Skip to main content

Tourist trip

A Trabant-based tank tour now tempts tourists travelling to German capital Berlin. A firm offers visitors a guided trip around Berlin in a replica of a tank, which is based on the chassis of the East German-made Trabant car. The replica tank is intended as a joke given the diminutive size of the vehicle and it sports a mock-up of a weapon on its roof. Some locals have found the joke somewhat less than amusing however. The firm runs a total fleet of some 50 Trabants in all, which it uses to provide tourists
February 22, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
A Trabant-based tank tour now tempts tourists travelling to German capital Berlin. A firm offers visitors a guided trip around Berlin in a replica of a tank, which is based on the chassis of the East German-made Trabant car. The replica tank is intended as a joke given the diminutive size of the vehicle and it sports a mock-up of a weapon on its roof. Some locals have found the joke somewhat less than amusing however. The firm runs a total fleet of some 50 Trabants in all, which it uses to provide tourists with guided tours. The Trabant has a low performance, high exhaust emissions and offers the crash protection of a cardboard box. The two cylinder, two stroke, 650cc engine of the Trabant was a slightly larger capacity version of a power unit developed in the 1930s and was lambasted for its crudity, dirty exhaust and low power output at the time of German reunification. At the time, Trabant owners were keen to sell their vehicles and buy more sophisticated cars and roadworthy examples of these tiny East German-made cars could be bought secondhand for a mere US$30. The last Trabants made were powered by a more modern VW engine but these retained the vehicle's pitiful impact performance as well as the bargain basement components and not surprisingly, failed to tempt buyers. Production ceased in the early 1990s. More surprising though is that the Trabant, widely acknowledged as one of the world's worst ever production cars, has become a collector's item in recent years. Highest prized is the open top military version that was issued to the East German Army.

Related Content

  • Geosynthetics revolutionise ground stabilisation
    March 13, 2012
    As powerful fabrics, geosynthetics and geotextiles have a wide range of applications in many civil engineering applications including roads and airfields. Geosynthetics specialist Tensar is introducing a radical new product that it thinks will revolutionise the construction industry. According to the company, its new product represents the "biggest advance in ground stabilisation technology for 25 years. Six years in development, it is said to offer major improvements in aggregate confinement and soil stabi
  • Lowering construction machine exhaust emissions
    November 6, 2017
    The alternatives to diesel fuel as a power source continue to grow as firms move to cut emissions - Mike Woof writes. Only the most myopic could have failed to notice that times are changing in terms of engine technology. In the on-highway automotive sector as well as for the off-highway construction machine segment, manufacturers are looking to lower tailpipe emissions. Similar technologies have been employed in both on-highway and off-highway sectors, although those solutions have been adapted to better
  • Clean running haulers
    February 14, 2012
    Volvo Construction Equipment says that its all-new F-Series ADTs will meet the tough Tier 4 Interim/Stage IIIB emissions legislation as well as delivering performance improvements over previous models.
  • Hyundai CEE launches its first battery electric mini excavator
    April 7, 2025

    Hyundai Construction Equipment Europe is launching the HX19e, its first battery electric mini excavator.

    The new model weighs in at 2,296kg when equipped with a full cab and large capacity battery pack. Hyundai CEE says the compact machine will provide the ideal digging solution for urban utilities, landscaping and gardening, tunnel and basement excavation and for many local authority tasks, such as cemeteries and sports facilities.