Vabis

1891

Vabis was the abbreviation and later also trademark of Swedish railway car manufacturer Vagnfabriks Aktiebolaget i Södertälje, which translates Wagon Factory Limited Company of Södertälje, established in 1891 in Södertälje.

The company was in 1911 merged with Maskinfabriks-aktiebolaget Scania, to form Scania-Vabis. ==History== The company was established in December 1891 by steel manufacturer Surahammars Bruk and engineer and entrepreneur Philip Wersén, in what was then known as Södertelge, Södermanland County.

Headquarters moved to Södertälje in 1912, and truck manufacturing too in the late 1920s. Examples of Vabis vehicles can be seen at the Scania Museum in the Marcus Wallenberg-hallen in Södertälje. ==References== ==External links== The Scania Museum – Marcus Wallenberg Hall Vehicle manufacturing companies established in 1891 Rolling stock manufacturers of Sweden Defunct motor vehicle manufacturers of Sweden Scania AB

1896

Erikson had been hired by Vabis in 1896 to design engines and motorized carriages.

1897

The demand for carriages had levelled out, and manufacturers like Vabis needed to find other markets to stay afloat. The first automobile built related to the company was a four-seater designed by Gustaf Erikson in Surahammar in 1897.

1898

Erikson replaced it with a tube-ignition four-stroke flat-twin in 1898, mounting it in a horse carriage, which he drove briefly.

1900

In 1900, Vabis had a peak year, building a total of 323 carriages.

1902

The first truck was built in 1902.

1903

In December 1903, one of their automobiles was displayed at the auto show in Paris.

1904

Around 1904, they were allocated to build 150 carriages per year for SJ.

1906

The same year, they also received the first actual order for a motor vehicle, a rail inspection car for Ystad–Eslövs Järnväg, powered by a one-cylinder 3.5-horsepower engine. After being used as an abbreviation for the tongue-twisting company name for some time, "Vabis" was registered as a trademark in 1906.

1908

In 1908, a new 3-ton truck with a 20-horsepower engine was developed, winning the gold medal at the Swedish Royal Automobile Club's international truck competition in 1909, but there was no real market for the trucks, selling only five vehicles per year, in comparison to the company's expectance of 50 per year. Surahammars Bruk kept losing money on the Vabis factory, and tried selling it, with the option of even closing it down if no buyer was found.

1909

In 1908, a new 3-ton truck with a 20-horsepower engine was developed, winning the gold medal at the Swedish Royal Automobile Club's international truck competition in 1909, but there was no real market for the trucks, selling only five vehicles per year, in comparison to the company's expectance of 50 per year. Surahammars Bruk kept losing money on the Vabis factory, and tried selling it, with the option of even closing it down if no buyer was found.

1910

An agreement was reached in November 1910, and in 1911 the two companies were merged to create Scania-Vabis, today known as Scania AB.

1911

The company was in 1911 merged with Maskinfabriks-aktiebolaget Scania, to form Scania-Vabis. ==History== The company was established in December 1891 by steel manufacturer Surahammars Bruk and engineer and entrepreneur Philip Wersén, in what was then known as Södertelge, Södermanland County.

An agreement was reached in November 1910, and in 1911 the two companies were merged to create Scania-Vabis, today known as Scania AB.

1912

Headquarters moved to Södertälje in 1912, and truck manufacturing too in the late 1920s. Examples of Vabis vehicles can be seen at the Scania Museum in the Marcus Wallenberg-hallen in Södertälje. ==References== ==External links== The Scania Museum – Marcus Wallenberg Hall Vehicle manufacturing companies established in 1891 Rolling stock manufacturers of Sweden Defunct motor vehicle manufacturers of Sweden Scania AB

1920

Headquarters moved to Södertälje in 1912, and truck manufacturing too in the late 1920s. Examples of Vabis vehicles can be seen at the Scania Museum in the Marcus Wallenberg-hallen in Södertälje. ==References== ==External links== The Scania Museum – Marcus Wallenberg Hall Vehicle manufacturing companies established in 1891 Rolling stock manufacturers of Sweden Defunct motor vehicle manufacturers of Sweden Scania AB




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Page generated on 2021-08-05