Sunday, January 11, 2015

1935 Maier Leichtbau


In 2008 Jorg Jansen, a German car enthusiast, heard about a strange car hidden away at the back of a panel beater’s workshop in Krefeld, Germany. The shop was experiencing difficulties and was looking to sell a number of project cars that had been cluttering up the workshop. When Jansen pulled back the dust covered sheet covering the car, he wasn't sure what he was looking at. At first glance it appeared to be a Tatra with its distinctive louvered slats over the engine bay, but the front was all wrong. A glance into the engine bay revealed the familiar sight of an air-cooled Volkswagen engine, but a quick check of the engine number showed this was a transplant from a 1960s Beetle. The car had no papers and the manufacturer’s plate on the firewall provided only scant information: Maier Leichtbau. Vehicle Number LM 050 1/35. Motor Number 386418, 20 horsepower. bore 76. Hubs 76. Weight 684 kg. Total weight 1034 kg.

The car as it was found in 2008. It had been repainted at the former owner's request but the restoration was never finished.

The panel shop explained that the car had been delivered to them for restoration but the owner had lost interest in the project. The car had been exchanged in payment for the work done. The car had been parked up in the back of the shop with the intention of completing the restoration at a later date, however, as time went on the project slipped further and further down their list of priorities. Jansen was intrigued however and decided to buy the car.

Jansen's search through the archives failed to find any record of an automobile company named Maier. He decided to take positive action and got the car running again on its Volkswagen engine and took it to the Schloss Dyck Classic Day in Grevenbroich where he put out a call for more information. The car drew the attention of Dutch auto historian, Herman Van Oldeneel, who began an investigation. Van Oldeneel managed to track down the likely manufacturer, Frederich Maier, through twelve patents which had been lodged in the US. A search of the engine specifications on the builders plate identified the unit as being from a DKW F2, which caused Van Oldeneel to contact me through this blog to see if I could shed any light on the car, having written extensively about DKW and Tatra history. At the same time Christine Dankbar of the Berlin Zeitung newspaper published an article calling for information about the mysterious car. Very slowly the story of the car began to be pieced together.


Frederick Maier - the innovative engineer

Frederich Maier was born on 1st November 1898 in Wollback, Germany on the Swiss border. He gained his pilot's license 1917, serving in the fledgling German airforce during the last year of the First World War. After the war he studied mechanical engineering, qualifying with high marks in 1923. He went to work with the German aircraft manufacturer, Junkers, serving overseas in South and Central America as a flight engineer. He returned to Germany in 1927 but was soon on the move again, this time to Russia where a joint venture aircraft development program was underway that allowed Germany to bypass the restrictions of the Versailles Treaty. In 1928 he returned to Germany and took a position at the Albatross Aircraft concern outside Berlin, where he became plant manager.

Junkers was a pioneer of all metal aircraft construction at a time when most aircraft manufacturers used composite construction of metal frame and wood and canvas.

At the beginning of the 1930s his mind had begun to turn towards using his experience of aircraft engineering to automobile design and in 1931 he registered the company Leichtbau Maier. Over the next several years he lodged a number of patterns for various features, such as a height adjustable driver's seat, a new suspension system, turning headlights and, most importantly a self supporting body manufacturing method that drew heavily on his aircraft manufacturing experience.

Following Adolf Hitler’s call to build ‘the people’s car’ at the 1933 Berlin Auto Show a group of financiers from Munich agreed to lend Maier 300,000 RM to build an experimental prototype that would meet the Fuhrer's specifications. Maier set about building a modern steel car in his modest workshop in Berlin. The car had a number of cutting edge features including a central headlight that pivoted as you turned the wheel and a rear mounted engine. He used a trusty DKW water cooled two cylinder, two stroke engine of 692ccs. The car was named the Maier lightweight sedan and was completed in 1935, receiving a manufacturers ID plate numbered 1/35. The car may ave been exhibited at the 1935 Berlin Motor Show, but by this time Ferdinand Porsche had received the contract to develop the People's Car. Maier's car was reglegated to the sidelines and obscurity. In an attempt to bury the car, it appears the Nazi administration confiscated several of his patents. Only the US patent records exist.

This copy of the patent highlights the aeronautical influence on the car's construction.

From this point it seems Maier's fortunes began a long downward trajectory. In 1938, the Schell Program, which rationalised the automotive industry, banned him from developing or building automobiles. Maier however, was still able to shop his designs around and in 1938 representatives from the Auto-Union body design office visited him to discuss self-supporting steel body construction. Auto-Union's new DKW F9 Hohnklasse was scheduled to go into production in 1940 and a key part of the company's strategy was to minimise manufacturing costs via monocoque construction. However, that plan had run straight into legal trouble as Adam Opel held an exclusive patent for monocoque construction from General Motors in the US. To license the GM process would add significant cost to the DKW project, eroding the forecast cost savings. Maier explained to the Auto-Union management that his patent was independent of the GM process and he could license it to them. Auto-Union engineers examined the Maier Lightweight car, but after consideration, the Auto-Union board decided to continue with their traditional separate body and chassis construction.

Auto-Union was not the only suitor during this time. Although formal documentation is lacking, it appears that Maier consulted for Peugeot as the company gifted him a brand new Peugeot 202 sedan in 1939. In 1947 after the war, Peugeot's new model, the 203 would be released featuring a monocoque self-supporting body. This very successful car had its genesis in the late 1930s, which fits with the timeline.

Maier's fortunes declined rapidly during the war years. His facilities in Berlin were requisitioned by the military for vehicle servicing. In 1943 and 44 the factory was severely damaged by bombing and many of Maier's designs and documents were destroyed. Maier's family moved to Denmark for safety, leaving Maier to struggle along alone. Following the Soviet occupation of Berlin, Maier was identified as a person of value and arrested, destined to be shipped to the east to work in the Soviet aircraft industry. However, he managed to escape during transport and made his way back to Germany.

For more information about the Soviet relocation of the Junkers plant to Russia, see here: https://junkersinrussland.wordpress.com/2012/06/03/hello-world/comment-page-1/


There was little for him to come back to. Maier’s engineering business was destroyed during the war and his vehicle patents had all be commandeered by the Allies as war booty, leaving him penniless. To make matters worse, he found himself in a legal dispute with his former investors seeking recovery of their 300,000 RM investment. Maier attempted to recover his patents through litigation, but this proved both costly and unsuccessful. As his disappointments compounded, Maier increasingly withdrew from the world. His family left him in the late 1950s and became estranged. The car, damaged in the air raids of 1943, was laid up in a cow shed outside Berlin, virtually derelict. In 1975 he loaned the car to a movie company as wreck in the WW2 mini-series ‘Tadelloser and Wolff.’ Needing to get the car moving for another scene in series, they ripped out its original engine and drive and replaced it with a Volkswagen 1500cc engine.

The car as seen in the Tadelloser and Wolff TV series. This is the only image we have showing the car as it was built. Shortly after this the engine and drive train was replaced with Volkswagen running gear.

In 1976 Maier died in poverty and obscurity. His estranged daughter sold the car and Maier’s Peugeot 202 to the movie props company in Aachen in 1976 and all of Maier’s paperwork, including any remaining patent documentation and vehicle designs were thrown away.



The Maier in storage.

The car went through several hands in subsequent years before it ended up at the panel shop in Krefeld. The car at that time was pale blue. By this time the car’s origin had been long forgotten and everyone thought it was an early Volkswagen so it was painted in same (rather awful) bright red as the Volkswagen Museum’s V3 replica.

The Maier in the mechanics workshop. The suspension is original.

Since then the Maier car has been seen out at many German classic car events where it draws considerable attention.





It is currently on display at the Zylinderhausmuseum, Adolf-Kolping-Str. 2, 54470 Bernkastel-Kues (as at 2021). https://www.zylinderhaus.com/

Jorg Jansen and Herman van Oldeneen are still keen to find more information about Maier or the car. If you have some information to share, Jansen can be contacted at info@sgjansen.de and van Oldeneen at h.van.oldeneel@hetnet.nl

AutoCult produce a very fine 1/43 scale model of the Maier Leichtbau



https://www.autocult-models.de/models/autocult-06013/

Some links:
Jansen's website - http://www.leichtbau-maier.com/
http://www.berliner-zeitung.de/berlin/kfz-sachverstaendiger-joerg-jansen-spurensuche-nach-friedrich-egon-maier,10809148,25774532.html
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leichtbau_Maier
Photos from Schloss Dyck Oldtimer Treffen. http://www.flickr.com/photos/zappadong/11978877133/
My video presentation:


Thursday, January 1, 2015

Classic car events in Perth 2015

14 February 2015 Big Al's 35th Annual Poker Run


22 February 2015 - Triple Treat Motorsport Day


28 February 2015 Hot Summer Nights 5


15 March 2015 Vintage Collective Markets Show and Shine

Link to photos from the January event - http://heinkelscooter.blogspot.com.au/2015/01/classic-car-events-in-perth-2015.html

22 March 2015 German Car Day

Photos and report - http://heinkelscooter.blogspot.com.au/2015/03/german-car-day-2015.html

28-29 March 2015 Northam Two Day Festival of Speed

http://www.vsccwa.com.au/cms/index.php?page=northam-flying-fifty-and-hillclimb

19 April 2015 "Orient Express" Asian Classic Car and Bike Show

http://www.teccwa.com/orient

3 May 2015 Classic Car Show, Whiteman Park


9 May 2015 Arthur Grady Day (Fremantle Heritage Festival)

http://www.fremantlestory.com.au/your-story/event-festivals/festivals/2015-fremantle-heritage-festival/2015-fremantle-heritage-festival.html

24 May 2015 Vintage Collective Markets - Cafe Racer Show

http://thevintagecollectivemarkets.net/perth-cafe-racers-at-vcmperth/

16 August 2015 Shannons Classic in the Park


28 September 2015 Rear-engine Car Day

Event report and photos http://heinkelscooter.blogspot.com.au/2015/09/rear-engine-car-day-photos.html

4 October 2015 Rotary Club of Como Car Show

http://comorotarycarshow.com/ Photos here http://heinkelscooter.blogspot.com.au/2015/10/rotary-club-of-como-car-show-photos.html

24 October 2015 French Car Festival

This year's show was a full on celebration of French culture. Here's a link to photos from the show http://www.heinkelscooter.blogspot.com.au/2015/10/french-car-day-perth-2015.html

1 November 2015 Italian Car Day


rotary-northbridge.org/rotary-italian-car-day/

8 November 2015 Brockwell Run


22 November 2015 Celebration of the Motorcar

Celebration of the Motorcar will be held in Perth on Sunday, November 22nd 2015. The venue will be the beautiful grounds of the Cottesloe Civic Centre again. We anticipate 130 cars this year. Early confirmations of display cars include: An Alvis TE21, which has recently arrived and is the sole example in WA. A spectacular Lamborghini Countach and an equally dramatic Ferrari F40. A pair of glamorous 1953 Cadillac Eldorado Convertibles fresh from extensive restorations. The 1923 Bentley which was the first of the marque to compete in the Le Mans 24-Hour race. A sporty AMG SLS Coupe. A unique Puma GT coupe. A glamorous 1963 Ferrari 250 GTE. A very rare Marcos sports car. A Panhard PL17 being shown for the first time since arriving in WA. The 1958 Corvette originally owned by Hollywood tars Robert Wagner and Natalie Wood.

There will also be a special display to celebrate 60 Years of the Citroen DS.

For more details, check in the website http://celebration.org.au/

6 December 2015 Day of the Volkswagen

http://vwclubwa.com/

Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Percy Markham's Antique Auto Museum


I thought I'd finish what has been an exciting and interesting year with a post about my great-uncle Percy Markham. Percy started collecting vintage cars in the early 1950s, initially just as an exercise to give his sons some mechanical experience. However, in those days vintage cars could be picked up for next to nothing and collection quickly grew. In the late 1960s Percy established the Antique Auto Museum in Wembley. It was a small private museum which was open to the public and includes two full-time mechanics who worked on the restorations. After a time Percy found the cost of maintaining the museum uneconomical and in the late 1970s he donated the collection to the WA Museum on the understanding that the cars would be displayed for the people of Western Australia. In the 1980s however, a particularly dishonest administration sold off a large portion of the collection, despite protests. Several of the individuals involved in that administration ended up in prison on corruption charges later.

I had heard about the museum but never saw it. I only ever saw the cars when they were in the Perth Museum. However, a witness to those times, Andrew Brownell, sent me these photos from the late 1960s.  He writes:
Hi Paul,
Back in the sixties I was a student of Architecture living with my parents in Mount Pleasant on the banks of the Canning River opposite Aquinas College. Needless to say as a student I had little money but somehow I met Percival Wynyard Markham and his wife who lived in Floreat Park. I do not remember how we met but chance had it and in discussion with 'Mr Markham' he offered me a Saturday job to keep his car collection clean and to drive occasionally for weddings. The attached shows most of the cars as they were in the Museum. As a result of meeting Percy in 1965 I joined the then very new Rolls-Royce Owners' Club, West Australian Branch and became the editor of the Newsletter and later editor of the National Magazine 'Praeclarum' and then many other positions in the Club at both State and Federal levels including that of Federal President.
I am not sure how you 'fit' into the Markham clan but I would be most pleased to hear. I have always enjoyed the Club and, of course the cars. I have had the pleasure of owning a total of 5 MkVI Bentleys, a 1921 Silver Ghost Tourer and a couple of 20/25's but also had the fortune to ride in and drive many more.
I hope that you find these of interest and would be pleased to assist you with identification of others if you need.
Sadly, Percy's son and fellow car enthusiast, John Markham, passed away a month before I received the email so I didn't get to see them. I'm sure he would have appreciated them. Nevertheless, I present here Andrew's photos to commemorate this lost era.

The 1913 Nazzaro



Detroit Electric

1908 Renault

Andrew and the Morris Cowley, Percy's first vintage car.

Stanley Steamer

Light the boiler!

The 1898 Star

Sizaire-Naudin (right)

1908 Star

The Rollers

1908 Minerva

One of the cars awaiting restoration at the rear of the museum



Rolls-Royce Club of WA day


After several years of operating the museum, Percy decided to sell the most significant part of the collection to the WA museum. Not only did he sell the vehicles at a bargain price (interest free in installments over ten years), but he also funded to construction of the new museum buildings to house the collection. This cost several million dollars. The museum building itself has been demolished.

Video presentation by Beata Dawson:


More links:
1. The Percy Markham Collection based on John Markham's records and the WA Museum postcards. http://heinkelscooter.blogspot.com.au/2011/06/percy-markham-collection.html
2. The Percy Markham Collection auction catalogue. http://heinkelscooter.blogspot.com.au/2013/10/percy-markham-collection-auction.html
3. The surviving Percy Markham Collection at the WA Motor Museum. http://heinkelscooter.blogspot.com/2010/04/whiteman-park-motor-museum.html
4. John Markham's Nazzaro, which was part of the collection. http://heinkelscooter.blogspot.com.au/2010/05/felice-nazzaro.html