Manufacturer: Zündapp
Model: K800 Wehrmacht
Year: 1936
Displacement: 800 cc
Cylinder: 4
Frame number: 192461
Engine number: 192461
Founded at the height of WWI to manufacture armaments, Zündapp found a new role post-war as a producer of motorcycles under the direction of new owner, Dr Fritz Neumeyer, building its first machine, a Levis-powered two-stroke, in 1921. The firm began making its own engines in 1924, selling more than 10,000 machines that year, and at the Berlin Motor Show in 1933 introduced the first of the horizontally opposed, four-stroke twins that it is best remembered for. These formed part of an extensive and diverse range of models, all but the smallest two-stroke being designated by the letter 'K' (for kardan, meaning 'shaft'). Among the models premiered were the K400 and K500 sidevalve twins, both of which employed designer Richard Küchen's unconventional all-chain four-speed 'gearbox' and, as the designation suggests, shaft final drive. Introduced at the same time was another Küchen design: a horizontally opposed four made in 598cc (K600) and 798cc (K800) capacities. Common to all the larger models and eminently suited to withstanding the stresses and strains imposed by travel on unmade roads, the robust frame and girder forks were made of pressed steel, an advanced feature at the time. The new Zündapp range was an enormous success, and in September 1933 the firm produced its 100,000th machine, quite an achievement after little more than a decade as a motorcycle manufacturer. Immediately prior to the outbreak of war in September 1939, Zündapp introduced an overhead-valve twin, the KS600. The latter's 597cc engine produced 28ps, and like the rest of the larger Zündapps the KS600 featured the chain-drive 'gearbox', shaft drive, and the pressed steel frame and forks.
According to the information given to us, it is supposed to be a Wehrmacht team. The machine was part of a large collection in Germany for many years and was restored in the late 1980s. The engine runs round, nice and powerful. The Veigel speedometer works fine. The electrics work and the alternator charges. The bike is ready to ride but not perfect. The vehicle is delivered with complete Austrian papers. The K800 is a powerful German motorcycle and is further enhanced with its 4-cylinder sound.