Wanderer W24

Wanderer W24

Manufacturer Wanderer-Werke AG
Production 1937 – 1940
Assembly Zwickau, Germany
Class transmission = 4-speed manual with floor-mounted shift
Wheelbase 2,600–3,100 mm (100–120 in)
Length 4,300 mm (170 in)
Width 1,615 mm (63.6 in)
Height 1,650 mm (65 in)

The Wanderer W24 was a middle market car introduced by Wanderer in 1937.

The car was powered by a four-cylinder four-stroke engine of 1767 cc driving the rear wheels via a four-speed gear box. Claimed maximum power output was 42 PS (31 kW; 41 hp) achieved at 3,400 rpm.

The W24’s structural basis was a box frame chassis. At the back it employed a swing axle arrangement copied from the popular small cars produced by sister company DKW.

At a time when some of the manufacturer’s larger models featured a twelve-volt electrical system, the W24 still made do with a six-volt arrangement.

The car was offered as a four-seater saloon with two or four doors. In addition, approximately 300 cabriolet versions were produced. Seventy years later few of these cabriolet version survive: those that do are much prized by collectors.

By 1940 when the increasing intensity of the war enforced an end to passenger car production, approximately 23,000 Wanderer W24s had been produced.

References

This article incorporates information from the equivalent article on the German Wikipedia.