Anglo-Dane
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The Anglo-Dane was a Danish automobile manufactured by H. C. Fredriksen of Copenhagen from 1902 to 1917. Fredriksen began by building bicycles in the 1890s; for these, he used British parts - hence the hyphenated name.
The first cars were light trucks with single-cylinder Belgian Kelecom engines. Later cars were produced with their own design single-cylinder 4-5 hp engines; these featured friction drive using double discs to give an equivalent 12-speed transmission. A few passenger cars were also built with twin-cylinder engines before the company merged with automobile makers Jan and Thrige, which made Triangel commercial vehicles until 1945. About 70 Anglo-Danes were made.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ Peter Bromley (2021-05-06). "Anglo-Dane – Danmarks Arkiv" (in Danish). Retrieved 2024-03-01.
Categories:
- Cars introduced in 1902
- Car manufacturers of Denmark
- Defunct motor vehicle manufacturers of Denmark
- Goods manufactured in Denmark
- 1902 establishments in Denmark
- Vehicle manufacturing companies established in 1902
- Defunct manufacturing companies of Denmark
- Cars discontinued in 1917
- Danish company stubs
- Brass auto stubs
- Veteran auto stubs