Goliath Pionier
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The Goliath Pionier is a small three-wheeled two-seater vehicle first presented by
Carl F. W. Borgward Carl Friedrich Wilhelm Borgward (November 10, 1890 in Altona, Hamburg – July 28, 1963 in Bremen (city), Bremen) was a German engineer and designer and the creator of the Borgward group, based in Bremen. Biography He was of modest origin, ...
at the 1931 Berlin motor show. It remained in production until 1934, by when approximately 4,000 had been produced.


Origins

Borgward was an energetic entrepreneur-engineer whose first venture into motorised transport had involved using his refrigerator factory to manufacture the "
Blitzkarren The Blitzkarren (German ) was a cab-less tricycle freight cart based on a motorcycle. It was produced in 1924 as the first complete production vehicle manufactured by the ''Bremer Kühlerfabrik Borgward & Co. GmbH''. The company, located in Sebald ...
", a three-wheeled motorised vehicle first seen in 1924. Its success diverted Borgward into automobile production, and in 1928 he founded the "Goliath Werke Borgward & Co. GmbH". The 1931 launch of the Goliath Pionier was an evolution from the earlier design. In the decade following the First World War Germany experienced desperate poverty, and many
micro-car Microcar is a term often used for the smallest size of cars, with three or four wheels and often an engine smaller than . Specific types of microcars include #Bubble cars, bubble cars, cycle cars, invacar, quadricycle (EU vehicle classification ...
designs were marketed, but the Pionier was both prettier and technically better thought through than competitors, and it enjoyed considerable success.


The body

The Pionier was a three-wheeled two-seater, with its single wheel at the front. The vehicle was built around a timber frame, coated with a skin of synthetic leather fabric. In 1934 it acquired an elegant "streamlined" rear end, although only a few hundred of those cars were produced.


Engine and transmission

There was a choice of single-cylinder
two-stroke A two-stroke (or two-stroke cycle) engine is a type of internal combustion engine that completes a Thermodynamic power cycle, power cycle with two strokes (up and down movements) of the piston during one power cycle, this power cycle being comple ...
power units. Maximum claimed power output of the 198 cc unit was at 3200 rpm, while the larger 247 cc unit produced . The gear box provided three forward speeds.


Commercial

Mandatory driving licenses had been introduced in Germany in 1909, but light-weight three wheelers such as the Pionier could be driven without a driver's license. Annual car tax was payable by vehicle owners between 1906 and 1933, but the Pionier could be owned without inviting this tax burden. The practical vehicle captured the frugal spirit of the early 1930s and total sales of approximately 4,000 represented a useful proportion of the approximately 24,500 three-wheelers sold between 1931 and 1934. Nevertheless, after ten years of economic gloom, in 1933 economic recovery was already in sight, and government moves to stimulate the economy included the abolition of car tax. By 1934 the minimalist approach of the three-wheeled microcars was no longer favoured by the German car market. The company's next small car, the
Hansa 400 {{Infobox automobile , image = , name = Hansa 400 / Hansa 500 , manufacturer = Goliath-Werke Borgward & Co. , production = 1933 – 1934 , predecessor = Goliath Pionier , successor = Hansa 1100 from 1934-1939 , class= Microcar , body_styl ...
built from September 1933, came with four wheels, a two-cylinder engine and at least of claimed engine power. In 1933 Borgward derived a commercial freight vehicle version of the Pionier and marketed is as the
Goliath F400 The Goliath F400 is a three-wheeled pickup transporter, made by Hansa-Lloyd and Goliath Company Borgward & Tecklenborg in Bremen, Germany which was sold under the brand Goliath. It was based on the three-wheeled passenger car Goliath Pionier wi ...
.


References


External links

{{commonscat, Goliath Pionier
1933 Goliath Pionier at the Lanemuseum Nashville, TN
Microcars
Pioneer Pioneer commonly refers to a settler who migrates to previously uninhabited or sparsely inhabited land. In the United States pioneer commonly refers to an American pioneer, a person in American history who migrated west to join in settling and de ...
Rear-wheel-drive vehicles Vehicles introduced in 1931 Three-wheeled motor vehicles