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The Lloyd 300 was a small car produced by the
Borgward Group Borgward Group AG was a Chinese-German automobile brand established in 2010 with headquarters in Stuttgart, Germany. The company carried the name and logo of the former German brand Borgward. Design and engineering was located in Germany, but th ...
's Lloyd Motoren Werke GmbH (''Lloyd Motor Works'') in
Bremen Bremen (Low German also: ''Breem'' or ''Bräm''), officially the City Municipality of Bremen (german: Stadtgemeinde Bremen, ), is the capital of the German state Free Hanseatic City of Bremen (''Freie Hansestadt Bremen''), a two-city-state consis ...
between 1950 and 1952. The full name of the Lloyd 300 featured a two letter prefix that identified the body shape. The Lloyd LP300 ("Limousine" / saloon) was released in May 1950, while the LC300 (Coupé) and LS300 ("Kombi" / estate) followed early in 1951.


Engine and running gear

Power was delivered to the front wheels from a transversely mounted air-cooled twin cylinder
two-stroke engine A two-stroke (or two-stroke cycle) engine is a type of internal combustion engine that completes a power cycle with two strokes (up and down movements) of the piston during one power cycle, this power cycle being completed in one revolution of t ...
with a horizontal-flow Solex 30 BFRH carburetor. The engine capacity of 293cc provided for a maximum power output of 10 PS (6.5 kW) at 4,000 rpm. The top speed listed was 75 km/h (46 mph). The car was fueled using "regular" grade petrol/gasoline, mixed in the ratio of 25:1 with oil, reflecting the requirements of the "motorbike-style" two-stroke engine. When driven normally the Lloyd 300 consumed fuel significantly more frugally than West Germany's best selling small car, the
Volkswagen Volkswagen (),English: , . abbreviated as VW (), is a German Automotive industry, motor vehicle manufacturer headquartered in Wolfsburg, Lower Saxony, Germany. Founded in 1937 by the German Labour Front under the Nazi Party and revived into a ...
. Space was at a premium and the 18 litre fuel tank was accommodated ahead of the bulkhead underneath the front hood/bonnet in a space shared with the engine and the six-volt battery. Power was fed to the front wheels via a three speed manual gear box (without synchromesh). Borgward had contracted out the development of the engine and transmission package to a firm called "INKA" ''(Ingenieurs- und Konstruktionsarbeitsgemeinschaft)'' in Hude. The INKA engineers had previously been employed by
Auto Union Auto Union AG, was an amalgamation of four German automobile manufacturers, founded in 1932 and established in 1936 in Chemnitz, Saxony. It is the immediate predecessor of Audi as it is known today. As well as acting as an umbrella firm f ...
, the
Zwickau Zwickau (; is, with around 87,500 inhabitants (2020), the fourth-largest city of Saxony after Leipzig, Dresden and Chemnitz and it is the seat of the Zwickau District. The West Saxon city is situated in the valley of the Zwickau Mulde (German: ' ...
based conglomerate that had produced a succession of technically innovative and commercially successful
DKW DKW (''Dampf-Kraft-Wagen'', en, "steam-powered car", also ''Deutsche Kinder-Wagen'' en, "German children's car". ''Das-Kleine-Wunder'', en, "the little wonder" or ''Des-Knaben-Wunsch'', en, "the boy's wish"- from when the company built to ...
branded small cars during the 1930s, and the similarities between the basic architecture and technical solutions employed by the Lloyd 300 and those of the prewar
DKW F8 The DKW F8 is a compact front-wheel drive two-stroke engined saloon, introduced in 1939.Odin, L.C. ''World in Motion 1939 - The whole of the year's automobile production''. Belvedere Publishing, 2015. ASIN: B00ZLN91ZG. The F8 was slightly shorter ...
was impossible to miss. From the driver's seat, it was clear that no attempt had been made to conceal the way that details such as the gear lever and dashboard layout had been modelled on earlier DKW designs.
Peter Kurze Peter Kurze is a German publisher and author. He became known through his book series on the history of the automobile. Life Born 1955 in Bremen, after two one-year internships at a machine factory and a bank, he studied mechanical engineerin ...
: ''Borgward Typenkunde.'' , pp. 9 -11


Steering, suspension and brakes

The steering employed a
rack and pinion A rack and pinion is a type of linear actuator that comprises a circular gear (the '' pinion'') engaging a linear gear (the ''rack''). Together, they convert rotational motion into linear motion. Rotating the pinion causes the rack to be driven ...
mechanism which was conventional at the time. It required 2¼ turns between opposite locks: the turning circle was . The front wheels were suspended independently by two laterally mounted leaf springs. At the back there was a swing axle with semi-elliptical longitudinally configured leaf springs. From January 1952 it was possible to order the cars with shock absorbers for a supplement of DM 70. The brakes were applied with a cable linkage. The mechanical handbrake worked on all four wheels.


Chassis and body

The compact four-seater body was mounted on a tubular steel chassis with cross members and a platform of sheet steel. It consisted of a timber and plywood frame with an outer skin of synthetic leather. This avoided the need to use steel body panels which would have necessitated investment in heavy presses and complex dies with a high capital cost, and it reflected the acute steel shortage across western Europe at the time. According to one source the synthetic leather skin sometimes concealed a multitude of imperfections in the construction of the timber frame. Timber frame construction, which built on skills developed in nineteenth century carriage manufacturing, had been common in the 1920s, and manufacturers of small inexpensive cars not wishing to invest in costly presses and dies for stamping out steel body panels, notably DKW, had persisted with the technique and refined it through the 1930s. By the 1950s, however, some thought it anachronistic and the Lloyd 300 quickly acquired the soubriquet "Leukoplastbomber",Georg Schmidt: ''Borgward.'' , p. 102. an essentially untranslatable term referring to its "cute" shape and the "plasticky" character of the car's synthetic leather skin. Leukoplast is a brand of adhesive tape used for fixing medical dressings (and allegedly suitable to repair the Lloyd 300). The doors were hinged on the rear edge which facilitated access and egress. The windows in the doors slid open horizontally which avoided the need for costly and bulky winder mechanisms in the doors of what was, even by the standards of the time, a narrow car. The hood/bonnet lid was considered very narrow, and was broadened at the end of 1951. There was no opening hatch for the luggage locker at the back of the car, which instead had to be accessed by reaching behind the back seat.


Commercial

By the end of 1952, when the Lloyd 300 made way for the
Lloyd 400 The Lloyd 400 is a small car produced by the Borgward Group's Lloyd Motoren Werke GmbH (''Lloyd Motor Works'') in Bremen between 1953 and 1957. As with its predecessor, the Lloyd 300, the full name of the Lloyd 400 featured a two letter prefix t ...
, 18,087 of the earlier cars had been produced. Production peaked in 1952 with 9,981 Lloyds produced. Nevertheless, by this time the West German small car market was dominated by
Volkswagen Volkswagen (),English: , . abbreviated as VW (), is a German Automotive industry, motor vehicle manufacturer headquartered in Wolfsburg, Lower Saxony, Germany. Founded in 1937 by the German Labour Front under the Nazi Party and revived into a ...
who in 1952 produced 114,348 Volkswagen "Beetles". When it was launched, in May 1950, the Lloyd came with an advertised price of DM 3,334, which was very much less than the DM 4,600 advertised price for a Beetle. Both cars were small, cramped and slow, but for most purposes the Lloyd 300 was a class smaller than the Beetle. Nevertheless, by 1952 the price for a Beetle had come down to DM 4,400 while the price of a Lloyd 300 was increased to DM 3,664 in February 1952. The Lloyd 300 was replaced at the start of 1953 by the broadly similar
Lloyd 400 The Lloyd 400 is a small car produced by the Borgward Group's Lloyd Motoren Werke GmbH (''Lloyd Motor Works'') in Bremen between 1953 and 1957. As with its predecessor, the Lloyd 300, the full name of the Lloyd 400 featured a two letter prefix t ...
, itself replaced by the more powerful but otherwise broadly similar
Lloyd 600 The Lloyd 600 is a small car produced by the Borgward Groups's Lloyd Motoren Werke GmbH (''Lloyd Motor Works'') in Bremen between 1955 and 1961. The Lloyd Alexander was identical to the Lloyd 600 in most respects, but in place of the three speed ...
in 1955. As the 1950 progressed the economies of scale available to Volkswagen from their higher production volumes enabled the company to reduce the price of the Beetle further, and the price differential between the little Lloyds and the Volkswagen eroded further year by year.


References

{{Borgward timeline 1945 to 1970 1950s cars Cars introduced in 1950 Front-wheel-drive vehicles
300 __NOTOC__ Year 300 (Roman numerals, CCC) was a leap year starting on Monday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Constantius and Valerius (or, less frequently, ...