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January 23, 2010 at 3:15 am #97944
KTM history that i wish i knew.
but glad i know now!
as per http://www.autoevolution.com/moto/ktm/history/
KTM
KTM was founded in 1934 by Hans Trunkenpolz and was initially known as Kraftfahrzeuge Trunkenpolz. Because the company was actually a metalworking shop and sales were pretty low, the owners decided to start manufacturing motorcycles. Two years later, in 1953, an Austrian businessman named Ernst Kronreif bought a large share of the company which was the renamed to Kronreif & Trunkenpolz Mattighofen (KTM).In the first year of existence, they had only 20 employees and they were producing approximately three bikes per day, including the 98cc R100, a project which began in 1951. KTM first participated in motorsports events in 1953 in the 5th Gaisberg competition in which it won the first three places.
One year later, KTM celebrated the delivery of their 1000th motorcycle and, during the same year, it won the Austrian 125 national championship. Two years later, in 1956, KTM participated in the International Six Days race for the first time
and Egon Dornauer won the gold.
In 1959, the KTM engineer Ludwig Apfelbeck developed a new racing motorcycle which Erwin Lechner uses to win multiple offroad competitions. Although the things were going pretty good for the company, KTM starts manufacturing bicycles in 1964.
Two years later, KTM started the production of the crosscountry Penton Six Days, a motorcycle which was meant to be exported to the USA. The same year marks the winning of the Austrian national championship by Manfred Klerr using the new 250cc Motorcross bike.
More important, in 1973, KTM starts the serial production of the 250 Motorcross and Enduro while the same year, the Austrian team records the first World Championship points and the first Grand Prix wins. Until 1974, KTM had a range of no less than 42 models, but even so, the company starts the production of KTM Hobby III in the same year.
KTM started the 80s with an important hit as they introduced the first watercooled 125cc Motorcross bikes in 1981 while one year later they implemented the new Pro Lever rear suspension to all their motorcross models.
In 1984, KTM started making radiators and sold them to competitors (Suzuki being one of the most important names). However, in the same time they were manufacturing motorcycle parts, the company celebrated their 100,000th KTM engine which came with a displacement of 500cc, with liquid cooling system and could produce more than 50bhp.
Series production of the KTM 4 stroke liquid cooled engine started in 1987 but one year later, one of the company’s founders, Eric Trunkenpolz dies. Due to bankruptcy, the company was divided into independent divisions, which either continued making radiators or building motorcycles and bicycles. In 1992, the new KTM Sportmotorcycle GmbH was officially founded, having a new management team, a new Hard Enduro and a new motorcycle design.
January 23, 2010 at 3:20 am #169112Ohh, I thought it was going to be an announcement
January 23, 2010 at 3:44 am #169114So Mr Transit why exactly did you wish you already knew that?
First time i ever saw one it was called a “penton” (memory so it coulda been a pentan??) and was obscure , more so than Ossa or Puch. Now look at them going for world domination bloody teutonics
BC
January 23, 2010 at 4:58 am #169115Fantastic there is 4 mins of my life I wont get back :huh:
TB
January 23, 2010 at 5:05 am #169116Trailboss wrote:
Quote:Fantastic there is 4 mins of my life I wont get back :huh:TB
Suck it up Princess!
we gotta hear all about your ‘Fiddy’!
:huh::blink:
.:laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:
January 23, 2010 at 5:18 am #169119ha ha ha yeah but I was asked sort of about my bike wasnt I, no one asked for this or did someone fart? :laugh: :laugh:
What happened after 1992 anyway?
TB
January 23, 2010 at 5:21 am #169113Hey XY it didnt say how Eric Trunkenpolz died in 1987, was he test riding a PDS fitted prototype bike and well the rest is history as they say :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:
TB
January 23, 2010 at 5:34 am #169121Trailboss wrote:
Quote:Hey XY it didnt say how Eric Trunkenpolz died in 1987, was he test riding a PDS fitted prototype bike and well the rest is history as they say :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:TB
Nar i think it was when he was ridding with Bob’s and Boony’s dads :silly:
but it could have been while he was helping develop the ‘perfect girl ‘ mentioned i think in a thread by BundyRoy :huh: Perfect Girl Thread
January 23, 2010 at 5:36 am #169117Trailboss wrote:
Quote:Fantastic there is 4 mins of my life I wont get back :huh:TB
I was thinking the exact same thing.
January 23, 2010 at 5:41 am #169120Continued.
Sometime after 1992 an aspiring Australian enduro/MX racer from Orange or was it Upper Mangrove Mountain, dumped his beloved XR280 and purchased a 250 XC in a desperate bid to get the upper hand over his opposition.
This was to be a sad time for KTM as the Australian motorcycling fraternity couldn’t take the brand seriously, as this aspiring rider that KTM had pinned its hopes on, had such a fat head that he couldn’t get a helmet to fit and looked rediculous with it firmly wedged on top of his head.
As you can see from the photo,if any one beat him or mentioned his fat head he would shape up and want to fight them, especially if you were on some other exotic heap of shyte.
This combined with the rider’s continued slagging off about how the front end “ploughed” in corners and his perpetual bagging of the machine as a whole was to set back KTM’s sales in Australia for quite sometime.
It wasn’t untill KTM fooled the masses with a mystical suspension called PDS that appealed to those who liked the occasional hit up the arse and had a attraction to bright shiny things, that KTM started to claw it’s way back into the hearts of Australian motorcycle fraternity.
January 23, 2010 at 5:44 am #169124Nice one Mick
January 23, 2010 at 5:54 am #169125Nice Mick very funny :laugh: , that bike was a front end ploughing heap of shit.
At least i can say i have owned and raced oneSo thats what happened after 1982 :laugh:
TB
January 23, 2010 at 6:04 am #169126Good one Mick, hadn’t thought about it that way, KTM riders must like the occassional hit up the bum.
:unsure::blink:
which explains quite a bit actuallyTB I wonder if his headstones reads “inventor of PDS, & first known victim“
BC
January 23, 2010 at 8:33 am #169118Trailboss wrote:
Quote:Fantastic there is 4 mins of my life I wont get back :huh:TB
Did you get someone to read it to you :woohoo: :woohoo: :woohoo:
Boony
January 23, 2010 at 9:09 am #169147Boony wrote:
Quote:Trailboss wrote:Quote:Fantastic there is 4 mins of my life I wont get back :huh:TB
Did you get someone to read it to you :woohoo: :woohoo: :woohoo:
Boony
No mate I can read
Keep practicing mate you might learn (no promises) although that would be new in Tamworth eh mate :laugh:
TB
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