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  2. Einheits-PKW der Wehrmacht - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Einheits-PKW_der_Wehrmacht

    The 'mittlerer' (medium) Horch / Wanderer 901 was the most common variant of the various Einheits-Pkw (here: 'Typ(e) 40' in the August Horch Museum Zwickau.. Early on in the process of motorizing the German military before World War II, first the Reichswehr, and then the Wehrmacht had procured militarised versions of many different makes and models of civilian passenger cars.

  3. Morris light reconnaissance car - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Morris_Light_Reconnaissance_Car

    Morris Light Reconnaissance Car (LRC) was a British light armoured car for reconnaissance use produced by Morris Motors Limited and used by the British during the Second World War. RAF Morris LRC on an airfield in the Azores, January 1944.

  4. Tempo (automobile) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tempo_(automobile)

    Tempo Matador (Restored) Tempo was founded as Vidal & Sohn Tempo-Werke in 1924. During the 1940s, Tempo produced small military vehicles. Post-war the requirement of the Bundesgrenzschutz, in West Germany, to acquire a suitable vehicle for Border patrol led to production of the 80" and 86" Tempo from 1953 to 1957.

  5. Kurogane Type 95 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurogane_Type_95

    Between 1936 and 1944 approximately 4,700 were built. It was the only completely Japanese designed reconnaissance car ever used by the Imperial Japanese Army, which tended to use civilian cars. Its nickname is the "Yonki" (よんき) which in Japanese means "all-wheel drive". [1]

  6. Delahaye - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delahaye

    In early 1940, 100 Type 134N and Type 168 chassis were built and bodied by Renault as military cars under contract for the French army. The French government had ordered all private automobile production to cease in June 1939, but small numbers of cars continued to be built for the occupying German forces until at least 1942. [citation needed]

  7. Production vehicle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Production_vehicle

    The earliest use of the term production car being applied to motor cars, found to date, was in a June 1914 American advertisement for a Regal motor car. [1] The phrase was a shortened form of mass-produced or quantity-produced car. [2] [3] The phrase was also used in terms of the car to be made in production, as opposed to the prototype. [4]

  8. Wanderer (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wanderer_(company)

    Wanderer was a German manufacturer of bicycles, motorcycles, automobiles, vans and other machinery.Established as Winklhofer & Jaenicke in 1896 by Johann Baptist Winklhofer and Richard Adolf Jaenicke, the company used the Wanderer brand name from 1911, making civilian automobiles until 1941 and military vehicles until 1945.

  9. Crossley Motors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crossley_Motors

    Car production resumed after World War I and a new model, the 19.6, was launched in 1921 and joined in 1922 by the smaller 2.4 litre 14 hp model that would become the company's best seller. The 19.6 was replaced by the 2.7 litre 18/50 in 1925 fitted with Crossley's first six-cylinder engine and this was enlarged in 1927 to 3.2 litres in the 20.9.