The name
The official name referred to the fact that the car's engine size gave it a 4 tax horsepower ''(Steuer-PS)'' rating. Where a two figure name is used, as in 4/12, the second number is the claimed actual horsepower. The origins of the Laubfrosch soubriquet are not entirely clear, but may refer to the fact that Opel painted all the early cars green, which by tradition is a lucky colour in Germany. Emphasis on the green colour also served to differentiate the car from the similarly shaped Citroën 5 CV which normally turned up painted yellow and was accordingly sometimes known as the Citron (lemon).Chronology
1924 - 1925: Opel 4 / 12 PS
Series production began in May 1924. Initially only a single body type, a simple two door "cabriolet" was offered, and the cars were all green. The 4,500 Mark price was competitive and the performance, for a small inexpensive car, was good. Demand for the cars and positive publicity followed, along with the affectionate soubriquet "Laubfrosch". The car had a four-cylinder Thermosyphon water cooled side valve engine with a claimed maximum output of at 2,200 rpm, and a top speed of 66 km/h (41 mph). Drive passed through a three speed transmission to the rear wheels. Alarmingly from the perspective of the twenty-first century the fuel tank in the Laubfrosch was housed along with the engine under the bonnet/hood. The footbrake operated mechanically on the drive shaft while a cable operated handbrake applied stopping power to the rear wheels. The wheelbase on these early cars was . The 4/12 PS was produced through 1924 and 1925, with a few modifications in place for the second year, including a new fashionable "boat-deck" style rear end and a switch over in respect of the brakes so that in 1925 it was the footbrake pedal that operated via a cable linkage on the rear wheels and the hand brake that operated via a mechanical linkage directly on the drive shaft.1924 - 1926: Opel 4 / 14 PS
In Autumn 1924, some months after the launch of the 4 / 12 PS, Opel introduced the 4 / 14 with a slightly longer wheelbase, a larger engine, and a wider range of bodies. The engine architecture and the stroke length in the cylinders was unchanged, but the bore was increased by , giving an engine capacity increased to 1018 cc and maximum output to at 2,500 rpm. The listed top speed was unchanged but the wheelbase was increased by to and new larger bodies became available. Another claim made for the 4 / 14 PS was that it incorporated improved brakes. Three seater bodies were offered, the third seat positioned behind the front two, and the bodywork a choice between an enclosed "Limousine" sedan/saloon and an open topped body. From 1925 the wheelbase cars were available with two and, for the first time on a Laubfrosch, four-seater bodies. There was now also a small delivery van. The cars were no longer only available in green. The three-seater "Limousine"-bodied cars were delivered in Steel Grey with a black roof while the delivery van variants were Reddish Brown".1927 - 1928: Opel 4 / 16 PS
Improvements announced in November 1926 included more power for the 1018 cc engine which by now was standard across the Laubfrosch range. Maximum output of at 2,800 rpm came with a small increase in the compression ratio and a change in the carburetor specification. Claimed top speed rose to 70 km/h (44 mph). There was also an increase in the range of body types offered along with some minor styling changes. For the first time the footbrake operated, still using a cable linkage, on all four wheels, and the suspension system was also reworked. The steering wheel was moved from the right side to the left, reflecting a more general trend in Europe at the time. The fuel filler cap which till now had been positioned centrally between the back of the hood/bonnet and the base of the windscreen was now repositioned under the bonnet/hood. In Autumn 1927 ratios on first and second gear were modified and the car received a slightly more flamboyant "Packard" style radiator.1929 - 1931: Opel 4 / 20 PS
At the end of 1928 the claimed maximum power from the engine increased to at 3,500 rpm which pushed the listed top speed up to 77 km/h (48 mph). This was accompanied by a further change in the carburetor specification. Three-seater bodies had by now disappeared from the list, but a new 2+2 cabriolet was introduced in 1930. The naming convention by which the Laubfrosch had been known as the Opel 4 PS became in one respect obsolete in 1928, since it defined the car in terms of its tax horsepower ''(Steuer-PS)''. 1928 was the year in which the German finance office switched from levying annual tax according to "tax horsepower", taxing cars instead according to "Steuer-cm3" (tax cubic capacity). Many German cars continued to be named formally or informally according toCommercial
The 4 PS ushered in Germany's age of mass motorisation, and was attractively priced on launch at RM 4,500. By 1930 Opel had produced 100,000 of these cars: initial investment costs had presumably by now been amortized, since the selling price had come down to . This was a deflationary period for the major European economies, but even in real money terms, the Laubfrosch became substantially cheaper during its production run. Germany's first mass-produced car could be priced to sell in the volumes that had, by 1930, established Opel, as Germany's leading volume auto producer. It is almost certainly because of the car's success and the state of the art production facilities at Rüsselsheim that in 1929Plagiarism is alleged
Opel's Rüsselsheim plant may have contained the first automobile production line assembly system in Germany, but the first automobile production line in Europe had been created bySources
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