DKW

WorldBrand briefing

AI supplement

Original synthesis to sit alongside the encyclopedia article below. Not part of Wikipedia; verify facts on Wikipedia when precision matters.

DKW is a defunct German automaker and motorcycle manufacturer, which took two-stroke engine technology as its core competitive advantage. It grew into one of the world's top two-wheeler manufacturers in the 1920s and 1930s, and was also the core founding brand of Auto Union, the parent company of Audi.

Key moments

  • 1906Founder Jørgen Skafte Rasmussen founded a machinery manufacturing plant in Chemnitz, Germany
  • 1916Officially operated under the name DKW (German for Dampf Kraft Wagen, steam-powered vehicle), with early steam car research failing
  • 1918Developed a 25cc two-stroke bicycle auxiliary engine, which was later named "Des Knaben Wunch" and "Das Kleine Wunder"
  • 1921Officially launched motorcycle production and quickly grew into the world's largest motorcycle manufacturer
  • 1928Entered the four-wheeled vehicle market and launched mass-produced models equipped with two-stroke engines
  • 1931The DKW Front model debuted at the Berlin Motor Show and became the best-selling compact car in Germany
  • 1932Merged with Audi, Horch and Wanderer to form Auto Union
  • 1969The DKW brand was officially discontinued

Competitive Analysis of DKW

DKW's competitive landscape varied across different development stages:

  1. Motorcycle Era (1920s-1930s): With compact and efficient two-stroke engines and cost-effective products, DKW quickly rose in the European motorcycle market, defeating competitors such as BMW and Harley-Davidson to become the world's largest motorcycle manufacturer. Compared with BMW's high-end motorcycle product line at that time, DKW's products focused more on the civilian代步 market, adapting to the post-war German economic environment.
  2. Automobile Era (1930s-1960s): After entering the four-wheeled vehicle market, DKW formed a differentiated advantage in the German compact car market with the technical combination of front-wheel drive and three-cylinder two-stroke engine, defeating traditional competitors such as Opel and becoming the best-selling compact car brand in Germany at that time. The lightweight and cost-controlled features of its models perfectly matched the代步 needs of ordinary consumers in the post-war period.
  3. Group Collaboration Stage: After joining Auto Union, DKW, as a brand line responsible for the economic compact car market, formed a complete brand matrix with the alliance's high-end brands Audi, Horch and Wanderer, covering different price levels and improving the overall market competitiveness of the group.
  4. Later Challenges: After the 1950s, with the maturity of four-stroke engine technology and the gradual tightening of global emission regulations, the environmental disadvantages of two-stroke engines gradually emerged, and DKW's product competitiveness continued to decline, eventually leading to the official discontinuation of the brand in 1969.
  • In the motorcycle field, it became the world's largest motorcycle manufacturer in the 1920s with affordable and efficient two-stroke products, suppressing competitors such as BMW and Harley
  • In the compact car market, it became the best-selling compact car brand in Germany in the 1930s with the technical combination of front-wheel drive and two-stroke engine
  • As the civilian brand of Auto Union, it formed a differentiated layout with the alliance's high-end brands and improved the group's product line
  • In the later period, it gradually lost in the competition with four-stroke models due to the environmental disadvantages of two-stroke engines, and the brand was finally discontinued

DKW was a German car and motorcycle marque. DKW was one of the four companies that formed Auto Union in 1932 and thus became an ancestor of the modern-day Audi company.[2]

In 1916, Danish engineer Jørgen Skafte Rasmussen founded a factory in Zschopau, Saxony, Germany, to produce steam fittings. That year he attempted to produce a steam car, (lit. steam power-wagon), from which the acronym DKW is derived.[3] That steam car was unsuccessful, and in 1919 he made toy two-stroke engines under the name des Knaben Wunsch[4] – the boy's wish. He put a slightly modified version of the toy engine into a motorcycle and called it das kleine Wunder[3] – the little wonder, and by the late 1920s DKW had become the world's largest motorcycle manufacturer.

In September 1924, DKW bought Slaby-Beringer, saving them from Germany's hyperinflation. Rudolf Slaby became chief engineer at DKW.[5] In 1932, DKW merged with Audi, Horch and Wanderer to form Auto Union.[3] After World War II, DKW moved to West Germany. The original factory became MZ.[1] Auto Union came under Daimler-Benz ownership in 1957 and was purchased by the Volkswagen Group in 1964. The last started German-built DKW car was the F102, which ceased production in 1966 (the last model bas DKW Munga, which production had started already in 1956). F102's successor, the four-stroke F103, was marketed under the Audi brand, another Auto Union marque.

DKW-badged cars continued to be built under license in Brazil and Argentina until 1967 and 1969 respectively. The DKW trademark is currently owned by Auto Union GmbH, a wholly owned subsidiary of Audi AG which also owns the rights to other historical trademarks and intellectual property of the Auto Union combine.

Automobiles made between 1928 and 1942

DKW cars were made from 1928 until 1968, apart from the interruption caused by the Second World War. DKWs always used two-stroke engines, reflecting the company's position by the end of the 1920s as the world's largest producer of motorcycles. The first DKW car, the small and rather crude Typ P, emerged on 7 May 1928[7] and the model continued to be built at the company's Spandau (Berlin) plant, first as a roadster and later as a stylish if basic sports car, until 1931.

More significant was a series of inexpensive cars built 300 km (185 miles) to the south in Zwickau in the plant acquired by the company's owner Jørgen Skafte Rasmussen in 1928 when he had become the majority owner in Audi Werke AG.[8] Models F1 to F8 (F for Front) were built between 1931 and 1942, with successor models reappearing after the end of the war in 1945. They were the first volume production cars in Europe with front wheel drive, and were powered by transversely mounted two-cylinder two-stroke engines. Displacement was 584 or 692 cc: claimed maximum power was initially 15 PS, and from 1931 a choice between 18 or 20 hp. These models had a generator that doubled as a starter, mounted directly on the crankshaft, known as a Dynastart.[9] DKW in Zwickau produced approximately 218,000 units between 1931 and 1942.[7] Most of those cars were sold on the home market and over 85% of DKWs produced in the 1930s were the little F series cars: DKW reached second place in German sales by 1934 and stayed there, accounting for 189,369 of the cars sold between 1931 and 1938, more than 16% of the market.[10]

Between 1929 and 1940, DKW produced a less well remembered but technically intriguing series of rear-wheel drive cars called (among other names) Schwebeklasse and Sonderklasse with two-stroke V4 engines.[11] Engine displacement was 1,000 cc, later 1,100 cc. The engines had two extra cylinders that acted as air compressors for forced induction, so they had the external appearance of a V6 engine but without spark plugs on the front cylinder pair.

In 1939, DKW made a prototype with the first three-cylinder engine, with a displacement of 900 cc and producing 30 hp. With a streamlined body, the car could run at 115 km/h. It was put into production after World War II, first as an Industrieverband Fahrzeugbau (IFA) F9 (later AWZ P70) in Zwickau, East Germany, and shortly afterwards in DKW-form from Düsseldorf as the 3=6 or F91.

Saab used DKW engines as a model for the Saab two-stroke in their first production car, the Saab 92.

Automobiles made after 1945

As Auto Union was based in Saxony in what became the German Democratic Republic (East Germany), it took some time for it to regroup after the war. The company was registered in West Germany as Auto Union GmbH in 1949, first as a spare-part provider, but soon to take up production of the RT 125 motorcycle and a new delivery van, called a Schnellaster F800. Their first line of production took place in Düsseldorf. This van used the same engine as the last F8 made before the war.

Their first car was the F89 using the body from the prototype F9 made before the war and the two-cylinder two-stroke engine from the last F8. Production went on until it was replaced by the successful three-cylinder engine that came with the F91. The F91 was in production 1953–1955, and was replaced by the larger F93 in 1956. The F91 and F93 had 900 cc three-cylinder two-stroke engines, the first ones delivering 34 hp, the last 38 hp. The ignition system comprised three independent sets of points and coils, one for each cylinder, with the points mounted in a cluster around a single lobed cam at the front end of the crankshaft. The cooling system was of the free convection type assisted by a fan driven from a pulley mounted at the front end of the crankshaft. The F93 was produced until 1959, and was replaced by the Auto-Union 1000. These models were produced with a 1,000 cc two-stroke engine, with a choice between 44 hp or 50 hp S versions until 1963. During this transition, production was moved from Düsseldorf to Ingolstadt, where Audi still has its production. From 1957, the cars could be fitted with a saxomat, an automatic clutch, the only small car then offering this feature. The last versions of the Auto-Union 1000S had disc brakes as option, an early development for this technology. A sporting 2+2 seater version was available as the Auto-Union 1000 SP from 1957 to 1964, the first years only as a coupé and from 1962 also as a convertible.

In 1956, the very rare DKW Monza was put into small-scale production on a private initiative, with a sporting two-seater body of glassfiber on a standard F93 frame. It was first called Solitude, but got its final name from the long-distance speed records it made on the Autodromo Nazionale Monza in Italy in December 1956. Running in Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) class G, it set records including 48 hours at an average speed of 140.961 km/h, 10,000 km at 139.453 km/h and 72 hours at 139.459 km/h. The car was first produced by Dannenhauer & Strauss in Stuttgart, then by Massholder in Heidelberg and lastly by Robert Schenk in Stuttgart. The number produced is said to be around 75, 50 survived. Production finished by the end of 1958.

A more successful range of cars was sold from 1959, the Junior/F12 series based on a modern concept from the late 1950s. The range consists of Junior (basic model) made from 1959 to 1961, Junior de Luxe (a little enhanced) from 1961 to 1963, F11 (a little larger) and F12 (larger and bigger engine) from 1963 to 1965, and F12 Roadster from 1964 to 1965. The Junior/F12 series became quite popular, and many cars were produced. An assembly plant was licensed in Ballincollig, County Cork, Ireland between 1952 and c.1964 and roughly 4,000 vehicles were assembled, ranging from saloons, vans and motorbikes to commercial combine harvesters. This was the only DKW factory outside Germany in Europe and for many years after its closure its large DKW sign could be visible on the wall of the factory. The building was demolished in the late 2000s and was redeveloped into a German Aldi store and a McDonald's drive-thru.

All the three-cylinder two-stroke post-war cars had some sporting potential and formed the basis for many rally victories in the 1950s and early 1960s. This made DKW the most winning car brand in the European rally league for several years during the fifties.

In 1960, DKW developed a V6 engine by combining two three-cylinder two-stroke engines, with a capacity of 1,000 cc. The capacity was increased and the final V6 in 1966 had a capacity of 1,300 cc, which developed 83 hp at 5,000 rpm using the standard configuration with two carburettors. A four-carburettor version produced 100 hp, a six-carburettor one 130 hp. It weighed only 84 kg. The V6 was planned to be used in the DKW Munga and the F102. About 100 engines were built for testing purposes and 13 DKW F102 and some Mungas were fitted with the V6 engine in the 1960s.[12] The last started DKW production model was the F102, coming into production in 1964 (the last model DKW Munga had started 1956) as a replacement for the old-looking AU1000. However, the F102 sold poorly, largely due to its two-stroke engine technology which was at the limit of its development. Auto Union's parent, Daimler-Benz, decided to offload the company to Volkswagen. The car was re-engineered with a four-stroke engine and relaunched as the Audi F103. This marked the end of the DKW marque for cars, and the rebirth of the Audi name.

From 1956 to 1961, Dutch importer Hart, Nibbrig & Greve assembled cars in an abandoned asphalt factory in Sassenheim, where they employed about 120 workers, two transporter, that collected SKD kits from Duesseldorf and built about 13.500 cars. When the DKW plant moved the import of SKD kits stopped, as it became too expensive.[13]

DKW Worldwide

From 1957 to 1967, DKW cars were made in Brazil by the local company Vemag (Veículos e Máquinas Agrícolas S.A., "Vehicles and Agricultural Machinery Inc.").[14] Vemag was assembling Scania-Vabis trucks, but Scania Vabis became an independent company in July 1960.[15] The original plans were to build the Candango off-roader (Munga), a utility vehicle and a four-door sedan, called Vemaguet and Belcar respectively. The first model built was the 900 cc F91 Universal but the Belcar and Vemaguet names were applied later.

In 1958, the F94 four-door sedan and station wagon were launched, in the early 1960s renamed Belcar and Vemaguet. The company also produced a luxury coupe (the DKW Fissore) and the off-road Munga (locally called Candango). In 1960 Vemag cars received the larger one-litre, 50 PS engine from the Auto Union 1000.[16]

Vemag had a successful official racing team, with the coupe GT Malzoni, with fiberglass body. This project was the foundation of the long-lasting Brazilian sports car brand Puma. The Brazilian F94 line has been improved with several cosmetic changes and became more and more different from the German and Argentine models. Vemag had no capital to invest in new products and came under governmental pressure to merge. In 1964–1965 Volkswagen gradually took over Auto Union, a minority holder in Vemag, and in 1967 Volkswagen bought the remainder of the stock.[17] VW quickly began phasing out DKW-Vemag production and introduced the Volkswagen 1600 sedan to the old Vemag plant, after a total of 109,343 DKW-Vemag cars had been built.[16][18]

Data from GEIA 1959 [22] Data from anfavea [23]

DKW vehicles were made in Argentina from 1960 to 1969 by IASF S.A. (Industria Automotriz Santa Fe Sociedad Anónima) in Sauce Viejo, Santa Fe. The most beautiful were the Cupé Fissore, which had many famous owners (Julio Sosa, César Luis Menotti, and others). Other models are the Auto Union 1000 S Sedán (21,797 made until 1969) and the Auto Union 1000 Universal S (6,396 made until 1969).[24] and the Auto Union Combi/Pick-up. The last version of the Auto Union Combi/Pick-up (DKW F1000 L), launched in 1969, survived a few months and was bought out by IME, which continued production until 1979.[25]

Data from ADEFA 1966 [26] Data from ADEFA 1970 [27]

After the Netherlands, the Danes were the second largest consumers of DKW vehicles. Due to tariffs and import restrictions, DKW was forced to find a solution. Christian Bohnstedt Petersen (1894-1967) was a pioneer in Danish aviation. He had obtained the 50th Danish pilot certificate in 1918 and was a manufacturer of both bicycles, motorcycles, automobiles and aircraft. With the Christian Bohnstedt-Petersen Automobile Assembly Factory in Copenhagen, they found a partner who could assemble DKW F5 Meisterklasse cars on site in Denmark from delivered parts. The wooden bodies delivered from Zwickau were mounted onto the also delivered chassis. Subsequently, the artificial leather upholstery was nailed on. After the installation of the engine and electrical system, one vehicle could be delivered per hour. Production was halted after the German Wehrmacht occupied Copenhagen in April 1940. By then, about 3,000 vehicles had been produced. In addition, a few F7 and F8 were built with steel bodies by M.C. Christensen near the city of Silkeborg.

A fifteen-minute film by the Danish Broadcasting Corporation from 1938 shows the following details:[28] View of the free port Frihavnen. Coachwork for DKW cars unloaded from carriages in Frihavnen and transported by lorry to Bohnstedt-Petersen's factory. On the first floor of the factory, the DKW cars are assembled by upholsterers, cabinet makers, mechanics and others who assemble the cars manually. The finished cars are driven down a slideway to the yard where they are filled up with petrol.[29] The cars in the streets of Copenhagen. Holka AG [30]

J. A. Lawton and Sons was a company that supplied bodies for the chassis delivered from Germany. A vehicle with an F7 pickup body is documented. The company from Adelaide, which was located on North Terrace, was already founded in 1865. Another supplier of vehicle bodies was Kellow Falkiner [31] from Melbourne.

Jawa [32]

The company Agroservice from the Slovenian town of Novo Mesto started as a maintenance company for agricultural machines. Under the new name Moto Montaza, CKD assembly of DKW vans began in 1955. In 1959, the company was renamed IMV [33][34] (Industrija Motornih Vozil). From 1962, DKW passenger cars [35][36] were assembled from CKD kits. In 1962, a transport vehicle was developed that bore a visual resemblance to the Barkas B 1000. The technical components such as the engine, axles, and other chassis parts continued to come from DKW. The engine of the vehicle called IMV 1000 [37][38] had a displacement of 981 cc and initially produced 39 hp. Later, up to 44 hp was also achieved. This was sufficient for 100 to 105 km/h. In 1972, engines from British Leyland were supplied for this vehicle. The vehicle designation changed to IMV 1600 B. It is therefore assumed that there was a supply stop by DKW at the end of 1971. The production capacity of IMV was a maximum of 1500 vehicles per year. Exports went to Czechoslovakia and Austria. In Austria, the transporter was sold as Donau 1000.

  • Brazil
  • Argentina
  • Denmark
  • Switzerland
  • Australia
  • Czechoslovakia
  • Yugoslavia

Vans and utility vehicles

The DKW Munga was built by Auto Union in Ingolstadt. Production began in October 1956 and ended in December 1968, with 46,750 cars built. From 1949 to 1962, DKW produced the Schnellaster with a trailing-arm rear suspension system with springs in the cross bar assembly. Spanish subsidiary IMOSA produced a modern successor introduced in 1963, the DKW F 1000 L. This van started with the three-cylinder 1,000 cc engine, but later received a Mercedes-Benz Diesel engine and was renamed a Mercedes-Benz in 1975.

Motorcycles

During the late 1920s and until WWII broke out, DKW was both the world's largest motorcycle manufacturer,[39] as well as Europe's pioneer of front-wheel drive automobiles with their successful 1931 and later DKW Front models,[40] before the 1932 Adler Trumpf and the 1934 Citroen Traction Avant. In 1931, Arnold Zoller started building split-singles and this concept made DKW the dominant racing motorcycle in the Lightweight and Junior classes between the wars.[41] This included off-road events like the International Six Days Trial where the marque scored some considerable inter-war year successes alongside Bavarian Motor Works At the same time, the company also had some success with super-charged racing motorcycles which because of their light weight were particularly successful in the ISDT[42]

The motorcycle branch produced famous models such as the RT 125 pre- and post-World War II, and after the war with production at the original factory in GDR becoming MZ[1] it made 175, 250 and 350 (cc) models. As war reparations, the design drawings of the RT 125 were given to Harley-Davidson in the US and BSA in the UK. The Harley-Davidson version was known loosely as the Hummer (Hummer is really just a few specific years, but generally people call the Harley lightweights Hummers), while BSA used them for the Bantam. IFA and later MZ models continued in production until the 1990s, when economics brought production of the two stroke to an end. Other manufacturers copied the DKW design, officially or otherwise. This can be seen in the similarity of many small two-stroke motorcycles from the 1950s, including from Yamaha, Voskhod, Maserati and Polish WSK.

Cars

Pre-war production

Production figures for DKW cars in 1933 amounted to 16,000 vehicles.[43] Pre-war and war-years production of civilian models totalled almost 250,000 units, of which some 218,000 were front-wheel driven.

  • DKW Typ P (1928–1933) 5,228 units
  • DKW Typ 4=8 (1930–1932) 4,693 units
  • Sonderklasse 432 (1932–1933) 966 units
  • Sonderklasse 1001, Sonderklasse 1002 (1933–1935) 6,264 units
  • Schwebeklasse (1934–1937) 6,999 units
  • Sonderklasse 37 (1937–1940) 10,472 units
  • DKW F1 (1931–1932) 4,353 units
  • DKW F2 Meisterklasse (1932–1935) 8,441 units
  • DKW F2 Reichsklasse (1933–1935) 18,591 units
  • DKW F3 (1933-1935) 224 units
  • DKW F4 (1934–1935) 7,900 units
  • DKW F5 Reichsklasse (1935–1937) 30,596 units
  • DKW F5 Meisterklasse (1935–1937) 32,901 units
  • DKW F5 Cabriolet (1935–1938) 6,374 units
  • DKW F5 Einheits two seater (1935–1936) 998 units
  • DKW F5K 600 (1936–1937) 1,450 units
  • DKW F5K 700 (1936–1937) 1,166 units
  • DKW F5 Roadster (1935–1938) 407 units
  • DKW F5 Lieferwagen (1935–1937) 765 units
  • DKW F6 ≈(1936) ? units
  • DKW F7 Reichsklasse (1936–1939) 50,842 units
  • DKW F7 Meisterklasse (1937–1939) 41,656 units
  • DKW F7 Cabriolet (1937–1939) 2,941 units
  • DKW F7 Lieferwagen (1937–1939) 2,266 units
  • DKW F8 Reichsklasse (1938–1942) 14,750 units into the war.
  • DKW F8 Meisterklasse (1938–1942) 19,405 units into the war.
  • DKW F8 Meister Super (1939–1941) 1,379 units into the war.
  • DKW F8 Cabriolet (1938–1942) 3,436 units into the war.
  • DKW F8 Lieferwagen (1939–1942) 9,517 units into the war.
  • DKW F9 prototype (1939-1942) 12 units

Post-war

  • DKW Schnellaster van (1949–1962)
  • DKW F10 (1950)
  • DKW F89 (1950–1954)
  • DKW 3=6 (F91/F93/F94) (1953–1959)
  • DKW Monza (1956–1958)
  • DKW Munga off-road (1956–1968)
  • DKW Junior (F11/F12) (1959–1965)[44]
  • DKW F102 (1963–1966)

Motorcycles and scooters

Companies that used DKW engines

<Gallery perrow="5"> File:W.A.D. 78 cc (1936).jpg | W.A.D. 78 cc (1936) File:DKW power supply of the DO X; also for the start of the main engines.jpg| DKW power supply of the DO X; also for the start of the main engines File:Lippisch Storch V.jpg| Lippisch Storch V with DKW 500 cc File:Moll Mollmobil 1924 C.JPG|Mollmobil DKW 200 cc

  • W.A.D (Wolf A. Doerhoeffer)
  • Framo
  • Dornier Do X
  • RRG Storch V
  • E. C. Flader Feuerlöschgerätefabrik
  • Erla 5
  • Moll-Werke
  • Blitzkarren
  • Autobau-Genossenschaft CH[66][67]
  • IFA F9
  • Baur DKW F-10[68]
  • Dobro-Motorist [69]

Refrigerators from DKW

In 1927, the company founder J.S. Rasmussen acquired a license for the production of scroll compressors and refrigerators based on the design of the American manufacturer Norge. In 1928, three workers were engaged in the production of refrigerators. In 1929, the DKW refrigeration was presented at the Leipzig fair and was so successful that by 1930, thirty workers were employed in the production of refrigerators. In 1931, the company was renamed in DKK (Deutsche Kühl und Kraftmaschinengesellschaft m.b.H. = German Refrigeration and Power Machinery Company Ltd.).[70] In 1938, DKK had 1200 employees.[71]

DKW replicas, copies, and licensed replicas

<Gallery perrow="5">

File: Л-300 Красный Октябрь.JPG | Л-300 from Promet or Red October File:I 350.jpg| ISCH-350 from Ischmasch File: MHV Sokol 125 01 noBG.jpg| Sokół 125 from Państwowe Zakłady Samochodowe no. 2 File: BSA Bantam noBG.jpg| BSA Bantam D1 from Birmingham Small Arms Company (BSA) File: Harley Davidson 125 noBG.jpg| Harley Davidson 125 File: YAMAHA YA-1 noBG.jpg| Yamaha YA-1

  • L-300 (Л-300) from Promet (1930–1934)
  • L-300 (Л-300) from Red October (1933–1939)
  • ISCH-350 (ИЖ-350) from Ischmasch (1946-1951)
  • Sokół 125 from Państwowe Zakłady Samochodowe no. 2 (PZS) (1948-1950)
  • BSA Bantam D1 from Birmingham Small Arms Company (BSA) (1948-1963)
  • Harley-Davidson Hummer S-125 (1947-1952); Model 165 (1953–1959); Hummer (1955–1959); Super 10 (1960–1961); Ranger (1962); Pacer (1962–1965); Scat (1962–1965); Bobcat (1966)
  • Yamaha YA-1 (1955-1958)
  • Motauto „Lusso“; „Sport“; „Monza“ [72] (1955-1959)

DKW engines and stationary engines, boat engines, aircraft engines, agricultural engines

The engine division of DKW is underestimated in terms of its importance to the company. In the autumn of 1921, the 10,000th DKW engine was produced. In February 1924, the next anniversary was reached with the 50,000th engine.[73]

See also

References

  1. Motor Cycle. 27 August 1964. "DKW man dies". Added 2014-06-16^
  2. History of the Four Rings—Part 1—Audi Auto Union www.seriouswheels.com, retrieved 8 May 2018^
  3. Odin, L.C. World in Motion 1939 – The whole of the year's automobile production. Belvedere Publishing, 2015. ASIN: B00ZLN91ZG.^
  4. DKW Des Knaben Wunsch arthistoricum, 1919-01-01, retrieved 2025-08-02^
  5. 1919 Slaby-Beringer Elektrowagen Heinkel Scooter Project, 17 April 2017^
  6. DKW 6.3 cc Motor Allgemeine Automobil-Zeitung, 1938-03-01, retrieved 2025-08-05^
  7. Oswald, p 86^
  8. Oswald, p 85^
  9. Oswald, p 94 – 103^
  10. Oswald, p 531^
  11. Oswald, p 87^
  12. DKW Specifications Dyna.co.za, 2008-11-13, retrieved 2010-10-02^
  13. Autokampioen 25/26 2007 "Made in Holland" by Yop Segers^
  14. Vemag Automobile Quarterly, 1973^
  15. Helen Shapiro. Determinants of Firm Entry into the Brazilian Automobile Manufacturing Industry, 1956–1968 The Business History Review, Winter 1991^
  16. Jason Vogel, Flavio Gomes. DKWs in Brazil KTUD Online Automotive Archive^
  17. Shapiro, p. 935^
  18. Paulo César Sandler, Rogério de Simone. DKW – A grande história da Pequena Maravilha Editora Alaúde^
  19. Candango lexicarbrasil, 2014-01-01, retrieved 2025-08-01^
  20. Candango velozesbrasil, 2025-01-01, retrieved 2025-08-01^
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  24. Auto Union Coche Argentino, 2009-05-18, retrieved 2011-10-30^
  25. Auto Union Coche Argentino, 2009-05-18, retrieved 2011-10-30^
  26. ADEFA 1966 (p.15) ADEFA, 1966-01-01, retrieved 2025-07-30^
  27. ADEFA 1970 (p.14) ADEFA, 1970-01-01, retrieved 2025-07-30^
  28. Christian Bohnstedt-Petersen Automobile Assembly Factory in Copenhagen Danish Broadcasting Corporation, 1938-01-01, retrieved 2025-07-29^
  29. Christian Bohnstedt-Petersen Automobile Assembly Factory Sundkrogsgade No.1 (1936) in Copenhagen Danmarks Motorhistoriske Arkiv, 1936-01-01, retrieved 2025-07-29^
  30. Holka AG Swiss Car Register, 2020-09-09, retrieved 2025-07-29^
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  36. Logo IMV DKW Muzejska zbirka IMV v Novem mestu, 2025-01-22, retrieved 2025-08-03^
  37. IMV 1000 imvklub, 2023-01-22, retrieved 2025-01-01^
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  39. http://bikelinks.com/directory/Classic_Motorcycles/A_to_Z/D/DKW/http://www.audi.com/corporate/en/company/history/models/^
  40. DKW Front F 1 roadster, 1931 audi.com, retrieved 8 May 2018^
  41. DKW Supercharged Two-Strokes – Force-Fed Deeks www.odd-bike.com, retrieved 8 May 2018^
  42. ISDT award-winning DKW 246cc 1935.^
  43. Production figures 1933 Club-Organ des Oesterreichischen Touring-Club, 1934-01-01, retrieved 2025-08-06^
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