MAYBACH (Germany) 1921-1940

After leaving Mercedes in 1907, Wilhelm Maybach collaborated with
Graf Zeppelin to build aeroengines particularly for airships and his
Friedrichshafen factory also made marine engines and motorcycle power
units, before introducing a sv 5738cc six-cylinder car (the engine
was also sold to Spyker in Holland).
First shown in 1921, the Maybach
originally had a two-speed pedal-controlled gearbox; Spohn, Glaser,
Armhruster, Erdmann & Rossi and Voll-Ruhrbeck were among the coachbuilders
who clothed this high-quality chassis with exclusive bodywork. An ohv
6995cc engine appeared in the W5 of 1926, available with a schnellgang
auxiliary two-speed gearbox. A 6922cc V-12 made its debut in 1929, and
was developed into the Zeppelin model of 1930. From 1931, a 7977cc V-12
was also available: some Zeppelins had the W5 six-cylinder; all had
seven-speed gearboxes.
The ohc SW series included the 3790cc SW38,
current from 1934 to 1940; there were also 3.5 litre and 4.2 litre
SW models. Always an expensive car, the Maybach could cost over
DM 40,000 in V-12 Zeppelin form with custom coachwork.
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