Saab-Scania

Saab-Scania AB was a Swedish vehicle manufacturer that was formed from the 1969 merger of Saab AB and Scania-Vabis. The company was split in 1995.

Saab-Scania logo
Share of the Saab-Scania AB, issued 15. June 1973

History

Truck and bus manufacturer Scania AB of Södertälje merged with car and aeroplane manufacturer Saab AB of Trollhättan on 1 September 1969,[1][2] under the Wallenberg family group of companies. The merger meant that Saab no longer had to import the British Triumph Slant-4 engine, and could instead use the engine production facilities of Scania. In 1972 they started manufacturing the 2.0 L B version. In 1977, Saab took advantage of Scania's experience with turbochargers and added one to the engine, thus creating one of the earliest turbocharged automobile engines to be produced in large numbers.

When the corporation was split in 1995 the name of the truck and bus division changed back to Scania AB. Saab Aircraft (Saab AB) and Saab cars were also split, with General Motors buying a major holding in Saab Automobile AB.

Divisions

Saab-Scania consisted of following divisions:

  • Aircraft (traded under the Saab AB brand) - until 1995
  • Cars (traded under the Saab Automobile brand) - until 1990
  • Trucks & Buses (traded under the Scania brand) - until 1995

Subsidiaries

Saab-Scania had following subsidiaries:

gollark: I just download anything interesting on YT etc. and all the stuff from some youtubers.
gollark: I have something like 120GB of random video stuff versus 5GB of music, 3GB of book stuff and 1GB of notes/personal pictures.
gollark: Presumably they can just run everything possible off 12V, and simplify cabling.
gollark: Boards will apparently have buck converters for 5V/3.3V.
gollark: There's that 4-pin connector for extra CPU power, which is 12V, so I assume they mostly use that.

See also

References

  1. Berg, Jørgen Seemann (1995). King of the road i femti år: Norsk Scania AS 1945-1995 (in Norwegian). Oslo, Norway: Norsk Scania AS. p. 85. ISBN 82-993693-0-4.
  2. Gunston, Bill (2005). World Encyclopedia of Aircraft Manufacturers, 2nd Edition. Phoenix Mill, Gloucestershire, England, UK: Sutton Publishing Limited. p. 164. ISBN 0-7509-3981-8.

Further reading

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