Within the Nineteen Fifties an enormous trade sprang up throughout Europe, constructing microcars.
Everybody wished mobility however many couldn’t afford a ‘correct’ automobile, whereas used vehicles had been in brief provide. The reply was a glut of tiny automobiles, often powered by two-cylinder engines and clothed in glassfibre – the brand new surprise materials of the age. Glassfibre made small-scale manufacturing viable, though some microcars featured metal bodyshells.
All through the fifties many of those corporations flourished, however when the Mini appeared in 1959 it killed off many microcar makers at a stroke, though some continued into the Nineteen Sixties. Some microcars had been ingenious whereas many had been shockingly dangerous – we’ll depart you to work out which is which:
Peel P50 (1962)
We’d as effectively begin with the smallest manufacturing automobile ever made – a minimum of in line with the Guinness E-book of Data. Made by the Peel Engineering Firm on the Isle of Man, the three-wheeled P50 got here in purple, white or blue. Initially constructed between 1962 and 1965 (50 had been made), the P50 is now again in manufacturing in each petrol and electrical kinds, and we have simply pushed it. Our verdict? “A 4.8bhp happiness generator.”
Biscuter (1953)
Extremely, round 10,000 of those Spanish-built torture gadgets had been made, between 1953 and 1960. Much more extremely, the Biscuter’s origins lay within the Biscooter, an economic system automobile created by Gabriel Voisin, who constructed among the most luxurious and costly vehicles of the Thirties.
Brutsch Mopetta (1956)
Making the Peel P50 look luxurious (a minimum of it had a roof), the Brutsch Mopetta took minimalism to extremes. Able to seating only one, and with a pull-start 50cc engine, simply 14 examples had been made between 1956 and 1958.
Brutsch V2 (1956)
Even rarer than the Mopetta was the V2, of which only a dozen had been made. This time there was a full complement of wheels and seating for 2, whereas energy got here from a 98cc engine – sufficient to provide a 40mph high velocity.
Dornier Delta (1956)
Dornier was finest recognized for constructing plane, however within the post-war period occasions had been robust so the corporate tried its hand at constructing vehicles as an alternative. The Delta was the outcome, however even earlier than the automobile had gone into manufacturing it was clear that the sums didn’t add up, so the venture was offered on. Apparently, immediately the agency focuses on medical gadgets and nonetheless makes a product underneath the Dornier Delta title, although it’s a ‘semi-integrated lithotripter’, a tool to deal with kidney stones.
Zundapp Janus (1957)
Dornier offered the Delta microcar venture to German motorbike builder Zundapp, because it was eager to increase its operations. Renamed the Janus, this four-seater microcar was powered by a mid-mounted two-stroke 245cc single-cylinder engine. Virtually 7,000 vehicles had been made in a yr.
Vespa 400 (1957)
Zundapp wasn’t the one bike maker eager to get into constructing vehicles; Vespa did the identical factor. Manufacturing ran from 1957 till 1961, with all vehicles powered by a 393cc two-cylinder air-cooled engine.









