1946 Saab 92001 Ursaab
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(from Saab Press Release) SWEDISH AIRCRAFT COMPANY: FROM WINGS TO WHEELS
DETROIT – Saab was
established in 1937 as a manufacturer of military aircraft, a
pedigree apparent in all Saab cars produced since the first
aerodynamic Saab 92 prototype automobile was unveiled in 1947.
As the product of an aircraft company based in a large country that
extends far into the Arctic Circle, Saabs were engineered with an
unconventional design philosophy then and today. A distinctively
streamlined body, strong performance combined with good fuel
efficiency, plus an unusually robust body construction for excellent
occupant safety were some of the initial design parameters that have
endured to the latest Saab models.
Today, after production of more than 4 million cars and 4,000
aircraft, Saab is one name and two companies. The car business, Saab
Automobile AB, is owned by General Motors, the world's largest
automaker, and the Saab Group is a global leader in the application
of advanced technologies, specializing in aerospace and defense
systems with the Saab Gripen jet fighter as the proverbial tip of
the corporate spear.
Saab automobiles are linked to a proud heritage of Swedish
transportation leadership that reaches back more than a century.
Today’s Saab automobiles also owe some of their technological roots
to the Scania and Vabis companies, makers of wheeled vehicles
ranging from trucks and buses to tanks and trains. Vabis was founded
in 1891 and Scania in 1903. The two companies competed until 1911,
when they merged. Saab merged with Scania-Vabis in 1969.
In the mid-1930s, Sweden realized that its Royal Swedish Air Force
needed to be strengthened to help defend the nation’s neutrality
from the imminent World War. In 1937, the Svenska Aeroplan
Aktiebolaget (Swedish Aircraft Company) was founded, abbreviated as
SAAB and later Saab. Based in Trollhättan, the company manufactured
hundreds of “anti-war” aircraft of several different designs.
By 1944, when peace descended on a war-weary Europe, Saab realized
that it must diversify its manufacturing capacity. In addition to
newly designated civil aviation projects, the company decided to
draw upon its abilities in the field of precision design to build
automobiles. In 1946, Saab aircraft engineer Gunnar Ljungström,
designer Sixten Sason and a staff of 14 craftsmen hand-built
prototype 92.001, also known as the UrSaab – a sleekly aerodynamic
car that reflected its aircraft heritage; its unusual profile
closely resembled the cross-section of an airplane wing.
The first four Saab prototype cars were unveiled to the world in
1947. Decades before the technology would come into vogue, Saab’s
first automotive entries featured front-wheel-drive and
transverse-mounted engines. Saab was one of the few cars of the
1940s to utilize wind tunnel testing, achieving an air resistance
coefficient of only 0.30 Cd, a respectable figure even today.