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  • Maybach Motor Works advert, around 1919

    © Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

    1918

    Motorenbau GmbH in Friedrichshafen is renamed to Maybach Motorenbau GmbH

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  • Interior view of the learning workshop at Maybach Motor Works, ca. 1919

    © Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

    1919

    Mentoring as an essential aspect of quality products and innovation

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  • William Orpener, The Treaty of Versailles, Oil on Canvas, 1919

    1920

    10th of January 1920

    The end of WW I is officially sealed by the Versaille Treaty

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  • The Grashof Memorial Coin in gold

    © Verband Deutscher Ingenieure

    1922

    Wilhelm Maybach receives the Grashof Gedenkmünze by the VDI (Verband Deutscher Ingenieure)

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  • Certificate for the conferral of an honorary doctorate to Karl Maybach

    © Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

    1924

    Karl Maybach receives the title of honorary doctor

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  • Photograph showing the 'Dehnlinienverfahren'

    © Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

    1926

    Patent on the “Dehnlinienverfahren” - a testing method developped by Karl Maybach

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  • The VL 2 type engine

    © Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

    1927

    Excellence across all elements

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  • Sale of welfare stamps and postcards on the street by the German Emergency Aid, 1931

    © Bundesarchiv, Bild 183-T0706-503 / CC-BY-SA 3.0

    1929

    25th of October 1929

    Black Tuesday on the New York stock exchange

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  • Portrait of Wilhelm Maybach at an advanced age

    © Daimler AG

    1929

    29th of December 1929

    On December 29th, Wilhelm dies at the age of 83

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  • Maybach 12 Chassis

    © Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

    1930

    A car that became a symbol in itself

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  • The Maybach type GO 6 engine of 1934

    © Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

    1932

    Taking trains to unseen speeds

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  • The Maybach EVA rail car at test drives in Aulendorf, 1924

    © Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

    1924

    Presentation of the first locomotive powered by fast running diesel engine by Maybach Motorenbau

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  • The Maybach type GO 6 engine

    © Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

    1934

    Introduction of turbochargers for fast running diesels in collaboration with Büchi

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  • Original footage from 1933 of the 'Flying Hamburger'

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Maybach Motor Works advert, around 1919

© Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

The engine works of Karl Maybach had been very successful in providing reliable and powerful airborne engines during WW I. As a result, the company was renamed in 1918 and from now carried the name Maybach Motorenbau - Maybach Engine Works. The now famous double M logo also was first seen not much later.

Interior view of the learning workshop at Maybach Motor Works, ca. 1919

© Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

Mentoring is essential to the Maybach DNA. Wilhelm Maybach became an orphan at age ten and subsequently was accepted at Bruderhaus orphanage, a new kind of institution in which manufacturing simple machines was part of the program. His talents were discovered by the head of the orphanage who then enabled him to meet Gottlieb Daimler, his most important collaborator in the years that followed. With his groundbreaking constructions, Wilhelm created a reputation of his own and even was described as the king of designers at only age 43. Wilhelm passed on this heritage to his son Karl whom he mentored on technical issues in many letters they wrote each other. Having founded a company of his own, Karl Maybach realized that to ensure the quality of work required, well educated workers were essential. As a result, the ‘Lehrwerkstatt’ (learning workshop) was established in 1919 at Maybach Motorenbau, setting an example for other German companies to this very day. This spirit is continued today in the Maybach Foundation where mentoring is paramount to the program.

The Julian Schnabel and Vahakn Arslanian Mentorship Project, Venice 2011

© Wilhelm and Karl Maybach Foundation

The World Trade Center Mentoring project 2008, documenting the reconstruction site. Photograph taken by mentee Vicky Roy from India

© Wilhelm and Karl Maybach Foundation

The Global Health Scholars Project, 2008. Dr. David Bangsberg, M.D., a leader in HIV treatment strategies mentored Dr. Conrad Muzoora, M.D., a medical researcher in AIDS/ HIV

© Wilhelm and Karl Maybach Foundation

William Orpener, The Treaty of Versailles, Oil on Canvas, 1919

The Versaille treaty sets an end date to WW I. It included that Germany ceases the production of military equipment - an aspect that gravely affected Maybach Motorenbau as engines for airships and planes had been the essential product range.

The Grashof Memorial Coin in gold

© Verband Deutscher Ingenieure

Seven years prior to his death the great contributions Wilhelm Maybach had made to the combustion engine and the modern automobile were finally officially recognized.

Certificate for the conferral of an honorary doctorate to Karl Maybach

© Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

The title of honorary doctor in engineering is awarded to Karl (45) by the ‘Wuerttembergische Technische Hochschule’ (Technical University) in Stuttgart. Five years later, at the age 50, he is also awarded honorary citizenship in Friedrichshafen, a town that had become another cradle of the combustion engine due to him.

Photograph showing the 'Dehnlinienverfahren'

© Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

Karl (47) receives a patent for his strain gauging method “Dehnlinienverfahren”. He uses this technique to determine the appropriate stress distribution to avoid fractures during alternate loading. A resin coating would be applied to the surface of the tested component. During the testing of the component, hairline cracks would appear in the resin, showing the actual areas of tension.

The VL 2 type engine

© Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

The three corners of the original Maybach Motorenbau ‘double‑M’ logo, are said to represent the three elements in which Maybach engines came to be used. While the impact on mobility “by land” and “by air” is more obvious, there are also stories to be told about Maybach engines powering boats and yachts. Wilhelm Maybach's grandfather clock had already been used in a boat, which has to be seen as another breakthrough as it was a first in history. Later on, Karl Maybach followed in his father’s footsteps and also offered Maybach Motorenbau engines as ‘marinized’ versions. One of the prime examples is the OHEKA II (1927), a special commission by Otto Hermann Kahn, one of the wealthiest men of his time. It was powered by three Maybach VL 2 airship engines, that combined for over 1200 horsepower, making it the fastest ship in its class. Shortly after WWII, Maybach engines once again disrupted an industry: the ‘MD’ engines became the gold standard on the market as the superior fast-running engines for boats, ferries, yachts, and the like. This legacy of technical excellence lives on to this day and can still be found in the motorization of the world’s largest and most powerful yachts.

Sale of welfare stamps and postcards on the street by the German Emergency Aid, 1931

© Bundesarchiv, Bild 183-T0706-503 / CC-BY-SA 3.0

A crash on the New York stock exchanges leads to the World Economic crisis. As a result 3 million people lost their jobs in 1932.

Portrait of Wilhelm Maybach at an advanced age

© Daimler AG

Wilhelm Maybach had not only experienced disruptive shifts in mobility, but he very much shaped them with his constructions. In the years prior to his death, he had withdrawn from actively constructing but his heritage and legacy lived on in his son Karl whom he had tutored on many occasions.

Maybach 12 Chassis

© Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

1921 saw the first car produced independently by Maybach Motorenbau. A variety of technical intricacies (among which the first four-wheel brake system) were installed that made it not only more comfortable and safer to drive but also resulted in increased performance. It was the starting point for many cars that combined high performance with user-friendly features for the driver. Maybach Motorenbau ('Maybach engine works') only provided the chassis with the engine - this led to a variety of different designs as the body work was done according to the customers wishes. The peak of the cars built by Maybach were the twelve-cylinder variants which were a first in Germany. The last model of this vehicle, that was to become a symbol of luxury, was the Zeppelin DS 8 (DS short for double six). Its eight-liter engine with 200 hp managed to propel the vehicle, which could weigh up to three tons with the body included, to 160 km/h. Though its engine is constructively not directly related to the ones used in airships, the name designates where Maybach Engine Works had earned its reputation – the airships and planes conceptualized by Count Zeppelin.

Advertisement of Maybach Motor Works from 1931, published in the magazine 'Motor'

© Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

Sketch of a Maybach DS 7 or 8, 1930s

© Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

Artist rendition of the Maybach pre-selective gear shifting mechanism

© Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

Artist rendition of the Maybach pre-selective gear shifting mechanism

© Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

The Maybach type GO 6 engine

© Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

In the mid-1920s Karl Maybach shifted his focus towards the construction of fast running engines for trains, essentially rendering existing solutions inferior. This new strategic outlook was a feasible way to bring the company through adversity. Having had provided high performance engines for airships and planes prior to and during WW I, these products had been banned afterwards due to the Versailles treaty. At the time, steam-powered trains were still the status quo and a fast-running diesel engine for this specific application was not being produced by any of the large industry players. Gradually, 'Maybach Motorenbau' ('Maybach Engine Works') claimed the new terrain with a stubborn attitude. What then followed can only be described as a disruption of an entire industry: powering the so-called SVT trains (“Schnelltriebwagen mit Verbrennungsmotor”) which enabled passengers to travel to all major German cities within a day by reaching world-record speeds of 160 km/h, thereby reshaping society forever. The first train of this new generation was the ‘Flying Hamburger’ built in 1932 which made use of the GO 5 type engine.

The Train, part of the 'Maybach Powered' Series designed by Michael Schwab

Advert from the 1940s for Maybach railcar propulsion

The experimental G 1 fast running diesel engine on the testing bench in 1919

The Maybach EVA rail car at test drives in Aulendorf, 1924

© Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

Eisenbahn-Verkehrsmittel-AG (E.V.A.), Wismar and Maybach-Motorenbau jointly developed a diesel locomotive. The World’s first large Maybach high-speed diesel engine, type G4 a, engine output is 150 hp. (110 kW)

The Maybach type GO 6 engine

© Rolls-Royce Power Systems AG/ MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH

Karl Maybach (55) works extensively on the turbocharged high-speed large diesel engine. Together with Büchi, he develops the turbocharger concept for the engine type GO 6.

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