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The Admiral could be presented as a comfortable and rapid autobahn cruiser. Between 1937 and 1939, Opel produced 6,404 Admirals, split between 3,500 "Limousine" bodied sedan/saloon bodied cars, 2,314 cabriolets and 590 bare chassis supplied for completion to independent coach builders. [5]
1937–1940, 1962–1991 Opel Kadett; 1937–1939, 1964–1977 Opel Admiral; 1937–1938 Opel Super 6; 1939–1970 Opel Kapitän; 1953–1957 Opel Olympia Rekord;
Deutsch: Opel Admiral, Bauzeit 1937 bis 1939, beim Oldtimmertreffen am Forellenhof, ... First-generation Opel Admiral, dashboard of a right-hand drive car, ...
In 1964, Opel introduced the completely new KAD (Kapitän, Admiral, Diplomat) models; the Kapitän served as the base model of this three-tier model range. It was powered by the same engines as the contemporary Opel Admiral, namely a 2.6- or a 2.8-litre inline-six; a small number of Kapitäns even received the Chevrolet-sourced 4
Opel RAK.1 – world's first public flight of a manned rocket-powered plane on 30 September 1929 Opel Admiral convertible (1937–1939) Opel Kapitän (1938–1940) In the early 1920s, Opel became the first German car manufacturer to build automobiles with a mass-production assembly line.
In February 1964 Opel introduced a new range of flagship models as successors to the Opel Kapitän P-LV of 1959/1963. These KAD models (Opel Kapitän, Admiral and Diplomat; also referred to as "The Big Three" by Opel) were available with 2.6-litre and 2.8-litre in-line six-cylinder petrol engines (100 or 125 PS), or a V8-Chevrolet small-block engine 283 (4.6-litre) teamed with a two-speed ...
The Opel 1.8 Liter is a family car manufactured by Opel. Production commenced in January 1931, and continued till November 1933. The Opel 1.8 Liter was the first new Opel to be launched following the purchase of an 80% share in Opel by General Motors (GM), and the first Opel to have been designed and developed by GM in North America. [1]
The Opel 7/34 PS is a large but relatively inexpensive six-cylinder-powered car manufactured by Opel, introduced in October 1927.It was replaced in 1928 by the Opel 8/40 PS which was virtually identical except that the cylinder capacity had been increased.