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

  • A new study is being carried out for a proposed bridge project for the UK’s Thames River
    April 4, 2012
    Engineering specialist AECOM will carry out a study into the proposed Lower Thames Crossing project in the UK.
  • Bridge under discussion for UK’s River Thames
    June 19, 2012
    Engineering specialist AECOM will carry out a study into the proposed Lower Thames Crossing project in the UK.
  • Increasing interest in secondhand machines
    September 27, 2013
    Auction specialist Euro Auctions claims that market interest in secondhand equipment continues to rise. The firm reports strong demand for secondhand machines at its recent sales. At the firm’s three day event in Leeds in late August, almost 4,000 lots went under the hammer, the highest number sold at their Leeds auctions to date, achieving over £26.6 million. A large volume of stock had to be turned away and the cut-off date for stationary equipment was also earlier than previous auctions. In addition the
  • The Howling
    April 16, 2012
    An American man has found a rather eye-catching way to increase the top speed of his 1967 Chevrolet Impala. The car has been modi ed with the addition of a gas turbine originally designed for use in a cruise missile. This engine is bolted onto the car's roof with additional security provided by sections of rope, one of which is wedged in the bonnet and another in a rear door. His car can now reach claimed speeds of up to 500km/h, shoot 9m long - ames from its tailpipe and has the added safety bene t of dete