BORGWARD Pioneered Direction Indicators: In 1949 the Bremen-based Company Introduced This Beacon of Modern Safety Systems as Standard Equipment
BORGWARD Pioneered Direction Indicators: In 1949 the Bremen-based Company Introduced This Beacon of Modern Safety Systems as Standard Equipment
PR62427
STUTTGART, Germany, Nov. 4, 2015 /PRNewswire=KYODO JBN/ --
- Pioneering Innovations
Many technical features that are taken for granted in today's automobiles were
only introduced as standard equipment because of the determined efforts of
valiant pioneers. Carl F. W. Borgward (1890-1963) was one of them. The
direction indicator was one of the trendsetting technical innovations that made
the post-war BORGWARD Hansa 1500 a milestone of automotive history. That's
because this 1949 model was the first German automobile to feature a direction
indicator system as standard equipment.
(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20151104/283717 )
Although Carl F. W. Borgward practically devoured almost all the automotive
technology magazines he could get his hands on and was virtually unmatched in
his efforts to successfully bring together all of the new research findings in
the automotive sector, he got his idea for the direction indicator simply from
his close observation of the army vehicles of the U.S. forces that occupied
Bremen after World War II. He noticed that almost all of these vehicles were
equipped with advanced direction indicator systems. This fired the imagination
of the automobile developers at BORGWARD.
Electro-mechanical trafficators had been introduced in Germany in 1928. These
systems were attached to the sides of vehicles, where they were supposed to
clearly indicate the direction in which a driver wished to turn by extending a
signal arm. Because it changed a vehicle's silhouette, an extended trafficator
was clearly visible in good light. However, this technology was very fragile
from a mechanical standpoint and it greatly restricted the possibilities of
body design. Moreover, whenever a vehicle travelled at high speeds the
increased air resistance prevented the signal arms, which were operated by
electromagnets, from extending. As a result, trafficators were no longer
state-of-the-art for advanced automobiles after World War II.
The better is the enemy of the good. BORGWARD immediately recognised the
advantages of the new technology, which was already being successfully used in
the USA. With its typical determination, the German carmaker spared no effort
to introduce direction indicators as standard equipment. Several German
supplier companies such as Bosch also began to experiment with direction
indicators during this time. The suppliers used a bimetal element to ensure
that the lights would flash reliably.
When Carl F. W. Borgward surprised the automotive world in 1949 with Germany's
first newly designed post-war car, the Hansa 1500 not only boasted a breath
taking pontoon shape but also served as a shining example of progress, thanks
to its standard-fitted direction indicator system.
BORGWARD introduced this innovation much earlier than required, as legislators
didn't "see the light" until some years later. The German government made
direction indicators mandatory for all vehicles in 1961, as traffic continued
to increase in the country as a result of Germany's "economic miracle".
BORGWARD Group AG
Kriegsbergstrasse 11
70174 Stuttgart, Germany
Marco Dalan
Head of Global Communications
Telephone +49-711-7941851000
e-mail media@borgward.com
Source: BORGWARD Group AG
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