Unimog 70200

The Unimog 70200 is the first series production Unimog of the Unimog series, made by Gebr. Boehringer. It was manufactured in Boehringer's Göppingen plant from June 1948 to April 1951. In total, 600 units of the 70200 have been made. Manufacture of the Unimog was sold to Daimler-Benz in October 1950, where it was modified for mass production. This mass production optimised Unimog is known as Unimog 2010.[1]

Unimog 70200
An Unimog 70200 on display in the Mercedes-Benz Museum
Overview
TypeTractor
ManufacturerBoehringer
Also calledUnimog, Boehringer
Production06.1948-04.1951
AssemblyBoehringer plant Göppingen
Powertrain
EngineOM 636 (Diesel,
18.4 kW or 24.7 hp or 25.0 PS)
Transmission6-speed manual gearbox, two reverse gears
Dimensions
Wheelbase1,720 mm (67 34 in)
Length3,520 mm (138 58 in)
Width1,630 mm (64 18 in)
Height2,020 mm (79 12 in)
Kerb weight1,775 kg (3,913 lb)
Chronology
Predecessornone
SuccessorUnimog 2010

The name Unimog 70200 was chosen because of Boehringer's cost centre. All Unimog 70200 vehicle identification numbers begin with 70200. Minuscules were used to differentiate between certain models.[2] It is said that approximately 100–120 Unimog 70200 still exist today.[1]

History

Development

Unimog U 6 prototype on display in the Unimog museum in Gaggenau

Originally, the Unimog was invented by German engineer Albert Friedrich, who worked for Daimler-Benz during World War II, designing aircraft engines. After World War II, Friedrich, now unemployed, wanted to develop an agricultural vehicle in case the Morgenthau Plan would become reality.[3] Friedrich's idea was designing a vehicle similar to an agricultural tractor with a hitch and PTOs, but much more offroad capable and fitted with all-wheel drive. Furthermore, a canvas roof and a flatbed were planned to be key elements of that vehicle. To reach a top speed of 50 km/h (31 mph), Friedrich considered a power output of 25 PS (18.4 kW; 24.7 hp) reasonable.[4]

The earliest plans were completed in late 1945; in November that year, a Production order was granted by the US Military administration, meaning that it was officially believed that the vehicle would not have any military purpose,[5] and Friedrich was allowed to develop the vehicle and build ten prototypes. For this purpose, Friedrich signed a development contract with the jewelry factory Erhard & Söhne in Schwäbisch Gmünd, which at that time produced gold and silver handicrafts. It was planned that two engineers would work on the project, but in January 1946, a third engineer, Heinrich Rößler, joined the team. Heinrich Rößler, who also used to be a Daimler-Benz employee during World War II, is responsible for the main development work. He later became the head of Unimog development at Daimler-Benz.[4]

The first technical drawings were completed in March 1946. Rößler put a lot of emphasis on the functionality of the vehicle, for instance, the track width measures exactly 50 in (1,270 mm), which equals two rows of potatoes. Both front and rear axle with reduction gears were planned to be technically identical live axles, welded together from just two preformed metal panels each; they were supposed to have four drive joints only. Later plans also included differential locks for the axles and gearbox, and coil springs with hydraulic shock absorbers instead of leaf springs for the suspension.[6]

First prototypes and engine development

The first prototypes were completed in late 1946 at Erhard & Söhne.[7] They were fitted with the Otto engine M 136.[8] The first four prototypes do not exist anymore; they were either wrecked or lost. On 9 October 1946, the first test drive was conducted.[9] In late autumn 1946, the vehicle was presented to experts and engineers.[10] Engineer Hans Zabel made the note „Universal-Motor-Gerät“ (Universal-Motor-Gadget), which led to the acronym „Unimog“. On 20 November 1946, the vehicle had officially received its name.[6] Prototypes U 5 and U 6 were made in the Boehringer plant in Göppingen and were already fitted with the OM 636 Diesel engine. Today, prototype U 5 is situated in the agricultural museum of the University of Hohenheim, prototype U 6 is on display in the Unimog museum in Gaggenau.[7]

Daimler-Benz had successfully brought a Diesel engine for passenger cars to market in the mid-1930s, the Mercedes-Benz OM 138. Development of a successor for this engine started in the days of World War II. In 1948, it was ready for mass production, but not yet used for Mercedes-Benz passenger cars.[11] The Unimog engineers had decided in 1947, that a Diesel engine instead of an Otto engine should be used for the Unimog. As they had a good relationship with Daimler-Benz, the engineers decided to use the then in development successor of the OM 138.[12] This is the reason why the OM 138 successor, known as OM 636, was already used for Unimog series production in 1948, before it had officially been introduced in 1949.[13]

Manufacture at Boehringer and sale of Unimog

The official Unimog presentation was held in 1947. Erhard & Söhne was not able to mass-produce the Unimog, which is why Gebr. Boehringer in Göppingen was ordered to manufacture it. This way, Boehringer, originally a tool manufacturer, could avoid dismantling. Erhard & Söhne then became a supplier for the Unimog production. Pre-series production finally started in 1948;[13] the same year, the Unimog was exhibited by Mercedes-Benz at the DLG-exhibition in Frankfurt[14] (150 orders for the Unimog were placed). The first patent for the Unimog's portal axles was filed on 21 November 1948 under the number 950 430.[5][15] Official start of the series production was in February 1949.[16]

Boehringer did not use modern methods of mass production, instead, all Unimogs were solely built by hand. Starting in 1949, 90 additional employees worked on the Unimog project, and a sales and distribution network as well as a customer service were established. The highest monthly production rate peak was 50 Unimogs per month.[16] This was not enough to meet customer demands, it was foreseeable that Boehringer was incapable of manufacturing the Unimog over a long period of time. Therefore, the Unimog was sold to engine supplier Daimler-Benz in October 1950. Production in Göppingen ceased by April 1951. Then, production was moved to the Mercedes-Benz plant Gaggenau.[17] Production of the 70200's successor, the Unimog 2010, began in June 1951.[18] Erhard & Söhne, who manufactured the Unimog axles, remained a supplier for Daimler-Benz until 1963.[19]

Technical description

The Unimog 70200 is a compact tractor, measuring approximately 3.5 metres (11 ft 5 34 in) in length. It has four wheels of the same size, a ladder frame made of U-shaped sections, and front and rear live axles with portal gears and bolted axle covers.[20] The axles are coil sprung (with hydraulic shock absorbers). Torque tubes, transverse links, and panhard rods are the main parts of the suspension system. The tyres are multi purpose tyres (6.5 – 18 in), that are designed both for on- and off road use. The Unimog has four hydraulic drum brakes.

A passenger car engine, type OM 636.912 is the Unimog's powerplant. The OM 636 is a straight-four, water-cooled, naturally aspirated precombustion chamber engine with overhead valves, using the Diesel operating principle. It displaces 1.7 litres (100 cu in) and produces 25 PS (18.4 kW; 24.7 hp). The engine is installed longitudinally, slightly inclined, and has an electric starter. Unlike the following OM 636 family engines, the OM 636.912 has two valve covers.[11]

The gearbox is a constant mesh gearbox with six forward and two reverse gears. It allows a speed range of 1–50 km/h (0.62–31.07 mph). The rear axle is permanently driven, enabling front wheel drive (which does not require pressing the clutch) locks both axles.[21]

Bibliography

  • Lutz Nellinger: Der Unimog: Arbeitstier und Kultmobil. Komet, Köln 2016, ISBN 978-3-86941-581-9.
  • Carl-Heinz Vogler: Unimog 411: Typengeschichte und Technik. GeraMond, München 2014, ISBN 978-3-86245-605-5.
  • Carl-Heinz Vogler: Typenatlas Unimog. Alle Unimog-Klassiker seit 1946 bis 1993. GeraMond, München 2015, ISBN 978-3-86245-026-8.
gollark: You could have a "please screen-read it as this" attribute, but then nobody will actually set it, as happens now.
gollark: Like I said, if you just break out all the various web bits into separate protocols, you then have to deal with irritating things like enforcing the same security on each, actually tying them together into one system to do what you want (because you quite plausibly want the file upload/download bits to be part of the same service), lots of open ports and possibly different server software, and implementing similar protocols over and over again.
gollark: No. They use multipart.
gollark: Share the authentication stuff.
gollark: One open port.

References

  1. Vogler, Typenatlas Unimog. Alle Unimog-Klassiker seit 1946 bis 1993. p. 17
  2. Mercedes-Benz Public Archive: U 25, Baureihe 70200
  3. Nellinger, p. 6
  4. Nellinger, p. 7
  5. Vogler, Typenatlas Unimog. Alle Unimog-Klassiker seit 1946 bis 1993. p. 6
  6. Nellinger, p. 8
  7. Remszeitung: Erhard & Söhne – eine Keimzelle der Gmünder Industrie. 4 May 2015
  8. Vogler, Typenatlas Unimog. Alle Unimog-Klassiker seit 1946 bis 1993. p. 13
  9. Daimler AG (Hrsg.): Der Unimog wird 70: Erste Testfahrt mit Unimog Prototyp am 9. Oktober 1946, 7 October 2016. Retrieved 15 January 2018
  10. Nellinger, p. 9.
  11. Vogler: Unimog 411: Typengeschichte und Technik. p. 48 and 49
  12. Nellinger, p. 10
  13. Nellinger, p. 11
  14. Legends of Trucking: Boehringer Unimog (Baureihe 70200)
  15. Daimler AG: Unimog zum Patent angemeldet
  16. Nellinger, p. 12
  17. Nellinger, p. 14
  18. Nellinger, p. 15
  19. Vogler: Unimog 411: Typengeschichte und Technik. p. 92
  20. Carl-Heinz Vogler: Das Unimog-Typenbuch : die komplette Modellgeschichte. GeraMond, München, 2009. ISBN 978-3765476990. p. 17
  21. Boehringer: Historical Unimog sales brochure
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.