Featuring a small two stroke engine endowing the vehicle with modest performance, the Trabant's real flaw was its plastic composite body. Providing virtually no crash protection, the plastic was an environmental disaster, both for the workers who produced the car, and for wreckers who struggle to find an environmentally-acceptable way to dispose of the vehicle.
The Trabant factories grew from the factories of other German manufacturers, closed after World War II. After producing cars under the name of AWZ (Auto-Werke Zwickau), the name Trabant was used for the first time in 1957, after launching the Trabant P 50[?] model. This was originally meant as a three wheeled covered motorbike. It was only converted to a car in its final design.
Later, a Volkswagen Polo[?] engine replaced the elderly two-stroke one. This came as many owners were already replacing the initial engine with that of a Fiat 128[?].
After the 1989 Wende and later unification of the two Germanies, the Trabant factories came into financial trouble, and closed in 1991. Trabants became known in the West after the fall of the Berlin Wall when many were abandoned by their eastern owners after migrating west. News reports inaccurately described them as having cardboard bodies.
In the 1990s, the Trabant became suddenly and indirectly famous when it upset the famous "Class A" by Mercedes-Benz while performing the common "elk test" (a sort of slalom with small obstacles on the course). The older, disregarded Trabant perfectly passed the test. Mercedes had consequently to deal with the embarrassment, while the Trabant received a unexpected praise.
Trabant means "satellite" in German.
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