Torpedo

Rat Rod Bikes Bicycle Forum

Help Support Rat Rod Bikes Bicycle Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Joined
Jan 6, 2014
Messages
15
Reaction score
20
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
What year is this bike . Can't find any real info on it. Please help?
60755909adf00ab2f0b07189f038baa7.jpg
e5758ebed9fcb0a636a3696f578bbb6b.jpg
2a19b4f343ff25d87d6f87e881e2e3eb.jpg
37cc685dc88ede3b0337fe7f7d68e471.jpg
60864d920be0905f2b3b74259bbf2c93.jpg
07638da78d12010d53838aff58bd7756.jpg
3261f402fb6c7e0adbc10bf33e9e3b40.jpg
b3bb5de271d40620b8c94bd655b637d2.jpg
2bb9fa581a2fe5f1df052c29d8deb686.jpg
f5ff10b00df2c15cbf3a06f2c14b30dc.jpg



Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
First off, i wanna say that those fender ornaments are tremendously rad, and i think it's awesome that yours is intact.

From German Wikipedia (excuse the bad translations):
The torpedo-Werke AG (Weil-Werke) was a manufacturer of bicycles and office machines in Frankfurt am Main .

History [ edit ]
The company was founded in 1896 by brothers Peter and Henry Because as "Peter Weil & Co". The manufacturing started with nine employees in a 500-square-meter hall in Roedelheim . The wheels that were assembled there from parts, were driven under the brand name "Weil-wheels" and "Torpedo-wheels".

1906 began the manufacture of typewriters , first with one of the company Johann Cultures & Co. of Neu-Isenburg assumed model, but which has been constantly developed. The typewriters were named Torpedo sold. On November 30, 1921, Weil works were in a corporation converted. Appeared in 1927 with the model Torpedo standard first German typewriter with bank switching . The model could be supplied with carriage of different length. Since 1931 there was the majority shareholder of the torpedo-Werke AG in possession of Remington Rand Inc., New York.

Except typewriters built torpedo also booking engines , from 1932 with a mechanical calculator and Einziehautomaten for debit cards.

From 1938 the bikes emerged in a new plant on the Hanauer Landstrasse , the office machinery manufacturing remained in Roedelheim. During the Second World Warin 1943 the bicycle factory and in 1944 the main plant in Roedelheim was in the air raids on Frankfurt destroyed. After the war, the reconstruction of the production began in Frankfurt, Alzenau and wholesale Karben . The product range included motorcycles and mopeds to 175 cc, typewriters and bicycles. Engines for motorcycles came from Fichtel & Sachs and Ilo .

After the number of employees had risen to 2,200 in 1956, came on bicycles and mopeds gradually a market saturation and for office machines they were no longer competitive. In 1967 the production was stopped.

The Torpedo freewheel hub was not manufactured by the torpedo works, but of Fichtel & Sachs.

Doesn't tell us much...the move from Roedelheim to Hanauer Landstrasse is a false lead b/c both locations are technically Frankfurt. I'd like to see what's printed (if anything) under the Thompson-style BB shell, and I'd also like to see the rear hub if you got it and it seems original. Both would be helpful in determining the vintage, but then again, they may not be.

HTH
-Rob
 
I agree with the others about that fender ornament, it's spectacular. IMHO the whole bike has a lot of potential to make a nice ride. What are your plans for it?
 
The "winged wheel" is pretty common on anything to do with vehicles in Germany, at least in the past. Here is a silver medal and pin given to a railroad retiree with 25 yrs. service. It was issued sometime between 1870 and 1918. The railroad (Reichsbahn) used it a lot. Gary

 
Judging by whst ive been told about the lever action brakes I would have to say 19 20s but the paint looks to good to be that old.
 
Nice Torpedo frame, I owned 2 of these bikes years ago and can roughly give a date range is about it. Your Torpedo if on the on the BB cup is a Thompson style and wheel size are 27x1 3/8 or 1/2 its Pre -1936 to Post 1949 than they changed hands and wheels were changed due interchange of parts through Raleigh and all these grey zone, My guess is roughed down to Pre-1939 to Post 1949. Your missing the spoon rod brake for the front. Your also missing the rear drop stand and If it had a coaster brake system would say Torpedo or Morrow, Sachs or in that range be Pre war until they converted them to though goofy 3 speed with coaster brake (1949-1954) 3 speed internal (1946-1949) But these bike are really great but so much we can still learn on the history.
 
I'd bet the bike came with a Fichtel & Sachs Torpedo hub. If you have the wheel the hub should have a date on it. Here's a website with some:

http://www.torpedo-coasterbrake.com/

If you send him an email maybe he'd be able to help with the date of your bike.

Here's another site that might be of help:

http://www.oldbike.eu/

torpedow.jpg
 
Back
Top