrow racing cars of the Auto Union racing team in Zwickau—developed by Ferdinand Porsche and Robert Eberan von Eberhorst, and driven by Bernd Rosemeyer, Hans Stuck, Tazio Nuvolari and Ernst von Delius—became known the world over in the 1930s.

Initial cars

The company initially began producing 5 hp (3.7 kW; 5.1 PS) and 10 hp (7.5 kW; 10 PS) twin-cylinder engine automobiles near Cologne in 1901.

The first Horch had a 4.5 hp (3.4 kW; 4.6 PS) engine, with an alloy crankcase, a unique achievement in those days. It had an open-body design, with lighting provided by lanterns containing candles. In contrast with the powerful cars of later years, the first Horch could barely reach a top speed of 32 km/h (20 mph). It was significant at that time because it used a friction clutch, and had a drive shaft providing power to the wheels.

The firm soon encountered financial difficulty, and Horch sought new partners.

In March 1902, August Horch produced a 20 hp (15 kW; 20 PS) four-cylinder car with a shaft drive in Reichenbach in Vogtland. Horch cars were considered[by whom?] more advanced to those being built by Mercedes or Benz (who were then separate manufacturers).

By 1903, Horch built a car with a four-cylinder engine. In March of the following year, he introduced his new car at the Frankfurt Fair.

In 1904, August Horch developed the first six-cylinder engine, which appeared in 1907. In 1906 a Horch automobile driven by Dr. Rudolf Stöss from Zwickau won the Herkomer Competition (equivalent to a 'brand-name' world championship at the time). In the 1920s, Moritz Stauss, a cosmopolitan Berliner, was the principal stockholder of the Horch company. He succeeded in making the Horch brand highly desirable by introducing art into the firm's advertising. He recognized that only a brand emphasising Horch's unique characteristics would be successful.

In 1923, Paul Daimler (a Stauss associate) worked for Horch as the chief engineer for 8-cylinder engines. Horch vehicles were subsequently the first to introduce 8-cylinder engines in series production.[citation needed]

Audi connection

In 1909, the supervisory board (the German equivalent of the Board of Directors) of the corporation forced out Horch. Horch went on to found Audi as Audiwerke GmbH, which became effective on 25 April 1910. The name was a solution to the legal dispute with his old company over use of the Horch brand and a clever play of words ("audi" is the literal Latin translation of the Old German "horch", meaning the imperative "Listen!").

In 1928, the company was acquired by Jørgen Skafte Rasmussen, owner of DKW (from the German Dampfkraftwagen, or steam engine vehicle) who had bought the remains of the US automobile manufacturer Rickenbacker in the same year. The Rickenbacker purchase included their manufacturing equipment for eight-cylinder engines.

Auto Union

Eventually, on 29 June 1932, Horch, Audi, DKW and Wanderer merged to form the Auto Union AG, Chemnitz affiliated group. The current Audi four-ring logo is the Auto Union logo that represents the merger of these four brands. In the 1930s, Horch introduced a new line of smaller and cheaper, but still presentable, V8 automobiles. In 1936, Horch presented the 25,000th 8-cylinder luxury car in Zwickau.

The Auto Union Grand Prix racing cars types A to D, were developed and built by a specialist racing department of Horch works in Zwickau between 1933 and 1939. Between 1935 and 1937 Auto Union cars won 25 races, driven by Ernst von Delius, Tazio Nuvolari, Bernd Rosemeyer, Hans Stuck and Achille Varzi.

 
Heavy standard passenger car Type Horch 108 (1942)

Auto Union became a major supplier of vehicles to the German Wehrmacht, such as Heavy standard passenger car (Horch 108), Medium standard passenger car (Horch 901 and Wanderer 901) and Half-track Sd.Kfz. 11. Civilian production was suspended after March 1940. After the war the Auto Union AG at Chemnitz was dissolved and in Ingolstadt, West Germany the new Auto Union GmbH was founded, where civilian car production continued. Due to widespread poverty in postwar Germany, only small DKW vehicles with two stroke engines were produced. After Auto Union was purchased in 1964 by the Volkswagenwerk AG, the old brand Audi was introduced again, together with the new four stroke vehicle Audi F103. Daimler-Benz retained the trademark rights to the Horch brand until the mid 1980s. Daimler-Benz then transferred the rights to the Horch brand name to Audi which in turn signed a waiver to use the name „Silberpfeil“ (silver-arrow) for any modern Audi racing car. However, the brand has remained dormant.

The Romanian Army purchased 300 Horch 901 4x4 field cars to mechanize some of its anti-tank companies.[4]

Trabant connection

During the Second World War, the factories suffered heavy bomb damage. Later, the advancing Soviet forces captured the area, and it became part of the Soviet sector of divided Germany in 1945, and later became part of East Germany.

 
Horch P240 (Sachsenring) Cabriolet (1956)

From 1955 to 1958, old Horch factories produced the Horch P240, a six-cylinder car that was respected at the time. The former Horch and Audi operations from Zwickau were unified in 1958. A new brand, Sachsenring, within the East German corporation IFA was born. After unification in 1958, the P240 car was renamed as the Sachsenring P240. As the Soviet Administration inexplicably banned the foreign exportation of the P240, the East German economic administration decided to stop production of the vehicle. IFA also produced the initial Trabant "P-50" model from 1957.[5]

The Zwickau site was acquired in 1991 by Volkswagen, effectively restoring its connection with Audi.

Rare collectibles

On June 24, 2006, a rare 1937 Horch 853A Sport Cabriolet in original unrestored, unprepared condition sold at auction in Cortland, NY for US$299,000.[6]

In the late 1930s, Horch supplied a limited number of promotional scarves bearing the Horch logo. Sent only to the wealthiest drivers, it is a major collectible amongst diehard enthusiasts of the pre-war car era. However, there is also a degree of controversy associated with these scarves as they were commonly sought by senior SS members.

 
1939 Horch 853 A Cabriolet

Horch models

Type Construction Cylinders Displacement Power Top speed
4-15 PS 1900–1903 straight-2 2.9-3.7 kW 60 km/h
(37 mph)
10-16 PS 1902–1904 straight-2 7.4-8.8 kW 62 km/h
(39 mph)
22-30 PS 1903 straight-4 2,725 cc 16.2-18.4 kW
14-20 PS 1905–1910 straight-4 2,270 cc 10.3-12.5 kW
18/25 PS 1904–1909 straight-4 2,725 cc 16.2 kW
23/50 PS 1905–1910 straight-4 5,800 cc 29 kW 100 km/h
(62 mph)
26/65 PS 1907–1910 straight-6 7,800 cc 44 kW 120 km/h
(75 mph)
25/60 PS 1909–1914 straight-4 6.395 cc 40 kW 110 km/h
(68 mph)
10/30 PS 1910–1911 straight-4 2,660 cc 18.4 kW
K (12/30 PS) 1910–1911 straight-4 3,177 cc 20.6 kW 75 km/h
(47 mph)
15/30 PS 1910–1914 straight-4 2,608 cc 22 kW 80 km/h
(50 mph)
H (17/45 PS) 1910–1919 straight-4 4,240 cc 33 kW
6/18 PS 1911–1920 straight-4 1,588 cc 13.2 kW
8/24 PS 1911–1922 straight-4 2,080 cc 17.6 kW 70 km/h
(43 mph)
O (14/40 PS) 1912–1922 straight-4 3,560 cc 29 kW 90 km/h
(56 mph)
Pony (5/14 PS) 1914 straight-4 1,300 cc 11 kW
25/60 PS 1914–1920 straight-4 6,395 cc 44 kW 110 km/h
(68 mph)
18/50 PS 1914–1922 straight-4 4,710 cc 40 kW
(55 PS)
100 km/h
(62 mph)
S (33/80 PS) 1914–1922 straight-4 8,494 cc 59 kW
10 M 20 (10/35 PS) 1922–1924 straight-4 2,612 cc 25.7 kW 80 km/h
(50 mph)
10 M 25 (10/50 PS) 1924–1926 straight-4 2,612 cc 37 kW 95 km/h
(59 mph)
8 Typ 303/304 (12/60 PS) 1926–1927 straight-8 3,132 cc 44 kW 100 km/h
(62 mph)
8 Typ 305/306 (13/65 PS) 1927–1928 straight-8 3,378 cc 48 kW 100 km/h
(62 mph)
8 Typ 350/375/400/405 (16/80 PS) 1928–1931 straight-8 3,950 cc 59 kW 100 km/h
(62 mph)
8 3 L Typ 430 1931–1932 straight-8 3,009-3,137 cc 48 kW
(65 PS)
100 km/h
(62 mph)
8 4 L Typ 410/440/710 1931–1933 straight-8 4,014 cc 59 kW
(80 PS)
100–110 km/h
(62–68 mph)
8 4.5 L Typ 420/450/470/720/750/750B 1931–1935 straight-8 4,517 cc 66 kW
(90 PS)
115 km/h
(71 mph)
8 5 L Typ 480/500/500A/500B/780/780B 1931–1935 straight-8 4,944 cc 74 kW (100 PS) 120–125 km/h
(75–78 mph)
12 6 L Typ 600/670 1931–1934 V12 6,021 cc 88 kW (120 PS) 130–140 km/h
(81–87 mph)
830 1933–1934 V8 3,004 cc 51 kW (70 PS) 110–115 km/h
(68–71 mph)
830B 1935 V8 3,250 cc 51 kW (70 PS) 115 km/h
(71 mph)
830Bk/830BL 1935–1936 V8 3,517 cc 55 kW (75 PS) 115–120 km/h
(71–75 mph)
850/850 Sport 1935–1937 straight-8 4,944 cc 74 kW (100 PS) 125–130 km/h
(78–81 mph)
830BL/930V 1937–1938 V8 3,517 cc 60 kW (82 PS) 120–125 km/h
(75–78 mph)
830BL/930V 1938–1940 V8 3,823 cc 67.6 kW (92 PS) 125–130 km/h
(78–81 mph)
851/853/853A/855/951/951A 1937–1940 straight-8 4,944 cc 74 kW (100 PS) 125–140 km/h
(78–87 mph)

See also

References

  1. ^ "Audi A8 L Horch Breaks Cover Ahead Of Chinese Debut Next Month". Motor1.com. Retrieved 2021-10-30.
  2. ^ August Horch: "Ich baute Autos - Vom Schmiedelehrling zum Autoindustriellen", Schützen-Verlag Berlin 1937
  3. ^ Audi AG motion picture 1994: 'The Silver Arrows from Zwickau, running time approx. 49 mins.
  4. ^ Tarnstrom, Ronald L. (1998). Balkan Battles. Trogen Books. ISBN 9780922037148. Retrieved Apr 14, 2019 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ . Trabant.shocauto.com. Archived from the original on 2010-09-29. Retrieved 2010-10-02.
  6. ^ . Rm Auctions. Archived from the original on 2010-09-29. Retrieved 2010-10-02.

Further reading

  • Horch, August: Ich baute Autos. Vom Schmiedelehrling zum Autoindustriellen. Schützen-Verlag, Berlin 1937.
  • Kirchberg, Peter, Pönisch, Jürgen: Horch. Typen – Technik – Modelle. Delius Klasing, Bielefeld 2006, ISBN 3-7688-1775-X.
  • Lang, Werner: „Wir Horch-Arbeiter bauen wieder Fahrzeuge“. Geschichte des Horch-Werkes Zwickau 1945 bis 1958. Bergstraße Verlagsgesellschaft mbH, Aue 2007, ISBN 978-3-9811372-1-7.
  • Pönisch, Jürgen: 100 Jahre Horch-Automobile 1899–1999. Aufstieg und Niedergang einer deutschen Luxusmarke. Zwickau 2000, ISBN 3-933282-07-1.

External links

  • Official Site of August Horch Museum Zwickau
  • Zwickau-Views (about 6000 Zwickau pics)

horch, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, october, 2018, learn. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Horch news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Horch German pronunciation hɔʁc listen was a car brand manufacturer founded in Germany by August Horch amp Cie at the beginning of the 20th century Horch AGIndustryAutomotiveFounded1904Defunct19321959Fatemerged with DKW Wanderer and Audi to form Auto UnionSuccessorAuto Union 1932 1969 Audi NSU Auto Union 1969 1985 Audi AG 1985 present HeadquartersZwickau Saxony GermanyKey peopleAugust Horch founderProductsLuxury carsCharles de Gaulle s 1936 Horch 830 BL convertible Bundeswehr Military History Museum Dresden It is one of the predecessors of the present day Audi company which itself resulted from the merger of Auto Union Aktiengesellschaft AG and NSU Motorenwerke in 1969 Auto Union AG in turn was formed in 1932 following the merger of Horch DKW Wanderer and the original Audi Automobilwerke GmbH Zwickau established by August Horch in 1910 In 2021 Audi reused the Horch name as a flagship trim level for the Audi A8 in China to compete with the Mercedes Maybach S Class 1 Contents 1 History at a glance 2 Initial cars 3 Audi connection 4 Auto Union 5 Trabant connection 6 Rare collectibles 7 Horch models 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory at a glance Edit August Horch in his car 1908 Horch hood ornament 1924 Horch 670 12 cylinder luxury cabriolet 1932 Horch 930 V Phaeton 1939 August Horch and his first business partner Salli Herz established the company on November 14 1899 in the district of Ehrenfeld Cologne in Cologne 2 August Horch had previously worked as a production manager for Karl Benz Three years later in 1902 he moved the company to Reichenbach im Vogtland On May 10 1904 he founded the Horch amp Cie Motorwagenwerke AG a joint stock company in Zwickau Kingdom of Saxony The city of Zwickau was the capital of the South Western Saxon County and one of Saxony s industrial centres at that time After troubles with the Horch chief financial officer August Horch founded a second company on 16 July 1909 the August Horch Automobilwerke GmbH in Zwickau He had to rename the company because Horch was already a registered brand and he did not hold the rights to the name On 25 April 1910 the name Audi Automobilwerke was entered in the company s register at the Zwickau registration court Audi is the Latin translation of horch from the German verb horchen which means listen compare English hark The Audi name was proposed by a son of one of Horch s business partners from Zwickau 3 In 1932 both companies from Zwickau Horch and Audi merged with Zschopauer Motorenwerke J S Rasmussen the DKW brand and the Wanderer car production facilities to become the Auto Union corporation of Saxony The Silver Arrow racing cars of the Auto Union racing team in Zwickau developed by Ferdinand Porsche and Robert Eberan von Eberhorst and driven by Bernd Rosemeyer Hans Stuck Tazio Nuvolari and Ernst von Delius became known the world over in the 1930s Initial cars EditThe company initially began producing 5 hp 3 7 kW 5 1 PS and 10 hp 7 5 kW 10 PS twin cylinder engine automobiles near Cologne in 1901 The first Horch had a 4 5 hp 3 4 kW 4 6 PS engine with an alloy crankcase a unique achievement in those days It had an open body design with lighting provided by lanterns containing candles In contrast with the powerful cars of later years the first Horch could barely reach a top speed of 32 km h 20 mph It was significant at that time because it used a friction clutch and had a drive shaft providing power to the wheels The firm soon encountered financial difficulty and Horch sought new partners In March 1902 August Horch produced a 20 hp 15 kW 20 PS four cylinder car with a shaft drive in Reichenbach in Vogtland Horch cars were considered by whom more advanced to those being built by Mercedes or Benz who were then separate manufacturers By 1903 Horch built a car with a four cylinder engine In March of the following year he introduced his new car at the Frankfurt Fair In 1904 August Horch developed the first six cylinder engine which appeared in 1907 In 1906 a Horch automobile driven by Dr Rudolf Stoss from Zwickau won the Herkomer Competition equivalent to a brand name world championship at the time In the 1920s Moritz Stauss a cosmopolitan Berliner was the principal stockholder of the Horch company He succeeded in making the Horch brand highly desirable by introducing art into the firm s advertising He recognized that only a brand emphasising Horch s unique characteristics would be successful In 1923 Paul Daimler a Stauss associate worked for Horch as the chief engineer for 8 cylinder engines Horch vehicles were subsequently the first to introduce 8 cylinder engines in series production citation needed Audi connection EditIn 1909 the supervisory board the German equivalent of the Board of Directors of the corporation forced out Horch Horch went on to found Audi as Audiwerke GmbH which became effective on 25 April 1910 The name was a solution to the legal dispute with his old company over use of the Horch brand and a clever play of words audi is the literal Latin translation of the Old German horch meaning the imperative Listen In 1928 the company was acquired by Jorgen Skafte Rasmussen owner of DKW from the German Dampfkraftwagen or steam engine vehicle who had bought the remains of the US automobile manufacturer Rickenbacker in the same year The Rickenbacker purchase included their manufacturing equipment for eight cylinder engines Auto Union Edit Auto Union Typ C 1936 Eventually on 29 June 1932 Horch Audi DKW and Wanderer merged to form the Auto Union AG Chemnitz affiliated group The current Audi four ring logo is the Auto Union logo that represents the merger of these four brands In the 1930s Horch introduced a new line of smaller and cheaper but still presentable V8 automobiles In 1936 Horch presented the 25 000th 8 cylinder luxury car in Zwickau The Auto Union Grand Prix racing cars types A to D were developed and built by a specialist racing department of Horch works in Zwickau between 1933 and 1939 Between 1935 and 1937 Auto Union cars won 25 races driven by Ernst von Delius Tazio Nuvolari Bernd Rosemeyer Hans Stuck and Achille Varzi Heavy standard passenger car Type Horch 108 1942 Auto Union became a major supplier of vehicles to the German Wehrmacht such as Heavy standard passenger car Horch 108 Medium standard passenger car Horch 901 and Wanderer 901 and Half track Sd Kfz 11 Civilian production was suspended after March 1940 After the war the Auto Union AG at Chemnitz was dissolved and in Ingolstadt West Germany the new Auto Union GmbH was founded where civilian car production continued Due to widespread poverty in postwar Germany only small DKW vehicles with two stroke engines were produced After Auto Union was purchased in 1964 by the Volkswagenwerk AG the old brand Audi was introduced again together with the new four stroke vehicle Audi F103 Daimler Benz retained the trademark rights to the Horch brand until the mid 1980s Daimler Benz then transferred the rights to the Horch brand name to Audi which in turn signed a waiver to use the name Silberpfeil silver arrow for any modern Audi racing car However the brand has remained dormant The Romanian Army purchased 300 Horch 901 4x4 field cars to mechanize some of its anti tank companies 4 Trabant connection EditSee also HQM Sachsenring GmbH During the Second World War the factories suffered heavy bomb damage Later the advancing Soviet forces captured the area and it became part of the Soviet sector of divided Germany in 1945 and later became part of East Germany Horch P240 Sachsenring Cabriolet 1956 From 1955 to 1958 old Horch factories produced the Horch P240 a six cylinder car that was respected at the time The former Horch and Audi operations from Zwickau were unified in 1958 A new brand Sachsenring within the East German corporation IFA was born After unification in 1958 the P240 car was renamed as the Sachsenring P240 As the Soviet Administration inexplicably banned the foreign exportation of the P240 the East German economic administration decided to stop production of the vehicle IFA also produced the initial Trabant P 50 model from 1957 5 The Zwickau site was acquired in 1991 by Volkswagen effectively restoring its connection with Audi Rare collectibles EditOn June 24 2006 a rare 1937 Horch 853A Sport Cabriolet in original unrestored unprepared condition sold at auction in Cortland NY for US 299 000 6 In the late 1930s Horch supplied a limited number of promotional scarves bearing the Horch logo Sent only to the wealthiest drivers it is a major collectible amongst diehard enthusiasts of the pre war car era However there is also a degree of controversy associated with these scarves as they were commonly sought by senior SS members 1939 Horch 853 A Cabriolet 1937 Horch 853 Voll amp Ruhrbeck Sport CabrioletHorch models EditType Construction Cylinders Displacement Power Top speed4 15 PS 1900 1903 straight 2 2 9 3 7 kW 60 km h 37 mph 10 16 PS 1902 1904 straight 2 7 4 8 8 kW 62 km h 39 mph 22 30 PS 1903 straight 4 2 725 cc 16 2 18 4 kW14 20 PS 1905 1910 straight 4 2 270 cc 10 3 12 5 kW18 25 PS 1904 1909 straight 4 2 725 cc 16 2 kW23 50 PS 1905 1910 straight 4 5 800 cc 29 kW 100 km h 62 mph 26 65 PS 1907 1910 straight 6 7 800 cc 44 kW 120 km h 75 mph 25 60 PS 1909 1914 straight 4 6 395 cc 40 kW 110 km h 68 mph 10 30 PS 1910 1911 straight 4 2 660 cc 18 4 kWK 12 30 PS 1910 1911 straight 4 3 177 cc 20 6 kW 75 km h 47 mph 15 30 PS 1910 1914 straight 4 2 608 cc 22 kW 80 km h 50 mph H 17 45 PS 1910 1919 straight 4 4 240 cc 33 kW6 18 PS 1911 1920 straight 4 1 588 cc 13 2 kW8 24 PS 1911 1922 straight 4 2 080 cc 17 6 kW 70 km h 43 mph O 14 40 PS 1912 1922 straight 4 3 560 cc 29 kW 90 km h 56 mph Pony 5 14 PS 1914 straight 4 1 300 cc 11 kW25 60 PS 1914 1920 straight 4 6 395 cc 44 kW 110 km h 68 mph 18 50 PS 1914 1922 straight 4 4 710 cc 40 kW 55 PS 100 km h 62 mph S 33 80 PS 1914 1922 straight 4 8 494 cc 59 kW10 M 20 10 35 PS 1922 1924 straight 4 2 612 cc 25 7 kW 80 km h 50 mph 10 M 25 10 50 PS 1924 1926 straight 4 2 612 cc 37 kW 95 km h 59 mph 8 Typ 303 304 12 60 PS 1926 1927 straight 8 3 132 cc 44 kW 100 km h 62 mph 8 Typ 305 306 13 65 PS 1927 1928 straight 8 3 378 cc 48 kW 100 km h 62 mph 8 Typ 350 375 400 405 16 80 PS 1928 1931 straight 8 3 950 cc 59 kW 100 km h 62 mph 8 3 L Typ 430 1931 1932 straight 8 3 009 3 137 cc 48 kW 65 PS 100 km h 62 mph 8 4 L Typ 410 440 710 1931 1933 straight 8 4 014 cc 59 kW 80 PS 100 110 km h 62 68 mph 8 4 5 L Typ 420 450 470 720 750 750B 1931 1935 straight 8 4 517 cc 66 kW 90 PS 115 km h 71 mph 8 5 L Typ 480 500 500A 500B 780 780B 1931 1935 straight 8 4 944 cc 74 kW 100 PS 120 125 km h 75 78 mph 12 6 L Typ 600 670 1931 1934 V12 6 021 cc 88 kW 120 PS 130 140 km h 81 87 mph 830 1933 1934 V8 3 004 cc 51 kW 70 PS 110 115 km h 68 71 mph 830B 1935 V8 3 250 cc 51 kW 70 PS 115 km h 71 mph 830Bk 830BL 1935 1936 V8 3 517 cc 55 kW 75 PS 115 120 km h 71 75 mph 850 850 Sport 1935 1937 straight 8 4 944 cc 74 kW 100 PS 125 130 km h 78 81 mph 830BL 930V 1937 1938 V8 3 517 cc 60 kW 82 PS 120 125 km h 75 78 mph 830BL 930V 1938 1940 V8 3 823 cc 67 6 kW 92 PS 125 130 km h 78 81 mph 851 853 853A 855 951 951A 1937 1940 straight 8 4 944 cc 74 kW 100 PS 125 140 km h 78 87 mph See also EditList of German carsReferences Edit Audi A8 L Horch Breaks Cover Ahead Of Chinese Debut Next Month Motor1 com Retrieved 2021 10 30 August Horch Ich baute Autos Vom Schmiedelehrling zum Autoindustriellen Schutzen Verlag Berlin 1937 Audi AG motion picture 1994 The Silver Arrows from Zwickau running time approx 49 mins Tarnstrom Ronald L 1998 Balkan Battles Trogen Books ISBN 9780922037148 Retrieved Apr 14 2019 via Google Books Trabant History Trabant shocauto com Archived from the original on 2010 09 29 Retrieved 2010 10 02 Rm Auctions Rm Auctions Archived from the original on 2010 09 29 Retrieved 2010 10 02 Further reading EditHorch August Ich baute Autos Vom Schmiedelehrling zum Autoindustriellen Schutzen Verlag Berlin 1937 Kirchberg Peter Ponisch Jurgen Horch Typen Technik Modelle Delius Klasing Bielefeld 2006 ISBN 3 7688 1775 X Lang Werner Wir Horch Arbeiter bauen wieder Fahrzeuge Geschichte des Horch Werkes Zwickau 1945 bis 1958 Bergstrasse Verlagsgesellschaft mbH Aue 2007 ISBN 978 3 9811372 1 7 Ponisch Jurgen 100 Jahre Horch Automobile 1899 1999 Aufstieg und Niedergang einer deutschen Luxusmarke Zwickau 2000 ISBN 3 933282 07 1 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Horch Official Site of August Horch Museum Zwickau Zwickau Views about 6000 Zwickau pics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Horch amp oldid 1077440486, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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