How the TRABANT was made - English subtitles

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Komentáře • 644

  • @a.p.2356
    @a.p.2356 Před rokem +7

    I love that the drivers loading them onto the trains got them up on 3 wheels going around the corner.

  • @McElroysMotors
    @McElroysMotors Před rokem +5

    As a Trabant fanatic and enthusiast from the USA, this never stops fascinating me.

  • @TheYizuman
    @TheYizuman Před rokem +2

    Thank you for the English subtitles. The deaf community appreciates it!

  • @DinghyadventuresPl
    @DinghyadventuresPl Před 2 lety +35

    Trabant was my first car, I enherited it after my gradfather from Hajnówka, Poland, who had it since new in 1983 (as my year of birth!). I rode it for 1.5 years only and I regret to have crushed it. But in the meantime I gave it a new look and roared the roads of Warsaw and outskirts. It was my first true mechanical - automotive adventure! I love old cars ever since.

    • @MetalTrabant
      @MetalTrabant Před 2 lety +12

      I've also inherited my Trabi, from my grandma, and it's a 1984 one (2 years older than me). Was also my 1st car, used solely for 7 years, but I still have it, cherish it, and go on cruising with fellow Trabants on sunny days :)
      People are smiling, waving, flashing beams, best thing ever! It was worth fighting for at home for not letting my parents sale it when it was basically worthless. Now worth around 2000 euros... but I'm not selling.

  • @Gabor.P.
    @Gabor.P. Před 2 lety +11

    OMG nostalgia. My father had his first car in like1972. My uncle had one but it was made back in the 60s' the 500CC Trabant. My friends had in the early 80s' also. It was cheap and if it break down (every week) we could fix it with no problem. It was 6V then later it was 12V models. After 5 years my father did a major rebuild on the motor in our kitchen. It was light so 1 man can take it out. His was still with the Dynamo but the 12V versions were with generators. Didn't start? Come here son go to the store and get me 2 brushes for the starter. Cost like pennies. OK, I went home he changed it and like new kept going. That is how simple it was to fix many things on it. It was a big deal. Top speed 120Km we juiced it up and it was going 135Km. My dads were 1:33 the gasoline then the later models were 1:40 and later 1:50 gas-oil ratio. Can you imagine we went to the disco club and 8 of us fit inside? Well, my friend had the station wagon style. I'm not kidding like 8 teenagers. But that was the only car we could afford. My dad's model had only 1-speed wipers and the later models had 2-speed and even with a washer. Only air heating no coolant nor radiator in it. 4 speed 26 horsepower. The best way is if you take a couple of sparkplugs with you just in case. lol. Oh, in the winter it was bad with no heating and take you about 15-20 kilometres by the times started blowing some warm air in and the fume was bad and the smoke. Had no adjustment just as you turn a blade in a hose that's all. No seatbelts only in the later models had it. Only the speedometer the blinker had 1 indicator and 1 was for the high beam. No other instrumentation. They made a space a cut out for radio but they put a plastic sheet there so it was up to the customers what kind of radio they want to put in. No built-in speakers. My father had a good radio it was stereo. I had put in a tape deck Alpine brand. Oh, also the antenna too. I had one of those 3-meter high fibreglass antennas and sadly every time I parked I had to take it down or people would steal it. The gas tap was by the passenger's feet and sometimes accidentally people kicked it and turned off the gasoline flow so it stopped. Many times people didn't know. There were no instruments to show how much gas you have. but had on the gas tap a quarter turn and that was the reserve. My dad also had a 4-liter plastic can just in case. What we did is when you wanted to turn around instead of the 3-point turn just pull in the hand break turn the staring wheel to left or right and floor it in first gear. Made the turn in the same spot. No other cars could do that in the world. The seat and the shocks were basic like a wooden bench. We used to call the Trabant paper Jaguar or soap box. I laugh now but back then it was a big deal and we loved it. Sadly yes as a 2-stroke engine it is polluting a lot. On 100Km eat about 6-7 liters of mixed gas. Memories. OK not my first sex but I had a few girls and I was a cool guy back then a teenager has a Trabant a car. many laughed but then hey what do you drive? Take the bus and shut up. lol. Oh, those good ol' days. Then when defected to Toronto my first car was a 1979 Ford T-bird. 5 liter engine and eat 22 liters on 100 Km. Here it was at the time 35 cents a liter of gas. Back there was 18.40Ft/liter. Back home 2 days' pay was a tank of gas. Here only 2 hours of wages. To me, it was like an airplane carrier compare to the Trabant cause that is what I saw in American movies. lol. I love them both equally. I think Trabant was the Hippie car for the eastern Europeans. Thanks for the upload it brought back sweet memories and a few tears and big smiles. so TY again !

    • @jonytube
      @jonytube Před rokem +2

      Great read, thanks for sharing!

    • @Gabor.P.
      @Gabor.P. Před rokem +2

      @@jonytube No problem. I was just remembering loudly. lol.

    • @jonytube
      @jonytube Před rokem +1

      @@Gabor.P. but it painted a very vivid picture, it was seriously entertaining! I'm assuming you're Magyar? (Because of the name)

    • @lundsweden
      @lundsweden Před 5 měsíci +2

      OK would you believe it did 135 kph downhill with a tailwind? 😉

    • @Gabor.P.
      @Gabor.P. Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@lundsweden Yes cause one of my good friends had one of the 601 models and went 125 with the 2 of us in it. So downhill and tailwind could boost another 10 km/h. So yeah it's possible for about a few kilometer distance or until the bottom of the hill.

  • @PhilJonesIII
    @PhilJonesIII Před 2 lety +26

    I smiled when the 'precision' forklift driver hit that support girder with the car.
    I curled up in my chair when I saw the workers using that bandsaw. Choreography indeed!
    I wonder if any new owners found a severed limb in the boot?

    • @c0nstantin86
      @c0nstantin86 Před 2 lety

      loool =))))))

    • @waterheaterservices
      @waterheaterservices Před rokem

      Glorious revolutionary production, a atheist socialist worker's paradise.

    • @tomatoes3
      @tomatoes3 Před rokem +2

      Can you imagine HSE ! They'd have a field day .

    • @peacefrog0521
      @peacefrog0521 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Reminded me of reading “The Jungle” by Upton Sinclair, about 19th-century meat packing plants.

  • @SOJZ927
    @SOJZ927 Před 2 lety +31

    My gfs mom grew up in the GDR and she told me "the trabant was like the freedom of speech in the GDR... can't be that bad if nobody complains about it"

    • @radioman140
      @radioman140 Před 2 lety +4

      Visited a family near Leipzig in 1987, the dad complained about it . He had a Wartburg, a much better GDR auto. He was a nice and funny guy.....

  • @joeblow8593
    @joeblow8593 Před 2 lety +23

    Thanks for providing English subtitles, I enjoyed watching this

  • @davidmizak4642
    @davidmizak4642 Před 2 lety +69

    Thank you for posting this retro video. It is a very insightful look into the production of such an iconic car. Two thumbs up!

  • @georgepitchley3946
    @georgepitchley3946 Před 2 lety +34

    Great video, A mate of mine bought one and drive it back to the UK, he ran it for years in the Scottish Highlands. Love the guy checking for leaks with a torch that looks very much like a US made “Mag-lite”. Great to see how things were.

  • @kazz6841
    @kazz6841 Před rokem +2

    昔、長野県の会社にお邪魔した際に、トラバントを見せてもらった事があります。
    社長がドイツに出張された際に数台購入され、会社の近隣の工業高校にも寄付されたそうです。確かにエンジンルームも余裕があり、高校生がメンテナンスするには丁度良かったのでしょう。デザインも味のある素敵な印象でした。
    ボンネットやトランク、屋根が紙で出来ていると聞いて驚きました。

  • @Leipaa
    @Leipaa Před 2 měsíci

    This helps me appreciate why they were so reluctant to introduce new models. They really had the process figured out.

  • @matiasjumppanen5756
    @matiasjumppanen5756 Před 2 lety +9

    Thank you Zwickau For The amazing trabant

  • @kjamison5951
    @kjamison5951 Před 2 lety +2

    No adverts… and yet, the entire video was an advert for the Trabant. Fascinating. Thank you - especially for the subtitles.

  • @teutonalex
    @teutonalex Před 2 lety +68

    I remember my uncle’s Trabi! We loved it. It took us everywhere and never broke down, never complained.

    • @michaelpielorz9283
      @michaelpielorz9283 Před 2 lety +10

      That means:He caught fire soon after purchase !!and was then pulled by our dogs.

    • @leokatigbak6102
      @leokatigbak6102 Před 2 lety +2

      ​@@michaelpielorz9283 😂

    • @mmdirtyworkz
      @mmdirtyworkz Před 2 lety

      @@michaelpielorz9283 your comment means you're a moron. Well pointed out, good job!

    • @nnnnnn3647
      @nnnnnn3647 Před 2 lety

      You are very lucky to be alive. The fuel tank was half a meter in front of the passenger seat.

    • @KuntalGhosh
      @KuntalGhosh Před 2 lety +1

      Never broke down? 😂 A 2 stroke that never broke down 😂😂 lmao.

  • @neilfoster814
    @neilfoster814 Před 2 lety +37

    I own a Trabant P601s Universal from 1988. They are certainly a quirky little car! But, better to ride a Trabi 30Km than have to walk in the rain for 30Km!

    • @MetalTrabant
      @MetalTrabant Před 2 lety +2

      Speaking of rain... I remember the morning I had to go to work with my Trabi in a brutal thunderstorm... couldn't see jackshit in front of me, dumpsters and banners were blown onto the street, the car leaked on the upper part of the windshield to my knee, and by the time I've got to work, I only had one working cylinder... but I arrived.
      After messing around later that day, I've found out that one of the sparkplug-wire pipes got leaky, and grounded down on the engine block. Luckily I had some spares in the back.

  • @stanojevicnatasa2514
    @stanojevicnatasa2514 Před 2 lety +82

    Simple, reliable, easy to fix, decent size of interior and trunk for the size of the car, cheap to buy and even cheaper to fix. What more does one need from a car? I don't want a bloody Tesla that drives itself, I don't need TV screen on the dashboard, I would not want a huge SUV like some suburban Karen, I love these old cars made for ordinary people - Trabant, Beetle, Isetta, Mini, 2cv and so on ...

    • @HeikoQuant
      @HeikoQuant Před 2 lety +21

      And the best thing: you only had to wait years for the delivery of that shitbox. GDR nostalgia aside, consumer products there were always crappy and/or in short supply in East Germany. If people want to rave about this era, I won’t cheer them on. A scratch plow from the stone age is also easyer to fix and to repair than a John Deere but you probably would not want to use it today. If you don't want to starve that is.

    • @stanojevicnatasa2514
      @stanojevicnatasa2514 Před 2 lety +9

      @@HeikoQuant outside GDR it was different, in Yugoslavia we could walk into a dealership and drive out in a new Trabant, Yugoslavia was the envy of the socialist world. Reasons for the waiting list were not to be blamed on the car itself. GDR was invention of the hardcore Stalinist factions of the CP USSR as a punishment for Germany after WW2 and the country was intentionally made difficult to live in.

    • @Fred_the_1996
      @Fred_the_1996 Před 2 lety +1

      @@HeikoQuant 10 years? Lol it was 3

    • @SimonBauer7
      @SimonBauer7 Před 2 lety +4

      but i wouldnt want one as a daily atleast. in a crash you are certainly dead. it is loud, smelly and has no safetey features. i mean i do like old cars (drive a 20 year old renault kangoo daily) but no.

    • @joskd8491
      @joskd8491 Před 2 lety +6

      These days cars like the Toyota Aygo is the equivalent of the old little cars. That's all you need, you are so right

  • @donaldduck4489
    @donaldduck4489 Před rokem +1

    I'm 12 and I absolutely love this car. I loved this since I was 6

  • @gillespriod5509
    @gillespriod5509 Před 4 lety +24

    More simple than Vespa engine! Love tre trabi

  • @DarkGT
    @DarkGT Před 2 lety +9

    Fascinating! I use to see those cars some 15 years ago on the roads in my country.

  • @gillespriod5509
    @gillespriod5509 Před 4 lety +18

    Nice video! Im italian i love the trabi!the ddr 500 Thanks for the subtitles!

  • @gauranga1008
    @gauranga1008 Před 2 lety +8

    I drove with trabant in the beginning of 90 ties. We had a few of them. Big noise, big smoke. Little space. But we had no choice. Later we got Lada. That was another level...
    Gauranga1008

  • @peterfeeney721
    @peterfeeney721 Před 2 lety +2

    Fantastic, detailed, excellent. Thank you.

  • @enedenedubedene4811
    @enedenedubedene4811 Před rokem +1

    Hervorragender Beitrag, kommentiert von einem Sprecher mit einer guten Portion Fachwissen, was bei solchen Beiträgen extrem selten ist. Alle Achtung!!!👆👆👆😃😃😃😃😃😃

    • @Schule04
      @Schule04  Před rokem

      Ich glaube der Sprecher hat zum Großteil nur wiedergegeben was ihm gesagt wurde. Und seine herabfälligen Bemerkungen wirken unprofessionell.

  • @davidstrohl
    @davidstrohl Před 2 lety +61

    Thanks for posting this video with English subtitles, thus ensuring that more people see and understand how these vehicles were made! I lived in West Berlin in ‘89 and when these cars flooded into my part of the city, I got my first chance to really give them a proper inspection. My neighbor had friends who owned a 1985 Trabi 601 who came from the East to visit, and I got the chance to drive it and the most I could say for it was that it “ran”. Fit and finish were horrendous. The two-stroke engine reminded me of my chainsaw and snow-blower back in the States. The smell of its exhaust fumes reminded me of my trips to the East, where the odor was omnipresent. While people may have waited 15 years to buy one while the DDR enforced its travel restrictions, once those were lifted all of the car dealers in West Berlin sold out of their stocks of used VW Golfs and Ford Escorts almost overnight. Of course, no dealer took a Trabi as a trade-in, they were totally valueless in the West. I’ve read somewhere that the Duraplast panels are so unrecyclable that the best way to get rid of them was to let sheep eat them, although I don’t know this for a fact. But they were then, as they are now, a product of the DDRs self-imposed economic isolation from all things western, unless you happened to be a government apparatchik, because then you’d get a Volvo. Growing up in Detroit, I’ve been a part of the USA’s car culture almost since birth. There are many cars produced that weren’t successful, but they remain iconic and desirable to this day, so I can understand how some people still find the Trabi exciting, but I certainly can’t. Give me an AMC Gremlin over one of these rolling, smoke-belching eggbeaters-on-wheels any day of the week and I’d be happy.

    • @BakedRBeans
      @BakedRBeans Před 2 lety +4

      I have seen several videos on Trabant production, and how they were recycled after German reunification. Metal parts were no problem, but what to do with the Duraplast bodies? Someone invented a process where the plastic was ground to a coarse material, mixed with sand and cement, and formed into concrete blocks "cinderblocks" to build most anything with. Sounds logical! As this article said, wait time was years, which made resale value of a used Trabant very high.

    • @armorer94
      @armorer94 Před 2 lety +7

      Volvos were rare too. Most mid-level apparatchiks got the Wartburg.

    • @mitsos306ify
      @mitsos306ify Před 2 lety +4

      The gremlin! I'd love to have one!

    • @paxhumana2015
      @paxhumana2015 Před 2 lety +4

      At least with an AMC Gremlin, you had decent build quality, more or less, plus they make for surprisingly good drifter, tuner, or drag strip cars too. Maybe they could even be decent rally and track race cars as well?

    • @armorer94
      @armorer94 Před 2 lety +3

      @@paxhumana2015 they started rusting on the showroom floor and didn't stop until they were a pile of brown flakes sitting in your driveway. The mechanicals were solid enough, but that didn't matter much if your unibody dissolved.

  • @markhagge8646
    @markhagge8646 Před rokem

    Great video! It's good that you're restoring your Trabant.

  • @waiata216
    @waiata216 Před rokem

    Good to be reminded of the day when people worked hard in very bad factories. Life today is much better. All those peope worked so well. Respect to them now all probably retired.

  • @I967
    @I967 Před 2 lety +15

    Thank you for the film and the subtitles, much appreciated!
    I was born in Czechoslovakia and I currently live in a former eastern bloc country. That *_arrogant sneer_* of the narrator, that is how western Europeans have viewed and *still* view Europeans from behind the iron curtain to this day.
    The westerners thought and *still think* we are tra5h, because their pr0pa9anda from c0rporaтions and wesтern governmenт agenc1es told them so. They were taught that their better, shinier, more stylish products make them better, more worthy people. This is confirmed by the many c0rporate office people I talk to (I work in training). They work for German and French coгp0гaтions and coгp0rатioпs of other western countries.
    There was state pгорagдапda in the communist bloc and there was and is corporaтe and g0vernmenт pr0paгanda in the capitalist "exтоrтioп" economies. It goes both ways. But somehow most westerners still think that evil bгainwasнing techniques were only used behind the iron curtain.
    Concerning work safety and protection of the environment - the *нурoсгisy* of the commentator *is* *staggering.* Many of the western corporations have factories and sweaтsноps in Asia, with conditions little different to those in the film. They make their products there and they happily ship them ACROSS THE PLANET, burning through _TONS_ of fuel. Somehow, that is perfectly fine. And they put lots of green graphics on their coгpоraтe websites, with photos of happy, smiling people. And they don't forget to tell you how _much_ *they* are doing то _save_ the planet. By producing disposaБle, planned 0бsolesceпce producтs.
    About communisт contr0l over production and over every отнег aspect of your life - the c0llecтive West is headed in a direction that is suggesting a future *_much_* darker than what has ever existed in the former communist bloc. There are some very nice examples of this т0тaliтariaп-like c0nтrоl from the European Union, I am sure some of the commenters will share their stories down below.
    And lastly, to finish my carefully crafted CZcams commenter's treatise. For people commenting that you couldn't say whatever you wanted in the coммuпisт counтries - you may have noticed some strange formaттing in this comment. Unfortunately experience has shown (my own experience, that is) that УоцтuБe either gнosтs my c0mmenтs or they don't show at all. Он - I almosт forgot - has anyone seen the dislike button lately? Yes, yes. _Much_ freedom, *so* happiness.

    • @Schule04
      @Schule04  Před 2 lety +6

      Correct, i recommend reading Günter Wallraff's book "Lowest of the low" to see what working in West Germany was like in the 1980s.

    • @jhareng
      @jhareng Před 2 lety

      Download the Return youtube dislike, they all show to me. You have non as of now.
      True the western totalitarian propaganda machine is much worse than the in your face communist propaganda.

    • @gordononkyo2713
      @gordononkyo2713 Před 2 lety

      Agreed 100%.
      Near future will prove that.
      The fake news EU citizens are fed with has reached ridiculous dimensions.

    • @gabrielbalbec883
      @gabrielbalbec883 Před 2 lety

      I am French but I agree 100% with what you said here.

  • @miirazgmail
    @miirazgmail Před 2 lety +15

    My parents had Trabant 601 Kombi when I was a child. That was good way to design a simple and serviceable car. It was designed much better than Mini. Power was sufficent to drive in city (max speed about 100 km/h), plastic parts could be repaired without welding skills or replaced using screwdriver and knife (because of glue/rubber sealing).
    The 2-stroke engine wasnt so good, but last Trabants had 4-stroke engine from VW POLO and it was small go-kart :)
    Liked it so much
    In communism, only three things went well - Kalashnikov, Trabant and UAZ-469

    • @lbond4754
      @lbond4754 Před rokem +1

      @Сергей М
      Yes Sergej, Lada, Moskvich, Saporoshez, Volga were imported by the GDR to complete the car portfolio with larger models. But those cars were much more expensive (at least double) compared to the Trabant. It's low price was also the reason for it's relative success in other eastern block countries like Hungary, CSSR, Bulgaria,...
      By the way Lada was a much admired car brand in GDR in the 70th and 80th with their cars engineered and licencsed from FIAT.

    • @picoolov2427
      @picoolov2427 Před rokem

      Comunismo? Era un bloque revisionista. De capitalismo de estado. El socialismo se abandono en el 53

  • @tomarmstrong1281
    @tomarmstrong1281 Před 2 lety +7

    Looks like hell on earth. "The phenol dust permeates everything". Including the workers lung no doubt. However all other things being equal there are countless millions who would love a cheap simple get you to where you want to go car without frills and fancies.

    • @jackx4311
      @jackx4311 Před 2 lety

      But who the hell would want to work in craphole conditions like that to build it?
      Simple is fine - crude, grossly inefficient, and brutally polluting is not.

    • @skwdenyer
      @skwdenyer Před 2 lety +1

      @@jackx4311 At its heart, however, the ideas embodied in the Trabant's construction are ones we need to revisit - with modern environmental & working conditions.

  • @saveriobiasutto4296
    @saveriobiasutto4296 Před 2 lety +5

    The delivery delay for a new Trabant was something like seven years, that's why the used Trabant were more expensive than new ones.

    • @eozcompany9856
      @eozcompany9856 Před rokem

      Depending on the time and country.
      In East Germany it was between 2-3 years in the early to mid 60s all the way to over 10 year during the 80s.
      At the same time you could buy a Trabant in Czechoslovakia with only few moths waiting time during the 60s and almost no or no waiting time at all after about 1973.
      That just goes to show how badly adjusted was the import and export in the Eastern Bloc.

    • @mirceapopa9947
      @mirceapopa9947 Před rokem

      In Romania time to delivery is was 5 years for Dacia and Oltcit. You pay avance in 1980 si receive a car in 1985. The factory Dacia and Oltcit can not produce togheter most 300.000 - 350.000 unit models per on year.

  • @c0nstantin86
    @c0nstantin86 Před 2 lety +1

    The fact that the factory was so contaminated by cotton and noise ... and disregard for human life and limb ... basically, the car that I appreciated so much for being so practical and cheap, I am glad that it is over with for the sake of the laborers. Lack of love brought the URSS down!

  • @johnwade5747
    @johnwade5747 Před rokem

    I love that technical application of the sealer on the halves of the engine block! Just rolling over some gooey stuff and hope you got all spots covered and slap it together! Lordy!😳

  • @antonboludo8886
    @antonboludo8886 Před 3 lety +3

    These were funny little cars. Brings back memories of East Berlin. Too bad I never got to drive one.

  • @jeffyoung60
    @jeffyoung60 Před 2 lety +24

    The Trabant was a big deal in East Germany where it offered the common citizen a chance to own an automobile, even if it took years of waiting. To the West Germans, driving their sleek, advanced Mercedes and BMWs, the "Trabi" was a joke. Its powerplant was a two-stroke, gasoline engine. When filling up petrol, the diver needed to add a quart of oil, much the same procedure for using a lawn mower back in the United States. Yet in the grand scheme of things, it got you where you were going, which was pretty much city driving and local trips to the near rural areas. You weren't going to drive across Europe with a Trabant. When the Berlin Wall fell, East Germans quickly poured into West Germany, fearful their once-in-a-lifetime opportunity might close if the East German government changed its mind. After entering West Germany, a lot of Trabants were simply abandoned on the side of roads by their East German owners. No one knows why they didn't continue using their Trabis. The reasons might be a few but probably the West German government would take a dim view to the awful ecological disaster that the Trabant was, spewing burnt oil smoke along with gasoline. The West Germans had become very environmentally conscious and the Trabant was never going to pass West German automotive safety and environmental regulations and restrictions.

    • @wezmarauder2754
      @wezmarauder2754 Před 2 lety +12

      Most West Germans drove *Volkswagens and Opels* certainly not BMW's and Mercedes's. And bear in mind that Volkswagen relied mostly on its Type 1 "Beetle" as a big seller way into the 1970's since all other modern replacements had failed miserably for VW (at one point they nearly went bankrupt). Opel too was pretty much a "scaled-down GM product" adapted for the German market (with various results).
      It's also true that pretty much *all* European small cars in the 1950's, 60's and 70's were horrible. Volkswagen pretty much saved the class with the introduction of the VW Golf in 1974. You know, it was actually the *Japanese* who actually began producing quality small cars in the late 70's and 80's which redefined the standard.
      If you compare the East-German Trabant with the often unreliable and sloppily assembled west-European small cars from West-Germany, France, Britain or Italy it was definitely not worse. As for American compact cars... best left unspoken.
      The Volkswagen Type 1 "Beetle" was still the most sold car in West-Germany in 1973. A car designed in the 1930's. The Volkswagen Golf became the most popular car in West-Germany in the late 70's and kept this position virtually uninterrupted until the mid 1990's.
      Most Italians still drove FIAT 500's and 600's by the time the Trabant was popular in East-Germany. Most French drove the Renault 4 and the ancient Citroen 2CV (a clever design in itself). The British? Morrises and Minis.
      A simple design? Definitely. But like the greatest engineers said:"Real innovative genius is in the simple."

    • @Momo_Kawashima
      @Momo_Kawashima Před 2 lety +1

      @@wezmarauder2754 well, of course we kept driving our 500s, they are the perfect combination of style and functionality (as anything coming out of our great country). Hell, a good chunk of people (including myself) still prefer it to modern cars for everyday driving. It's such a loved car that some fellas came up with an electric motor conversion to turn gas powered 500s into electric ones (for when you wanna roll in style but regulations day "NoOo yOu aRe kIlLiNg tHe pLaNeT). Other countries' 50s to 70s cars suck tho, but what do you expect? They're not us

    • @AlexandraVioletta
      @AlexandraVioletta Před 2 lety

      Because they were told all things from the GDR are BS.

    • @AlexandraVioletta
      @AlexandraVioletta Před 2 lety +1

      And today, you get a "H" license plate and can drive everywhere.

    • @honzavlcek4021
      @honzavlcek4021 Před 2 lety +4

      Yes, in 80s Trabi was completely outdated, and gap between east and west vehicle industry was enormous, but at era of late 50s and 60s when it was new, Trabant was relevant, practical and very useful vehicle. At that time even in west countries normal people driving small and primitive cars as Mini, Fiat 500, or many of bizzare 2 stroke carts (Issetta, Goggomobil). Yes, Trabant havent a sexappeal of Mini or Fiat 500, but it was more practical, with space for 4 persons, 0,4m3 luggage space and minimal maintenance.

  • @prelovedguitarsni1436
    @prelovedguitarsni1436 Před 2 lety +10

    Fascinating, I had no idea the bodies were made of comressed cotton, I had always assumed it was glass fibre.

  • @chrislaing7153
    @chrislaing7153 Před 2 lety +12

    A car ahead of it's time - phenolic resin and cotton strands - essentially an early form of carbon fibre.

    • @jhareng
      @jhareng Před 2 lety +2

      13 January 1942: Henry Ford patents his plastic car, thats some 16 years prior!

    • @c0nstantin86
      @c0nstantin86 Před 2 lety +1

      Duroplast, bitte! Duroplast!

  • @zajebaosve
    @zajebaosve Před 2 lety +3

    I was drive 1987-2013 (26 years) Trabant and i am was satisfacted ! To mee, nice and amusing automobile !

  • @roberthaines4221
    @roberthaines4221 Před rokem +1

    10:35 -- "The fine plastic dust permeates everything"
    Notes total lack of dust masks on workers

  • @rosbtim
    @rosbtim Před 2 lety +4

    The narrator is so funny! Good video . Greetings from Romania!

    • @gammaraider
      @gammaraider Před 2 lety +3

      Yeah I love those moments of subtle sarcasm he does

  • @arakort8005
    @arakort8005 Před 2 lety +67

    Around the 7 minute mark, how to smoke and weld at the same time.

    • @ChillToMusic87
      @ChillToMusic87 Před 2 lety +5

      😄 I take it that you have a trade or work manual labour? This is normal to smoke a cigarette whilst on the job.

    • @leokatigbak6102
      @leokatigbak6102 Před 2 lety +4

      It's not a cigarette, it's a joint. 😅

    • @camtoufan3704
      @camtoufan3704 Před 2 lety +2

      Lies we have been told about smoking!

    • @Momo_Kawashima
      @Momo_Kawashima Před 2 lety +2

      You learn that in school. During hours in the workshop you can always see students squatting and welding with an electrode welder, no welding mask and a cigarette in mouth

    • @maaroufhicham
      @maaroufhicham Před 2 lety

      @@leokatigbak6102 ççççcfçççççççcççççççfçcçççcçرئئئلئئىرلئلىىىئىىئىىىىئلىئئئىىئئىلئ لى الى ىىىئئىئىئىىىىئئىىىىىىىىىىىلىىئىىىئئ لى ئcçcccccccc ccgccccccgcccccccgccçcccccccccccgcccccgcccccccg GCC çcccgcgccccccccc FFF gccgcccccçc FFF cccccccccgçccfgccgcccccccccccccccccçcccgçccgcccgcgccccgccccgccgçcc FFF cgلىىىىىىىى لل رلىىلىلىىلىىىىىىىىلىىىلىىىىىىىىىىىلىلىى لل ىىىلىىىئىلىىىىلىىىىىىىىى للدار ىلىى لل ئ لل ىىىىئىىىئ لله ىلى للدار ىلىىىىىىلئىىلى للدار ىىىىلىىرلئىىىىىىلىىىىىىىىىللئلىىئىىىلىىىىىلىلىىىىىىىىلىىىىىىىىى للدار ىلىلىcccccccccccccgcgçccccgccccccccccccccccccgccccccçcccgcccccccccccccccccccccccccccgccccccccccccgccfcccgccccgcccccccccccgcccgcccgccccccccggcçلىىىىىىىىىىىىىىىىىىىلىىىلىىىىىىىىىىلىىىىىرىىلىىىىلىىلىىىللىىىىىىىىىىىىىىلىلىىىىىىىىىىى ليtcccgcccgccgcccccccgcgccccccggccccgccgcccgccccccgcccgcccccccccgcccccccىىىلىىىلىىىىىىىىىللىىلcccىىىلىلىلىىىىىىىلىلىىىىىىcccccccccccgcccccلىىىلىىىىىىىلىلىىىللىىىىلىىىىىىىىلىىىىلىىلىىىىىىىىىىىىىىىلىلىلىلىلcىىىلىلىىلىىىىلىىىىلى ىلىى لىلىىىىىىى

  • @Ronnymikkonen2686
    @Ronnymikkonen2686 Před 3 lety +6

    Very fine film indeed.

  • @astella3
    @astella3 Před rokem +1

    Each product has its own challenges

  • @matthiasbreiter4177
    @matthiasbreiter4177 Před 10 měsíci

    I had no idea that the production included many manual (and potentially dangerous) steps. Applying lacquer without a mask probably for hours every day - that is insane!

  • @leokatigbak6102
    @leokatigbak6102 Před 2 lety +7

    @20:21, those workers were exposed to terrible danger with those band saw! 😢

    • @AaaBbb-ff1pn
      @AaaBbb-ff1pn Před 2 lety +2

      the paint sprayer too... or the poor girl that mix plastic resin with dust everywhere. it let to think how much the workers protection rules progress to provide a safety enviroment

  • @angelikamerker4006
    @angelikamerker4006 Před 2 lety +4

    Vielen Dank für diesen sehr informativen Beitrag. Er räumte bei mir mit manchen Vorurteilen aus Hörensagen auf. Er ist doch mehr als "Leim und Lumpen". 🙋🏻‍♀️🙋🏼‍♂️

  • @ponyrang
    @ponyrang Před 2 lety

    Wow... !!! My best friend, It's always great. Your video is excellent quality. We liked and enjoyed to the end. Thanks

  • @YaoiMastah
    @YaoiMastah Před 2 lety +14

    13:45 the worker showing how much he appreciates the DDR.

  • @nicolasr.3843
    @nicolasr.3843 Před rokem

    Bonjour , merci pour cette excellente vidéo .
    Au revoir .

  • @boundish1
    @boundish1 Před rokem +1

    The way that bandsaw was used made me uneasy.

  • @walther7147
    @walther7147 Před 2 lety +5

    1200 Mark, das war ein hoher Lohn. Ich habe in 3 Schichten am Fließband 600 verdient.
    1200 Mark was a really high wage.
    I got working in 3 workshifts, early, normal, late, 600 Mark.

    • @cristianmicu
      @cristianmicu Před 2 lety

      so working 8 weeks you could buy a brand new trabant. pretty good deal

  • @otm646
    @otm646 Před 2 lety +6

    12,000 people to make a maximum of 580 vehicles per day. That's the most accurate explanation of Soviet style production economics I've ever seen.

    • @mmdirtyworkz
      @mmdirtyworkz Před 2 lety

      Check how many kids you need in a sweatshop to produce one Nike sneakers, that is the most accurate explanation of western capitalism...

    • @doubledragun8650
      @doubledragun8650 Před 2 lety +1

      In USSR one hungry missed sleep teenager after 5 days training make 3 bodies of T34 per day. In Germany 3 high level welders make one Tiger body per 2 days. What is the better economy was resolved at 9 May 1945.

    • @blpadge2
      @blpadge2 Před rokem +1

      @@doubledragun8650 Stalin supposedly said, “Quantity has a quality all its own.”

  • @Tuppoo94
    @Tuppoo94 Před 2 lety +25

    Imagine the health problems that these poor workers faced over the years, being exposed to cotton dust, resin dust, and spraypaint all day, every day. For a "Worker's Paradise", the Communist state seemed to care little for the safety of its workers.

    • @nnnnnn3647
      @nnnnnn3647 Před 2 lety +3

      That is why they employed slaves from Asia and Africa.

    • @TheEricleegreen
      @TheEricleegreen Před 2 lety +3

      @@nnnnnn3647 The workers in this film look like members of the band Rammstein, i.e., definitely not slaves from Asia and Africa.

    • @nnnnnn3647
      @nnnnnn3647 Před 2 lety +2

      @@TheEricleegreen Watch a movie. There is information about employees from Asia and Africa. You can see them in the movie. The GDR brought them to work because the Germans did not want to die.

    • @edcolins5498
      @edcolins5498 Před 2 lety

      @@TheEricleegreen 🤣

    • @Buzzillus
      @Buzzillus Před 2 lety +5

      @@nnnnnn3647 There were guest workers from Vietnam and Cuba, and it was a stroke of luck for Cubans and Vietnamese to have such an opportunity. Many could do an apprenticeship in the GDR, and many also study. They earned more than they did back home and could send their families things like color TVs, stereos, and motorbikes. Almost all former guest workers from Cuba took an MZ motorcycle with them after their contract period. Most of the Vietnamese who came to the GDR at that time stayed here, and together with the boat people in West Germany, the Vietnamese are the largest Asian immigrant group in Germany, and an enrichment for our country!

  • @ibrahimsued4906
    @ibrahimsued4906 Před rokem

    tHE video is about the industrial chalenges, processes and solutions. I've been highly well impressed. If I understood well they rolled out the 'fiberglass' intensive use

  • @andro7137
    @andro7137 Před rokem

    An old colleague told about colliding with a Trabant many years ago in Hungary. According to him, the Trabi exploded, with panels flying all around - there wasn't much left of it. His Mercedes had a few scratches.

    • @thesteelrodent1796
      @thesteelrodent1796 Před rokem +1

      that's the same result you get if you crash into a modern Smart, which in many ways is the modern version of a Trabant

  • @razvi70
    @razvi70 Před rokem +1

    This was my first car!

  • @freddyjorquera7062
    @freddyjorquera7062 Před 2 lety

    Great video, i love to see the low tech fabrication of these cars. Regards from Chile.

  • @lutzphilippines618
    @lutzphilippines618 Před 2 lety

    Sehr interessant, danke!

  • @majchers
    @majchers Před rokem

    Nice little car. Dream of many in those years...

  • @ccooper8785
    @ccooper8785 Před 2 lety +3

    Brilliant, thoroughly enjoyable video 👍
    Now if only we could be allowed to have such a cheap, simple car again (but with modern fuel-efficient, reliable engines).

  • @bataigic9472
    @bataigic9472 Před 2 lety

    krasan videjo!

  • @roberthaines4221
    @roberthaines4221 Před rokem +1

    25:43 -- "The (fuel) tank was located above the motor; no pump was needed."
    Also, in case of death from front-end collision, no cremation was needed.

    • @blpadge2
      @blpadge2 Před rokem

      Ford Pinto, the fuel tank was located between the solid live rear axle and the rear bumper. Also, in case of death from a rear-end collision, no cremation was needed, and Ford saved $10 per car (x a total production of 3 million in 9 years vs. the same number of Trabis built in 30+ years).

    • @roberthaines4221
      @roberthaines4221 Před rokem +1

      @@blpadge2 -- yeah, I'm familiar with the Pinto; my sister bought one new, and hers was returned to Ford when they did the recall for retrofitting with the improved fuel system.
      The difference between the Pinto and the Trabant is that the location of the Pinto's tank wasn't in and of itself fundamentally unsafe. Federal regs at the time only focused upon _front_ collisions; the regs began to include side and rear collision standards during the Pinto's production run. Almost every car built since WWII has had a fuel tank in the same location as the Pinto's (between the trunk and the rear passenger compartment), so the Pinto was just following convention. Yes, the way that the axle could impact the fuel tank in a >30mph rear collision was incrementally more dangerous than if the bottom of the tank had been located above the axle, (or if the car used half-shafts instead of a live axel), but in all circumstances *other than* a >30mph rear-end collision, it's not a problem. If the Pinto's fuel tank were to develop a leak, well -- it leaks harmlessly onto the ground. If the fuel tank of a Trabant leaks, it leaks onto a hot engine. I'm sure you recognize which of those two is fundamentally more dangerous.

  • @bangerbangerbro
    @bangerbangerbro Před 2 lety +2

    Wow! What a coincidence! I was watching an OPL3 video of yours and then found you have a video about my favourite car! This one has English subtitles too which the video called "Trabi Produktion Zwickau" doesn't to my recollection.

    • @Schule04
      @Schule04  Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah, I made the subtitles for this video.

    • @bangerbangerbro
      @bangerbangerbro Před rokem

      @@Schule04 Sorry I only just saw this, was watching the video again from a playlist I put this in. Thanks for the subtitles, they are a great help!

  • @x40xandus
    @x40xandus Před 2 lety +9

    Though the trabant was very simple and had no special features, we came always from a to b. I am sure, there will be a time again when we will remember the good old days when we had individual transport. We now may laugh about, but the times will change.

    • @DanielLopez-tb2fl
      @DanielLopez-tb2fl Před 2 lety +1

      Sado-Masochism EXPLAINED

    • @x40xandus
      @x40xandus Před 2 lety

      @@DanielLopez-tb2fl actually i dont know, what you mean, however I think even the Harley Davidsons of today are a kind of Masochism.

    • @jurgenschur9210
      @jurgenschur9210 Před 2 lety +1

      Da gibt es nichts zu lachen. Als Kind drufte ich mal eine Strecke mit dem Trabant des Kantors mitfahren. Ich war absolut fasziniert. Viel später habe ich mit meinem Bruder einen 10 Jahre alten Trabant ergattert und Ende der 80ger sogar einen neuen bekommen, da der Vater meiner Exfrau eine Bestellung laufen hatte, aber selbst einem Unfall zum Opfer gefallen war.
      Es war wie Weihnachten und Ostern, als wir den Trabant in Papyrus Weiß in Schwerin abholen durften.
      Nun fahre ich schon knapp 30 Jahre Skoda und bin auch zufrieden. Aber der erste neue Fahrzeug ist eben das erste neue Fahrzeug.

  • @gebene7390
    @gebene7390 Před 2 lety

    Very interesting history video. How things were back in East block prior to 1990

  • @user-gw9sk1zy4s
    @user-gw9sk1zy4s Před 2 měsíci

    So was a VW Beetle, and unlike the trabant, the Beetle's engineering and technology was continually improved.

  • @ineverhadthemoney7857
    @ineverhadthemoney7857 Před 2 lety +1

    Trabant will sell today in USA for people over 60 years old on fix income like SOC. SEC, CHECKS

  • @pintcat1
    @pintcat1 Před 2 lety

    Sehr gutes Zeitdokument.

  • @MaxHohenstaufen
    @MaxHohenstaufen Před 2 lety +3

    You watch this and say it is poorly to not at all automated. I watch this and think: handmade in Germany, it must cost a fortune!

  • @iainmclaughlan1557
    @iainmclaughlan1557 Před 5 měsíci

    These are beautiful cars, the prototypes are too. Why do I love the look of these cars so much? There must be a market today for an up to date safe, clean emissions, simple and reliable version (although it was simple and reliable at the time). I hope the cotton and phenyl didn’t damage the workforces health in any way..

    • @Schule04
      @Schule04  Před 5 měsíci +2

      Someone wanted to make an electric modern version about a decade ago, but it went nowhere.

  • @TheLRider
    @TheLRider Před 2 lety

    We hired one from Hertz while on holiday with my girlfriend in Yougoskavia. An absolutely beautiful place and people. My girlfriend was pretty beautiful too. The car was a convertible and once overtook a Mercedes SLK. ha ha downhill..

  • @rva1945
    @rva1945 Před 2 lety +2

    The workers with no protection...that is disregard for human life from the authorities.

    • @jurgenschur9210
      @jurgenschur9210 Před 2 lety +1

      I think overall in the world are workers in danger. This is a political statement.

    • @slome815
      @slome815 Před 2 lety

      Yes, capitalism did much better at the time, ask any coal miner of the 60's or 70's, or the people working at the asbestos factory near where I live. Or the children working in sweatshops in asia now.

  • @darploin5071
    @darploin5071 Před rokem

    I would love to get one little box 2-stroke engines definitely would go into one of my go-karts

  • @J0Boa
    @J0Boa Před 5 měsíci +2

    It wasn’t such a bad car. It was better than walking.

  • @KarlNapp429
    @KarlNapp429 Před 2 lety

    Was für düstere Werkshallen. Gruselig.

  • @manfred-wolfgangschulz2666

    Unsere klare Antwort 👉👍Super👍👈
    👉👉👍Fahrzeuge der Zeiten 👍👈👈

  • @MANSIKKAPUURO-jl9zm
    @MANSIKKAPUURO-jl9zm Před 2 lety +3

    I LIKED IT

  • @michaelcroos4713
    @michaelcroos4713 Před 2 lety +12

    OSHA would have a total meltdown!! Tell you what...I just saw an all Trabant road rally video, and it was totally fun to watch, and the little car looks like a total blast to hook around a track like that... I'd do it. I almost want one for fun, better than a Yugo.

    • @maximilian200057
      @maximilian200057 Před 2 lety

      Did Trabants even include a sway bar?

    • @walther7147
      @walther7147 Před 2 lety +2

      Those times we had also very quiet jobs like Streckengänger. Means walking alog a railway track looking for loose screws. Good old Times!

    • @mrljgibson
      @mrljgibson Před 2 lety +1

      Good luck, the remaining ones are collectors items.

    • @adrianshephard224
      @adrianshephard224 Před 2 lety +1

      Since I owned both (Yugo and Trabant 601) I can tell you first hand that Yugo was far better car compared to a lot of western built cars, such as Renault 4, Citroen 2CV, VW Beetle, Fiat 600, not to mention being better compared to eastern cars such as Skoda's 1100 - 1200 models (better even compared to late Favorite model), not to mention Lada's (although Lada cars are tough as nails in my opinion), better than Moskowitzs, FSO Polonez, Dacias, etc... Yugo's only problem was that it was a state owned car company and the lobby from the EU and USA wanted to see the factory dead. That's why they had a stigma attached to the brand and it's cars. Yugo Florida was a best car in it's class. As soon as NATO aggression took place against Yugoslavia, first thing NATO planes devastated was a Zastava car factory that wasn't even a military target. But even so, production continued and every time Angela Merkel would visit she demanded that the car factory has to be closed, until Italians bought it... Then she shut her fat mouth and never spoke against it ever. Democracy eh? Where few billionaires own everything and you work your ass to make them even richer. Some "democracy" ain't it? And btw, Yugo could achieve 140-160 km/h based on engine model, (models with EFI engine could go well past 180 km/h). Trabant was out of power after 100 km/h. I love both Trabant and Yugo but they can't go in the same sentence...

    • @MetalTrabant
      @MetalTrabant Před 2 lety

      It's fun as long as you don't underestimate a corner in the rain, and fall down the road like me as a fresh driver... I got away with it with no injuries, and the car still works fine to this day, but I was never that anxious in my life like on that wretched afternoon about 18 years ago.
      I've tried to break, but it was like going over a bubblegum, worth nothing on the wet road with 25 year old diagonal tires, and I was afraid if I turn too hard we tip over, and that would've been worse, so we flew straight off the road to a ditch. This way only the front bumper had some minor damage, and our nerves...

  • @darploin5071
    @darploin5071 Před rokem

    Yes this is giant go-kart engine anytime the gas tank sits above the engine so you don't have to use the fuel pump. You don't know how many times we have just stuck the gas tank on top of the engine when we do our go-kart builds here in the state I guess some things never change I would say to trabant is a luxury go-kart

  • @pintmarten2403
    @pintmarten2403 Před rokem

    I would actually get my license if cars this simple existed today.

  • @ammerudgrenda
    @ammerudgrenda Před rokem

    Thanks! That was very interesting…and scary…LOL

  • @erwinvb70
    @erwinvb70 Před 2 lety +3

    it does look like a fun car, but they’ve become quite expensive now

  • @Sharp931
    @Sharp931 Před 2 lety +3

    The Fiat factory in Poland was a fancy club, compared to this.

  • @catoom10
    @catoom10 Před 2 lety +1

    So, the Trabi was an AUDI :), it's cool!

  • @Zolotoy2504
    @Zolotoy2504 Před 2 lety +2

    Почему бы не возродить производство Трабанта ,авто эконом класса ,

  • @demogaming8895
    @demogaming8895 Před 2 lety +1

    fun fact: workers of the factory were all color blind and could only see the colors: bright green, bright orange, and white. So all cars had to be painted these colors to make the job of the workers easier.
    source: I made it the fuck up

  • @bobratu9029
    @bobratu9029 Před rokem

    Wunderschonne film

  • @nlpnt
    @nlpnt Před 2 lety +8

    I've heard the origins of the "Audi" name many times but never the reason why it was chosen over Horch and Wanderer for revival when the Ingolstadt DKW company chose to rebrand while going over to four-stroke engines in the '60s.

    • @Rod54Am
      @Rod54Am Před 2 lety +1

      Horch means listen in German.
      Audi(o) is latin for Horch
      The new company was not allowed to use the old name. So the use the Latin name.

    • @Tokru86
      @Tokru86 Před 2 lety

      @@Rod54Am To be precise "audi" is the imperative singular of "audio". The same with "horch". It's the imperative singular (albeit a bit old fashioned) of "hören". In english the difference isn't really there because the word is the same ("listen" and "to listen")

    • @10zoll
      @10zoll Před 2 lety

      @@Rod54Am Bullshitbingo!
      My Dad once owned a DKW F 91/4 also known as DKW Munga 4 (MehrzweckUNiversalGeländewagenmitAllradantrieb 4 sitzer) - these Cars were build between 1956 and 1968. DDR was between 1949 and 1989.
      You see there was a Car called DKW after the DDR was there.
      The Reason was another - you cant sell cars like Horch after WW2 to the "rich ones" like the US People.
      Hey Johnny whats this Car - Is it a ortsch a DeKayway or a Wonderer?
      That DKW was a Miltary Vehicle only build for the German Military & Market.
      And the famous Silverarrows where Audis not Horchs Wanderer or DKW.
      BTW: 2021 The Brand Horch was (like Maybach some Years earlier) reborn.

    • @thesteelrodent1796
      @thesteelrodent1796 Před rokem

      Audi is arguably easier to market internationally than a name most non-German speakers can't pronounce correctly

    • @nlpnt
      @nlpnt Před rokem

      @@thesteelrodent1796 Certainly in a rhotic accent like General American, Wanderer's double "er" ending sounds like onomatopoeia for a bad wheel bearing!

  • @roberthaines4221
    @roberthaines4221 Před rokem

    19:45 -- "DuroPlast is covered worldwide by over 30 patents"
    -the world's potential patent infringers: "That's OK; we're not interested. _Really._ Your patents are totally safe."

  • @huudamu1884
    @huudamu1884 Před 2 lety

    NICELY FAV

  • @Lobo-ih3bh
    @Lobo-ih3bh Před 2 lety +1

    ‘The fine plastic dust permeates everything’ including the workers lungs. The working conditions look atrocious.

  • @horstwinterscheid4927
    @horstwinterscheid4927 Před 2 lety +3

    Well, the Pontiac TransSport Van 1989-1996 was composite panels on spaceframe, too. (That led to advertisements like "and it will never rust" - spoiler, it did, too. Cause the frame and the floor were made from steel, little rust protection there as well). So the 601 was not the only one. The first Renault Espace had several composite body panels too. Then there were several cars with parts made from plastic/composite as well. Like the Fiat Tipo, the 1989 too, had a boot lid made from plastic. The Renault Megane Senic had fenders from composite. And that's only the ones I know by heart. There might be more.

    • @kostis2849
      @kostis2849 Před 2 lety

      1st gen Citroen BX, composite front lid and rear side panels.

    • @paulrowan1501
      @paulrowan1501 Před 2 lety

      But I doubt Pontiac was using the poorest quality Soviet cotton in their panel production...

    • @horstwinterscheid4927
      @horstwinterscheid4927 Před 2 lety

      @@paulrowan1501 no, is not cotton at all. But a composite nonetheless.

    • @mmdirtyworkz
      @mmdirtyworkz Před 2 lety +1

      Trabant had a complete plastic body, not just some panels. And when Pontiac did it Trabant was exiting production.

    • @horstwinterscheid4927
      @horstwinterscheid4927 Před 2 lety

      @@mmdirtyworkz as you saw in the video: the frame of the trabant is steel. The plastic parts are glued and/or screwed to the frame. So pretty similar to the Pontiac Transport, spaceframe with the body glued as plastic panels to it.

  • @bruceh92
    @bruceh92 Před 2 lety +6

    The factory, with its paint and adhesives, had a safety mask budget of zero.

  • @meunomeeplissken3088
    @meunomeeplissken3088 Před rokem

    Ainda vou comprar um

  • @HikikomoriDev
    @HikikomoriDev Před rokem

    Imagine East Germany back with AI and heavy automation and high end computers and high dicipline of the workers... It could rule the world. It's never too late to have the East back!

  • @hypercomms2001
    @hypercomms2001 Před 2 lety

    This factory ... definitely not a worker's paradise...

  • @granfury1238
    @granfury1238 Před rokem

    Sadly this version has some parts missing. Original runs for about 37 or 38 minutes

  • @mrdaykurutakuchannel
    @mrdaykurutakuchannel Před rokem +1

    EAST GERMANY'S VW BUG AKA SPY X FAMILY-MOBILE!

  • @itsshalevfromtaxidashcamer9390

    Thanks for the subtitles! We don't have a Trabant 601 in Israel. 🇮🇱

  • @AlexandraVioletta
    @AlexandraVioletta Před 2 lety +1

    Wrääääm. 😁 Ich liebe den Trabant. Unserer hieß "Paula" 🤣

    • @iamatree1112
      @iamatree1112 Před 2 lety

      English is a fine language, you know? Ich mag die Deutschen einfach nicht :D