Two basic models were produced, both had 750 cc in-line four cylinder engines and shaft drive.
The first was made during the 1920s and had both front and rear wheel springing and a very characteristic spine frame giving birth to its nickname "The Stovepipe".
The later model "The bumblebee" was produced in very large numbers from 1934 till the end. It had a ohv[?]-design engine and a frame made from steel bar. Also it had one of the earliest telescopic[?] front forks seen - possibly the first? A very reliable and sturdy motorcycle often seen attached to a sidecar. Many of them served the post, military, police and other official duties in Denmark. Few were exported when new.
Eventually the design grew old-fashioned and as interest in motorcycles turned down in the late 1950s - as a consequence of the availability of cheap cars such as the Volkswagen, VW - production ceased after some work to develop new models (a four cylinder with a rotary valve and a two cylinder - both never reached production).
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