Things are going streamlined at the Audi museum mobile

The new special exhibition at the Audi museum mobile could hardly be more topical: With the advent of electromobility, aerodynamics has again become the focus of vehicle development. Audi Tradition is inviting everyone interested in technology on a journey through the history of aerodynamics, showing the beginnings of aerodynamic concepts used in automotive engineering up to 1945 in an exhibition titled “Windschnittig” (German for “streamlined”) at the Audi museum mobile. From December 1, the August Horch Museum in Zwickau will follow with an exhibition titled “Form vollendet” (German for “perfect form”), which will complete the arc of aerodynamic development up to the present day. Both exhibitions will run until June 2024.

Edmund Rumpler, Paul Jaray, and Baron Reinhard von Koenig-Fachsenfeld are names that no historian of aerodynamics can ignore. In the early 1900s, these three pioneers of aerodynamics began to adapt the body shapes of automobiles to match the flow of air. They came up with some astounding ideas, encouraged by a growing enthusiasm for aviation at the time and often inspired by patterns found in nature. Shapes like wings and teardrops served inventors as vital wellsprings of ideas. At first, however, it was anything but easy for engineers to get their ideas accepted. At that time, their aerodynamic bodywork designs, based on scientific findings, were too far removed from what customers and manufacturers expected in a car. However, new research and design methods, such as wind tunnel research, helped change people’s thinking.

Audi museum

An aerodynamic concept tested in racing: “Streamline”

Streamline is a term taken from the scientific study of fluids. In the period between the two world wars, this unique shape fascinated aerodynamics researchers. Engineers aimed to reduce vehicle bodies’ air resistance to lower fuel consumption and make cars more suitable for long-distance driving. Motorsport offered an ideal testing ground for manufacturers. For example, in early 1937, the racing department at Auto Union AG began developing a fully streamlined car based on the Auto Union Type C. The engine and chassis remained virtually unchanged. The design of the streamlined body was primarily based on the work of Josef Mickl, the aerodynamics engineer from the Porsche design office. The streamlined car made its debut at the AVUS race in 1937, where it achieved record speeds of over 400 km/h (249 mph) in numerous record-breaking runs.

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