Seeing this brought back cherished memories of 1970, when my dad drove us from West Yorkshire to Naples (and back) to visit family, in his brand new red NSU Prinz-L Super ! Not the most roomy interior for that kind of journey - family or four plus toddler - but nobody died, and whenever we needed to stretch our legs we just pulled over. That little engine got us across France, over the Alps via the Mont Blanc Tunnel and through 250 miles of Italian autostrade and never missed a beat...... lots of laughs, and the occassional fright - an adventure we'll never forget.
Our first family car. We had a '62 , bought in 1970. You've just brought back so many memories. Can't wait to show this to my dad. Thanks. BTW great channel.
Great video, thanks for posting. You are quite young so I excuse you from any historical faux pas. These cars were quite common in the UK in the '60s and '70s. Quirky but decent reputation. Most rear-engined cars of the period were a bit too light on the steering. Some people put bags of sand under the bonnet of their Hillman Imps, etc, to keep the steering firm. (Others put bags of sand in the boot to keep their rear-wheel-drives going through the snow). NSU was bankrupted by its Ro80 rotary-engined saloon car. It was a brilliant vehicle, 20 years ahead of its time in terms of comfort, handling, looks, etc. Unfortunately its rotor tips had not been perfected and the engines failed invoking myriad warranty claims. My father converted two Ro80s to Ford V4s, one for him, one for his dad. I drove his for a few years and the ride and semi-automatic transmission was like something you would expect today. Amazing. Anyhow, I appreciate your enthusiasm and diligence to dredge up these old motoring curiosities.
@@neriozulberti1492 With a Wankel engine, yes. There were some engine problems with the first models. But as far as I know they were all fixed by warranty and goodwill regulations. The last models were very reliable.
Indeed, apart from the engine it was so good that Audi continued making it in 100 and A6 guises right upto the current day. Strange because Germans like their cautious evolutionary approach, as with the Porsche 911, BMW 2002/3 series and Golf.
That brought back many happy memories I had a bright red Nsu Prinz when stationed in the RAF in Germany in 1964. Drove it from Cologne ,through the Alps to Venice and Rome and only needed to refill the tank just across the German border on our return journey. I miss that kind of mpg! Thanks for the video.
Love this little car. Car manufacturers in the 60s and 70s realised that it might be a good idea to be able to see where you are going - just look at all that glass!
These bring lots of memories growing up in Italy in the 70s. And you mistaken they were very successful out of Germany maybe not the UK, they were reliable, utilitarian and simple to run. Nice video
Yes, they were very popular in Italy. Unfortunately AudiNSU (and VW) used Italian steel for their bodies in the early 1970s, making the cars "already rusting in the sales brochures" (including e.g. the earliest Golf Mk I).
@@nobbel65 From what I heard, the "italian steel" originally came from the Soviet Union and was used as partial payment for the Fiat 124 license that became Lada. The russian steel had a lot of inpurities, mainly due to being mixed with old recycled scrap material. Furthermore it was often stored in more or less damp conditions, starting to corrode before it was even used. There were many car victims of this horrible steel, but none suffered more severely than the original (1972) Alfasud, which is why there's practically not a single of these cars left.
Great! A historically important car! It gave birth to the polo, influenced the golf, hillman minx and even the later fiesta, bmw 2001 series, and even developement units for the fiat saloons of the 70's. So msny cars hsve this cars dna in their history and roots. From body, inovation, syspension and tardis like interior. This little thing gave us every modern supermini and small saloon designed and built in the uk and europe. Well done for showing us this rare and important car
Oh my gosh that brings back great memories. I had a 71 NSU Prince. I was in Germany at the time and it was given to me by an old World War II German veteran that couldn’t drive anymore. Love that car.Every time you put gas in it you filled the oil reservoir cause it was a two cycle. Drove it all over Germany had a great time
Had one as my first car in 1979. There should be a cover over the engine as rain water gets onto the sparkplugs. It was missing in mine. My Grandfather used a metal door pocket off a Hillman Imp as a cover, fixed onto the top of the rear bonnet cover above the louvres. Heater was chronic, as it was a heat exchanger from the exhaust. Best way was to start her up, and hold a high idle for 5min. Also the fan was single speed and it was slow. Took ages for the windscreen to clear in frosty mornings. There where some things that where really ahead of the times, like alloy finned (for cooling) front drum brakes with steel inserts. Nowadays all car have discs , but some Renault's have finned drums on the rear brakes. Yes she was basic, but which would you prefer car to get home in the wet Scottish winter, or a wait for 2 buses and a long walk home. Yup basic wins
My dad had an NSU Prinz - although I think I'm right in saying it had a 1,000 cc engine. It had an automatic clutch but a gear-lever which took a little getting used to. It was an absolute hoot to drive - my dad let me drive it back from the West Country one summer's evening and it was a joyous experience.
33 seconds to 63 miles or 17.5 seconds to 50 miles from stand still, all with 30 hp from 599 cc H2 twin. The 1200 (1192cc) Beetle with 34hp needed 39 seconds to 63 miles or 19 seconds to 50 miles. The Trabant 601 last series with 26hp need 48 seconds to 63 miles (two door sedan manually shifted) and 22 seconds to 50 miles.
@@mtjakubec That is what I was thinking, but I am not familiar enough with either to be sure. The engines are totally different, as NSU used in-line 2- and 4-cylinder air cooled engines, transverse with gearbox in a location more like a motorcycle engine, and the ZAZ is laid out more like a VW Beetle.
@@psk1w1 Yes you're right. Considering the fact that even the first generation of ZAZ was copying the body of FIAT 600, it's clear that they took some inspiration from the NSU in the second generation, in the body design. (While NSU being more well made and reliable than ZAZ)
Of course I've heard of the Prinz. When I was a kid in the 70ies there were lots of Prinzes driving around here in Denmark. Mostly they were green. The Prinz had a larger brother with oval headlights, and three rear lights. It was actually pretty cool.
My mum had one in Lancashire in the early/mid 70s and loved it to bits. No idea where she got it from. Sadly my older brother drove it into a ditch and wrote it off, mum was relived that him and his mates were OK but was also furious!
Just came across this video. My bright red NSU Prinz 4 (ANU609B- yes, I still remember the number!), was my first new car. I had just finished my engineering apprenticeship, my wife was a teacher and we had no kids (yet) so we splashed out. £550 I think. We drove all over the UK in that car. It would do 50mpg no matter how hard you drove it, but in fairness that was usually with the accelerator to the floor. I once got it up to 80mph downhill but you needed a pilots licence for that because the already light steering was almost non-existent by then. We just loved that car but only kept it a couple of years before getting a Singer Chamois. It was fun the drive, but everything was fun then. Both of us working, no kids, a new car, newly married, couldn't keep our hands off each other. What memories we made. Ps. You said it was for sale. What was the asking price? I'll guess about 4 to 5000 (£).
My Dad had an NSU Prinz before I was born. He ALWAYS talked about it, and how it would buzz down the highway keeping up with traffic all day. He also had a Corvair and VW Transporter, so he seemed to like air-cooled rear-engine cars.
Dad used to deal in cars a bit in early seventies. He had one and I used to drive it as I has just passed my test in 1972. It was a great little car. Compared to the British equivalent it was very reliable and incredibly economical. Thanks for great memories of my old man and his cars. Happy days.
My Father had a NSU 1000, 1litre, 4 cylinder, Alloy Air Cooled. I Learnt to drive in it 1971 and have fond memories of it. It was larger than the Prinz in the Video, but similar shape.
My dad's first car, NSU Prinz 4 in light green. All NSU driver at that time flashed their lights as they passed each other and the wave of the hand. After all, we are a big happy Prinz 4 family. Happy days, sniffle sniffle!!!!!!
What the feck is the point in a comment like this? The video is about the NSU Prinz. If you have something to say about this vehicle then say it - it will be of interest. But to go on about the volume levels is just pathetic. Stick to Grand Tour or Top Gear if that's what it's all about for you. I'm sure they've got a sound engineer on 100 to 200k a year to sort these things out.
@@paulplaskwa1600 Yeah, whisper quiet so you have to turn up the volume followed by super loud blasting out of the speakers because you just turned the volume up, silent gaps, sometimes mostly left channel - all adds to the fun, right?
My parents had two NSU's. A Prinz 4L, followed by a 1970 1000c in green. My dad almost got a metallic brown M reg Ro80 around '82. This car is very nice.
Well made? Quality build? Are we really talking NSU Prinz here? I had the misfortune to own one of these cars in the early seventies in my "old bangers" era. It was without doubt, the worst car I ever owned. Here is a list of its failures (some of them re-occurring). The rear brake drums (aluminium), were fastened to the splined drive shaft with a large 2 tab locking washer. One tab used to chew it's way into the recess designed for it on the brake drum. Shortly after purchasing the mini monster, I was returning home after a visit to the local dealers to obtain a new Locking Washer having noticed some wear in the rear nearside wheel area. Slightly downhill on a long gentle left hand bend, I noticed out of the corner of my eye, something overtaking me on the inside.... Yes, it was my rear nearside wheel. The realisation coming to me as I keeled over onto the Brake backing plate. As it was slightly downhill, my escapologist wheel continued for at least another 1/2 mile before itself keeling over. How the oncoming drivers managed to avoid it, I will never know. It used to regularly spit spark plugs out of the cylinder head. On a 2 cylinder car, this has a drastic, immediate effect on what performance there was to begin with. I now know that particular fault could probably have been cured by a couple of "Helicoils" but in those days, I was on a very limited budget and it had spat one too many spark plugs out. One of the worst faults was caused by the engine mounting syste,m. 3 rubber blocks, 2 at the bottom either side and the main anti torque one at centre top. Every time you take off from a standing start, the engine tries to rotate backwards, or on the overrun, rotate forwards. All controlled by the anti torque rubber bush at the top, until that decides it has had enough. The net result here in that as soon as you change torque direction, the whole engine pivots on the 2 lower mountings (usually forward, as it is mounted at an angle) until it is resting on the bulkhead between the engine and passenger compartments. At this point the weight has also been taken up by the gearbox end of the gear control lever. You will now find that your gear lever cannot be moved and you are stuck in whatever gear you were in prior to the catastrophe. Hopefully that will be 2nd gear and not neutral, so you can at least get the heap of rubbish out of everybody else's way The steering is light. A bit of an understatement there. It was so light that stop the chance of aquaplaning on anything more than a Summer Dew, most people used to carry a bag of sand around with them in the front of the (front) boot. A bit of fancy switchgear doth not a Classic make. NSU should never have survived the production of this machine. Not sure how it overlapped chronologically with the Hillman Imp, but switchgear apart, The Prinz wasn't a patch on the Imp. Sorry for the length of this, but I will never forget my association with this (IMO) pile of c**p
As I mention in another post, I had the 1200cc version .... a few foibles that I had were the cylinder head parting from the block which required helicoiling ...... heat exchanger exhaust rusted on the inside which let exhaust fumes into the cabin via the heater vents ..... Clutches also didn't last five minutes.
@@Mariazellerbahn One further fault I forgot to mention,but which was quite entertaining. The gear selector stuck out of the front of the gearbox and had a right angle bend turning downwards, terminating in a "Ball". The remote control rod can straight back, through the bulkhead to meet this "Ball". It had a "Cup" on the end to locate the ball. The ball was secured inside the cup by a Rubber (plastic?) grommet, which had long since disappeared. When driving in London traffic where one had to be reasonably quick off the mark, the ferocious clutch would cause the engine torque to rotate the engine, including the ball, backwards. As you declutched to make your fast change to 2nd gear, the engine would return to normal position. However, the remote control cup would no longer be aligned with the selector ball. Total disconnection of gears and again left with whatever gear you were in prior to this. The solution to this was to forcibly hold the remote gear lever in the required position, usually 1st gear and jump the clutch repeatedly until the ball miraculously relocated itself back within the cup. All great fun in London traffic. You may wonder that I held on to this piece of junk so long, I still wonder myself, but budgetary requirements were the main reason.
My brother bought a 1966 one in 1970 as his first car. They were simple but had some awesome technology. Overhead cam driven by con rods, the two coils are six volt in series and fire both cylinders at the same time, and the dynastarter, a starter motor and generator on one. Because the starter/generator coil was about 250mm diameter it would turn over if the battery had any spark, and if it didn't it was the only car I've ever been able to push start up-hill on my own! The handbook had a graph showing fuel consumption vs speed. a srtaight line graph. 0 mph = 100 mpg to 100mph = 0 mpg. My brother's had burned out valves when he bought it and five years after the warranty expired the dealer provided a 50% discount on the new ones as they were the first valves that had ever failed.
My Grandad had 2 NSU Prinz's the first in a petrol blue which was written off the last one in this colour he used to wear a trilby when driving it and Corgi did a model in the exact same colour with a driver figure with a brown trilby like my Grandad this brought back so many happy memories thanks for postingi
I used to own one of these. Apart from the occasional breakdowns and catching fire in Southend it was a great car. I used to drive it flat out everywhere. Great fun!
@@pcno2832 It was a backfire that caused the mostly cardboard air intake to catch fire. It looked dramatic - lots of smoke and flame but was put out rather quickly and the car survived.
Cool. Many years since I've seen one of those. Farht means journey in German. Our school German language text book was called Farht ins blau, journey into the blue. I don't remember much of the language we were taught but the book title caused much tittering for us eleven year old's. That was in 1971. Oh crap, I am old now!
In the mid-1970s, I bought a euro-spec VW Beetle. It had a locking steering column instead of the key on the dash. The four key positions were Halt-Garage-Fahrt-Start [Lock-Off-Run-Start].
My dad was a main dealer for NSU in 1967 he changed from Volkswagen to NSU in 1968 he had the first NSU RO 80 that came off the stand at Earls Court what an engine but such a shame about the sills. Enjoy the show
Sounds similar to the VW Beetle. I assume the heat exchanger was stainless , so that by the time it leaked, the body had big enough rust holes to let the exhaust out.
I heard several stories about people being gassed by rotten exhausts and heater boxes on the Beatles. If they are true, I don't know. The worst stories about the Beatle was told by my uncle who saw a man burning to death because the fuel tank of his beetle burst in an accident and covered him in fuel because the fuel tank is under the windshield.
In the 1980's I worked for Marconi and there was always one of these in the car park, I loved it then as I love it now. I had a BMW 2002 at the time, which I'd often park next to the NSU if I could!
Jim Brown mentions the 1000 and TT models. The dream version was the special order TTS. 100bhp from 1000cc. It was delivered with gearsets for road, hillclimb or race! I once saw a Swiss TTS with camping gear on the roof play with a hotted up BMC 1300GT on the M62. At 70mph the TTS driver floored it, and it was like the 1300 was stalled at the lights the NSU disappeared so quickly.
My Father had one of these! And he had a mistress too, and my Mum knew. One day she bought a brand new Fiat 128 and warned my Father that If she ever caught my Father in her Fiat with the mistress alongside she would divorce immediately! Go figure... He always complied, yes. Every Man knows what a Red Line is...
the dealers who distributed these car often did not do the servicing and repairs , think it was the cooling fan bearings that gave allot of trouble a local mechanic made special tools to use on thes cars and work came from the dealers , this was around 1970, the mopeds built by nsu called the qwickly were more well known than the cars
i worked for a car dealer in the UK that sold NSU cars back in the late 60's these cars were way ahead of their time, the engines in these cars were hardened to last, beside's having rust protection that was lacking on other makes of cars of that period.
I saw an earlier model of the Prinz with the 600 cc engine in Perth when I was in my teens. I looked with interest at the motor and I'm pretty sure it was in line, not horizontally opposed.
my grandfather bought one new, i still remember it, same colors as the one in the video. The backs of the front seats don't lock upright, so if you're a child riding in the back seat and the driver brakes hard or hits something, they make a pretty good launching ramp so you can go through the windscreen! don't ask me how i know
My mum had a green one G reg I think.Dad had a red obling headlight one with black perforated vinyl seats with a 1.2 rear engine that the water pump used to go wrong back in the early 1970s
Great review and what a beautiful little car. Like the reviewer I’ve never seen one in the flesh but looks fun if a bit scary to drive. Like he says it’s slow and one wonders if cars from an earlier era would be adequate on today’s roads and the way we drive now?
Some are. Rover P6, BMW 2000, Mk2 Jags - things that were rapid with disk brakes are still fine, its the smaller engine more basic cars that feel their age in traffic
I owned one about 40 years ago, it was 6 or 7 years old then. At its end of life, though very little rust. Most cars had a very short lifespan in that time, say 70's, early 80's. Lot of fun driving it, handling was not too bad, but terrible brakes. A briljant designed engine, overheadcam with a very complex system to drive the camshaft, and the dynastart, a combination of a dynamo and starter directly mounted to the driveshaft.
Superb little car. DO NOT remove that engine. It's what makes the little beauty so of its time. Great video, but on dear, the volume keeps you busy throughout.
First of all : compliments for your outstanding retro test of this wonderful machine. Second : i always wished if someday BMW could buy the tools and the copyrights to re launch again this precious creature of global car's history and to repeat the big success of Austin Mini under Bayerische's tunning criteria . Hellos from Argentina
My first car (well, a '65 one). Ridiculously frugal! The 1200 was basically two 600 blocks end to end. The 1000 made more power than the 1200, and the top models were the 1000 TT (name resurrected later) and the 1000 TTS, - 96bhp. Then there was the option of the Speed Kit. On the M6, an MGB tried to show off by overtaking a Swiss-registered TTS. The TTS took about 25 seconds to disappear over the horizon.
When i was a little boy here in Italy i saw many of these cars , we nicknamed it "vasca da bagno" (bath tub), i also remember the prinz 1000 tt (it was kind of "gti")
My dad had one of these back in the early 70's. It was green, and had semi-automatic transmission. The engine was bigger than this model (I'm guessing 1,000 cc) and was perky to drive. I remember coming back from the West country with my dad, who let me drive all the way home, which was a real hoot. It was a perky little car and I have very fond memories of it.
I remember saying some of this in the 80's and 90's. When I was at highschool there was a guy living nearby who had at least 2, he must had been a collector. I remember thinking they looked amazing!
Listen to MAtt's comment at 0.48 secs into the video. "But, outside of Germany, pretty much unheard of". The same car made it 1/2 way around the world into the Southern Hemisphere. I can remember them growing up as a boy in Auckland New Zealand. Astonishing!
I saw a few of these growing up in Malaysia in the early 70s. They soon disappeared off the roads and were considered 'old fashioned' even by that time
The sports Prinz is a fantastic looking car . Nsu rensport 250 won the world Grand Prix title for three years I think in the fifties . The Munch Mammoth motorcycle used an NSU engine . The NSU 250 manx was a very inovative bike in it's day and would blow a Triumph 500 twin into the weeds at the time . The NSU Ro80 had a Rotary engine it proved to be a disaster with engines breaking and put them out of business . There was some nice twin cylinder cars out of Japan look up kei cars .
My grandmother had one in the 60's; bright red. It needed a bag of cement in the front to cope with the strong winds in Cape Town. We asked her if she had wound up her rubber bands whenever she set off. Not amused!
The last and most powerful version was the 1200 TTS/E. They had between 70 up to 85 hp! Nice and astonishingly agile cars, often used in hill races. Good drivers could outperform BMW‘s or even Porsches. Only negative aspect: they got quite warm in the engine compartment, and several burned out about 10 - 15 minutes after they were parked
They also made a scooter the NSU 150 Prima n that was very well build too mate, when i saw your video an Alpha cloverleaf i got very excited as I instantly thought it must be the alpha Sud 1,5 as this n golf MKI both where a driver's car loved them both cheers great job mate thx
@@furiousdriving welcome mate love all your videos just don't stop posting, one of my ALL times favourite can was still is actually the Rover 2000TC it was voted the Best sports saloo can for 2yuears Running in Europe n the best sports sedan in the USA for 2 years Running mate in its day there was Nothing to touch it the BMW 2000 in its TI form was Fast But in comfort n road holding specially in the wet would a been left dead by the Rover 2000TC in comfort too, that Is a car i would happily spend to have it totally rebuild If i had the money in tobaco colour of course the rover n the Elan where by far the best 2 in their class
It's bigger brother the NSU Prinz 1000 lent it air-cooled straight four to what at the time was the most powerful and most expensive motorbike: The Münch Mammoth. Kept the twin headlight unit too.
The actual reason why it was no success was not the engine. It was plain and simple the body design. In 1970 people expected an eye-catcher, even when the car was cheap. But the Super Prinz 4L was considered ugly. A bathtub with four wheels. Citroen Duck was also considered ugly but it was extravagant. That's why people bought it. There was just nothing you could fall in love with the 1970 NSU Super Prinz 4L. Today it might be different, it is a nice minimalist car. Awesome restoration of the 1970 NSU Super Prinz 4L in the video.
My father had one back in the mid-1970's. Great little car. The ones you want though are the TT or TTS. Real pocket rockets and NSU's equivalent to the souped up Fiat 500 and 600's of the day from Abarth.
40 yrs ago , one of my teachers had one of these , it was the most unreliable bag of shite he ever owned, ,, his words ,, most hideous looking horrible shite box ,,, my words cheers Shane uk 🇬🇧
@@Skoda130 Actually, there are three rods, but only two are moving the cam and at all. The third "rod", the one closest to the engine, is a kind of spacer that ensures a constant distance between crank- and camshaft at all temperatures. Also, there was at least one counterweight at the top which would not have been necessary with three rods at 120°.
My sister owned a NSU Prinz in 1975 and let me drive it along country lanes some months before I got my driving license with 18. One time I almost put the car in the bushes because the pedals were so narrow and so close to each other that I accidentally stepped on the gas pedal with the brake pedal and the edge of my foot. 🤣
My cousin had one. It caught fire on the M5 and completely burnt to the ground by the time the fire brigade arrived. Someone tell the narrator that Prinz is pronounced Printz.
I wouldn't say it was virtually unknown. They certainly had a presence on British roads back in the 1950s/ 1960s. They were too expensive compared to rivals, so I would call it a niche market for people who appreciated the higher quality of German cars, or wanted something different.
Seeing this brought back cherished memories of 1970, when my dad drove us from West Yorkshire to Naples (and back) to visit family, in his brand new red NSU Prinz-L Super !
Not the most roomy interior for that kind of journey - family or four plus toddler - but nobody died, and whenever we needed to stretch our legs we just pulled over. That little engine got us across France, over the Alps via the Mont Blanc Tunnel and through 250 miles of Italian autostrade and never missed a beat...... lots of laughs, and the occassional fright - an adventure we'll never forget.
The engine is a vertical twin, mounted transversely. Not a flat twin. Flat twins have horizontally opposed cylinders.
-Very good,Now why didn't he say that.
He didn't say that because he is not a proper gearhead .... just another twerp on the RUclips.
@@FourDollaRacing what a bell end you are. IF YOU DONT LIKE HIM THEN DONT WATCH AND/OR COMMENT ON HIS VIDEOS
Our first family car. We had a '62 , bought in 1970. You've just brought back so many memories. Can't wait to show this to my dad. Thanks. BTW great channel.
thats great, glad it brought back good times, hope you dad likes it too
Great video, thanks for posting. You are quite young so I excuse you from any historical faux pas. These cars were quite common in the UK in the '60s and '70s. Quirky but decent reputation. Most rear-engined cars of the period were a bit too light on the steering. Some people put bags of sand under the bonnet of their Hillman Imps, etc, to keep the steering firm. (Others put bags of sand in the boot to keep their rear-wheel-drives going through the snow). NSU was bankrupted by its Ro80 rotary-engined saloon car. It was a brilliant vehicle, 20 years ahead of its time in terms of comfort, handling, looks, etc. Unfortunately its rotor tips had not been perfected and the engines failed invoking myriad warranty claims. My father converted two Ro80s to Ford V4s, one for him, one for his dad. I drove his for a few years and the ride and semi-automatic transmission was like something you would expect today. Amazing. Anyhow, I appreciate your enthusiasm and diligence to dredge up these old motoring curiosities.
The biggest NSU was the RO 80, a wonderful car, far ahead of its time.
I remember a wenkel engine isn’t it?
@@neriozulberti1492 With a Wankel engine, yes. There were some engine problems with the first models. But as far as I know they were all fixed by warranty and goodwill regulations. The last models were very reliable.
Edward van Egmond infact but Mazda had reloaded the wankel and now what an engine
Indeed, apart from the engine it was so good that Audi continued making it in 100 and A6 guises right upto the current day. Strange because Germans like their cautious evolutionary approach, as with the Porsche 911, BMW 2002/3 series and Golf.
Character in TV show The Same Sky (set in 70s) drives one.
That brought back many happy memories I had a bright red Nsu Prinz when stationed in the RAF in Germany in 1964. Drove it from Cologne ,through the Alps to Venice and Rome and only needed to refill the tank just across the German border on our return journey. I miss that kind of mpg! Thanks for the video.
Love this little car. Car manufacturers in the 60s and 70s realised that it might be a good idea to be able to see where you are going - just look at all that glass!
These bring lots of memories growing up in Italy in the 70s. And you mistaken they were very successful out of Germany maybe not the UK, they were reliable, utilitarian and simple to run. Nice video
Yes, they were very popular in Italy. Unfortunately AudiNSU (and VW) used Italian steel for their bodies in the early 1970s, making the cars "already rusting in the sales brochures" (including e.g. the earliest Golf Mk I).
@@nobbel65 From what I heard, the "italian steel" originally came from the Soviet Union and was used as partial payment for the Fiat 124 license that became Lada.
The russian steel had a lot of inpurities, mainly due to being mixed with old recycled scrap material. Furthermore it was often stored in more or less damp conditions, starting to corrode before it was even used.
There were many car victims of this horrible steel, but none suffered more severely than the original (1972) Alfasud, which is why there's practically not a single of these cars left.
Great! A historically important car! It gave birth to the polo, influenced the golf, hillman minx and even the later fiesta, bmw 2001 series, and even developement units for the fiat saloons of the 70's.
So msny cars hsve this cars dna in their history and roots. From body, inovation, syspension and tardis like interior.
This little thing gave us every modern supermini and small saloon designed and built in the uk and europe. Well done for showing us this rare and important car
Pretty common in the UK in the 1960's. Most were scrapped when they broke down because getting them fixed and finding spare parts was difficult.
I remember seeing a few in the 80s but dont know when I saw another
Audi took NSU over and they didn't support the Prinzes with spares.
I had one in 1980 and I had to get spares from scrapyards.
Oh my gosh that brings back great memories. I had a 71 NSU Prince. I was in Germany at the time and it was given to me by an old World War II German veteran that couldn’t drive anymore. Love that car.Every time you put gas in it you filled the oil reservoir cause it was a two cycle. Drove it all over Germany had a great time
Had one as my first car in 1979. There should be a cover over the engine as rain water gets onto the sparkplugs. It was missing in mine. My Grandfather used a metal door pocket off a Hillman Imp as a cover, fixed onto the top of the rear bonnet cover above the louvres. Heater was chronic, as it was a heat exchanger from the exhaust. Best way was to start her up, and hold a high idle for 5min. Also the fan was single speed and it was slow. Took ages for the windscreen to clear in frosty mornings. There where some things that where really ahead of the times, like alloy finned (for cooling) front drum brakes with steel inserts. Nowadays all car have discs , but some Renault's have finned drums on the rear brakes. Yes she was basic, but which would you prefer car to get home in the wet Scottish winter, or a wait for 2 buses and a long walk home. Yup basic wins
My dad had an NSU Prinz - although I think I'm right in saying it had a 1,000 cc engine. It had an automatic clutch but a gear-lever which took a little getting used to. It was an absolute hoot to drive - my dad let me drive it back from the West Country one summer's evening and it was a joyous experience.
Its not flat engine, its inline 2 engine.
margus kiis
But still flat in every sense.
margus kiis Shit, do you think you will get over it?
Like describing a straight six as a V6......
margus kiis .. that would be a parallel twin then!
I’m sure the power curve is flat 🤪
33 seconds to 63 miles or 17.5 seconds to 50 miles from stand still, all with 30 hp from 599 cc H2 twin. The 1200 (1192cc) Beetle with 34hp needed 39 seconds to 63 miles or 19 seconds to 50 miles. The Trabant 601 last series with 26hp need 48 seconds to 63 miles (two door sedan manually shifted) and 22 seconds to 50 miles.
Not that uncommon in UK in the 60s. The styling is just like the later BMW 1602/2002 series.
and also similar to the ZAZ Zaphorozhets, a Soviet flat 4 car
@@psk1w1 Zaporozhets was actually a copy of this car (like a lot of Soviet cars of this era)
@@mtjakubec That is what I was thinking, but I am not familiar enough with either to be sure. The engines are totally different, as NSU used in-line 2- and 4-cylinder air cooled engines, transverse with gearbox in a location more like a motorcycle engine, and the ZAZ is laid out more like a VW Beetle.
@@psk1w1 Yes you're right. Considering the fact that even the first generation of ZAZ was copying the body of FIAT 600, it's clear that they took some inspiration from the NSU in the second generation, in the body design. (While NSU being more well made and reliable than ZAZ)
@@mtjakubec There was also a derivative of the FIAT 600 made in Serbia, but I don't know what engine it had. This was the precursor to the Yugo.....
Of course I've heard of the Prinz. When I was a kid in the 70ies there were lots of Prinzes driving around here in Denmark. Mostly they were green. The Prinz had a larger brother with oval headlights, and three rear lights. It was actually pretty cool.
My mum had one in Lancashire in the early/mid 70s and loved it to bits. No idea where she got it from. Sadly my older brother drove it into a ditch and wrote it off, mum was relived that him and his mates were OK but was also furious!
Just came across this video. My bright red NSU Prinz 4 (ANU609B- yes, I still remember the number!), was my first new car. I had just finished my engineering apprenticeship, my wife was a teacher and we had no kids (yet) so we splashed out. £550 I think.
We drove all over the UK in that car. It would do 50mpg no matter how hard you drove it, but in fairness that was usually with the accelerator to the floor. I once got it up to 80mph downhill but you needed a pilots licence for that because the already light steering was almost non-existent by then.
We just loved that car but only kept it a couple of years before getting a Singer Chamois.
It was fun the drive, but everything was fun then. Both of us working, no kids, a new car, newly married, couldn't keep our hands off each other. What memories we made.
Ps. You said it was for sale. What was the asking price? I'll guess about 4 to 5000 (£).
It looks like a ZAZ, or whatever, from the USSR.
soviet was chinese of their time, they had good copy+paste-ers
"Zaporozec" was in fact based on NSU Prince 4
And the NSU Prinz copied the Chevrolet Corvair but in a way shorter size.
Yeah a zaz-968 zaporozhets
@@raspucin70 no way man.
My Dad had an NSU Prinz before I was born. He ALWAYS talked about it, and how it would buzz down the highway keeping up with traffic all day. He also had a Corvair and VW Transporter, so he seemed to like air-cooled rear-engine cars.
Dad used to deal in cars a bit in early seventies. He had one and I used to drive it as I has just passed my test in 1972. It was a great little car. Compared to the British equivalent it was very reliable and incredibly economical. Thanks for great memories of my old man and his cars. Happy days.
My Father had a NSU 1000, 1litre, 4 cylinder, Alloy Air Cooled. I Learnt to drive in it 1971 and have fond memories of it. It was larger than the Prinz in the Video, but similar shape.
My dad's first car, NSU Prinz 4 in light green. All NSU driver at that time flashed their lights as they passed each other and the wave of the hand. After all, we are a big happy Prinz 4 family. Happy days, sniffle sniffle!!!!!!
Interesting video but my goodness...the volumes are all over the place. :D
What the feck is the point in a comment like this? The video is about the NSU Prinz. If you have something to say about this vehicle then say it - it will be of interest. But to go on about the volume levels is just pathetic. Stick to Grand Tour or Top Gear if that's what it's all about for you. I'm sure they've got a sound engineer on 100 to 200k a year to sort these things out.
@@trailingarm63 agreed mate, makes no difference to the video at all , silly comments.
@@paulplaskwa1600 Yeah, whisper quiet so you have to turn up the volume followed by super loud blasting out of the speakers because you just turned the volume up, silent gaps, sometimes mostly left channel - all adds to the fun, right?
Douglas J Morris yes.
What the feck is the point of a video when you can't hear anything. Yes ANYTHING.
They were built in my neighbourhood, the city Neckarsulm. NSU is the short word for the town.
is nt there a museum about NSU?
@@erbse999 Yes. It´s called "Zweiradmuseum".
My parents had two NSU's. A Prinz 4L, followed by a 1970 1000c in green. My dad almost got a metallic brown M reg Ro80 around '82. This car is very nice.
Thanks for posting and sharing. A bit of trivia, this car was also produced under license in Egypt in the 60's under the name "Ramsis"
Here's a documentary about the Ramses car. Parts of it are translated into English: ruclips.net/video/S6jWrao1n9E/видео.html
In my opinion, this is a good-looking car.
Well made? Quality build? Are we really talking NSU Prinz here?
I had the misfortune to own one of these cars in the early seventies in my "old bangers" era. It was without doubt, the worst car I ever owned. Here is a list of its failures (some of them re-occurring).
The rear brake drums (aluminium), were fastened to the splined drive shaft with a large 2 tab locking washer. One tab used to chew it's way into the recess designed for it on the brake drum. Shortly after purchasing the mini monster, I was returning home after a visit to the local dealers to obtain a new Locking Washer having noticed some wear in the rear nearside wheel area.
Slightly downhill on a long gentle left hand bend, I noticed out of the corner of my eye, something overtaking me on the inside.... Yes, it was my rear nearside wheel. The realisation coming to me as I keeled over onto the Brake backing plate. As it was slightly downhill, my escapologist wheel continued for at least another 1/2 mile before itself keeling over. How the oncoming drivers managed to avoid it, I will never know.
It used to regularly spit spark plugs out of the cylinder head. On a 2 cylinder car, this has a drastic, immediate effect on what performance there was to begin with. I now know that particular fault could probably have been cured by a couple of "Helicoils" but in those days, I was on a very limited budget and it had spat one too many spark plugs out.
One of the worst faults was caused by the engine mounting syste,m. 3 rubber blocks, 2 at the bottom either side and the main anti torque one at centre top. Every time you take off from a standing start, the engine tries to rotate backwards, or on the overrun, rotate forwards. All controlled by the anti torque rubber bush at the top, until that decides it has had enough. The net result here in that as soon as you change torque direction, the whole engine pivots on the 2 lower mountings (usually forward, as it is mounted at an angle) until it is resting on the bulkhead between the engine and passenger compartments. At this point the weight has also been taken up by the gearbox end of the gear control lever. You will now find that your gear lever cannot be moved and you are stuck in whatever gear you were in prior to the catastrophe. Hopefully that will be 2nd gear and not neutral, so you can at least get the heap of rubbish out of everybody else's way
The steering is light. A bit of an understatement there. It was so light that stop the chance of aquaplaning on anything more than a Summer Dew, most people used to carry a bag of sand around with them in the front of the (front) boot.
A bit of fancy switchgear doth not a Classic make. NSU should never have survived the production of this machine. Not sure how it overlapped chronologically with the Hillman Imp, but switchgear apart, The Prinz wasn't a patch on the Imp.
Sorry for the length of this, but I will never forget my association with this (IMO) pile of c**p
As I mention in another post, I had the 1200cc version .... a few foibles that I had were the cylinder head parting from the block which required helicoiling ...... heat exchanger exhaust rusted on the inside which let exhaust fumes into the cabin via the heater vents ..... Clutches also didn't last five minutes.
@@Mariazellerbahn One further fault I forgot to mention,but which was quite entertaining.
The gear selector stuck out of the front of the gearbox and had a right angle bend turning downwards, terminating in a "Ball". The remote control rod can straight back, through the bulkhead to meet this "Ball". It had a "Cup" on the end to locate the ball. The ball was secured inside the cup by a Rubber (plastic?) grommet, which had long since disappeared. When driving in London traffic where one had to be reasonably quick off the mark, the ferocious clutch would cause the engine torque to rotate the engine, including the ball, backwards. As you declutched to make your fast change to 2nd gear, the engine would return to normal position. However, the remote control cup would no longer be aligned with the selector ball. Total disconnection of gears and again left with whatever gear you were in prior to this. The solution to this was to forcibly hold the remote gear lever in the required position, usually 1st gear and jump the clutch repeatedly until the ball miraculously relocated itself back within the cup. All great fun in London traffic.
You may wonder that I held on to this piece of junk so long, I still wonder myself, but budgetary requirements were the main reason.
Reminds me of my father's Opel Kadett; the Germans have knack for making cars that seem well built until you put a few miles on them.
My brother bought a 1966 one in 1970 as his first car. They were simple but had some awesome technology.
Overhead cam driven by con rods, the two coils are six volt in series and fire both cylinders at the same time, and the dynastarter, a starter motor and generator on one.
Because the starter/generator coil was about 250mm diameter it would turn over if the battery had any spark, and if it didn't it was the only car I've ever been able to push start up-hill on my own!
The handbook had a graph showing fuel consumption vs speed. a srtaight line graph. 0 mph = 100 mpg to 100mph = 0 mpg.
My brother's had burned out valves when he bought it and five years after the warranty expired the dealer provided a 50% discount on the new ones as they were the first valves that had ever failed.
My Grandad had 2 NSU Prinz's the first in a petrol blue which was written off the last one in this colour he used to wear a trilby when driving it and Corgi did a model in the exact same colour with a driver figure with a brown trilby like my Grandad this brought back so many happy memories thanks for postingi
I used to own one of these. Apart from the occasional breakdowns and catching fire in Southend it was a great car. I used to drive it flat out everywhere. Great fun!
What's a little fire? Never let that spoil the fun.
@@pcno2832 It was a backfire that caused the mostly cardboard air intake to catch fire. It looked dramatic - lots of smoke and flame but was put out rather quickly and the car survived.
what's a small fire between friends?
My parents had one of those NSU Prinz in red. I still remember it as it was yesterday.
I had a 1965/66 back in 1970 when I was going to university in Tübingen, thanks for the memories.😢
Cool. Many years since I've seen one of those. Farht means journey in German. Our school German language text book was called Farht ins blau, journey into the blue. I don't remember much of the language we were taught but the book title caused much tittering for us eleven year old's. That was in 1971. Oh crap, I am old now!
In the mid-1970s, I bought a euro-spec VW Beetle.
It had a locking steering column instead of the key on the dash. The four key positions were Halt-Garage-Fahrt-Start [Lock-Off-Run-Start].
My dad was a main dealer for NSU in 1967 he changed from Volkswagen to NSU in 1968 he had the first NSU RO 80 that came off the stand at Earls Court what an engine but such a shame about the sills.
Enjoy the show
Somebody has done a great restoration on it, showroom quality. With its square edges, small size and rear engine it reminds me of the Hillman IMP.
I was told the heater was a heat exchanger around the exhaust. Is that true? And if so, how come no-one was gassed by a rusted through exhaust?
Sounds similar to the VW Beetle. I assume the heat exchanger was stainless , so that by the time it leaked, the body had big enough rust holes to let the exhaust out.
I heard several stories about people being gassed by rotten exhausts and heater boxes on the Beatles. If they are true, I don't know. The worst stories about the Beatle was told by my uncle who saw a man burning to death because the fuel tank of his beetle burst in an accident and covered him in fuel because the fuel tank is under the windshield.
In the 1980's I worked for Marconi and there was always one of these in the car park, I loved it then as I love it now. I had a BMW 2002 at the time, which I'd often park next to the NSU if I could!
Jim Brown mentions the 1000 and TT models. The dream version was the special order TTS. 100bhp from 1000cc. It was delivered with gearsets for road, hillclimb or race! I once saw a Swiss TTS with camping gear on the roof play with a hotted up BMC 1300GT on the M62. At 70mph the TTS driver floored it, and it was like the 1300 was stalled at the lights the NSU disappeared so quickly.
My Father had one of these! And he had a mistress too, and my Mum knew. One day she bought a brand new Fiat 128 and warned my Father that If she ever caught my Father in her Fiat with the mistress alongside she would divorce immediately! Go figure...
He always complied, yes. Every Man knows what a Red Line is...
Hm... Kind of reminds me of the original 1960 to 1964 Chevrolet Corvairs.
T'airn'KA Definitely Corvair-inspired.
Yes, I had a 1960 Corvair, he even mentions it in the clip. I would say the Hillman Imp also Corvair inspired.
My sister's friend's brother had the 4 cylinder version in bright orange. It was absolutely demented.
Sister''s boyfend''s dad for me, the 1000cc was mad...
These were quite common in the late 60s early 70s.there was also a slightly larger bodied 1000 and TT which were mini Cooper rivals.
I remember my uncle having the 1000. I remember him saying the insurance was really expensive as it was quite quick.
the dealers who distributed these car often did not do the servicing and repairs , think it was the cooling fan bearings that gave allot of trouble a local mechanic made special tools to use on thes cars and work came from the dealers , this was around 1970, the mopeds built by nsu called the qwickly were more well known than the cars
I owned this car for 4 years, glad to see it restored
Fantastic, I love it when the actual past owners see these videos! I can say its in incredible condition
i worked for a car dealer in the UK that sold NSU cars back in the late 60's these cars were way ahead of their time, the engines in these cars were hardened to last, beside's having rust protection that was lacking on other makes of cars of that period.
I am intrigued by the later TT models. But this specimen is in beautiful condition.
I saw an earlier model of the Prinz with the 600 cc engine in Perth when I was in my teens. I looked with interest at the motor and I'm pretty sure it was in line, not horizontally opposed.
quanti ricordi... la PRINZ era la nostra macchina quando ero piccolo...che bel video.complimenti
Molto felice di aver riportato quei ricordi, e grazie
In Dublin when I was a Kid..
NSU stood for No Shaggin Use!!
They were so unreliable!!
Congratulations hitting 10,000!
Thanks! Its a big milestone
my grandfather bought one new, i still remember it, same colors as the one in the video.
The backs of the front seats don't lock upright, so if you're a child riding in the back seat and the driver brakes hard or hits something, they make a pretty good launching ramp so you can go through the windscreen! don't ask me how i know
I can confirm something similar happens in a Mk1 Escort...
the RO80 was one of the nicest German car designs of all time , a friend's father has about 10 in his paddock in Australia
10....really! Wow!
@@lesrogers7310 possibly more lol but only 3 were road-going
My mum had a green one G reg I think.Dad had a red obling headlight one with black perforated vinyl seats with a 1.2 rear engine that the water pump used to go wrong back in the early 1970s
Fantastic video. I believe my grandfather owned one of these in the sixties.
Very interesting! Any idea of the mpg?
Sorry no idea
What a cute little car, that boot catch is a work of art and looks well made.
Great review and what a beautiful little car. Like the reviewer I’ve never seen one in the flesh but looks fun if a bit scary to drive. Like he says it’s slow and one wonders if cars from an earlier era would be adequate on today’s roads and the way we drive now?
Some are. Rover P6, BMW 2000, Mk2 Jags - things that were rapid with disk brakes are still fine, its the smaller engine more basic cars that feel their age in traffic
I owned one about 40 years ago, it was 6 or 7 years old then.
At its end of life, though very little rust.
Most cars had a very short lifespan in that time, say 70's, early 80's.
Lot of fun driving it, handling was not too bad, but terrible brakes.
A briljant designed engine, overheadcam with a very complex system to drive the camshaft, and the dynastart, a combination of a dynamo and starter directly mounted to the driveshaft.
It was reasonably succesfull in italy too next to germany you still see them there. You saw them in the netherlands until the 1980 s
Same in Denmark. They kept soldiering way up into the 80's.
Superb little car. DO NOT remove that engine. It's what makes the little beauty so of its time. Great video, but on dear, the volume keeps you busy throughout.
First of all : compliments for your outstanding retro test of this wonderful machine. Second : i always wished if someday BMW could buy the tools and the copyrights to re launch again this precious creature of global car's history and to repeat the big success of Austin Mini under Bayerische's tunning criteria . Hellos from Argentina
My first car (well, a '65 one). Ridiculously frugal! The 1200 was basically two 600 blocks end to end. The 1000 made more power than the 1200, and the top models were the 1000 TT (name resurrected later) and the 1000 TTS, - 96bhp. Then there was the option of the Speed Kit. On the M6, an MGB tried to show off by overtaking a Swiss-registered TTS. The TTS took about 25 seconds to disappear over the horizon.
When i was a little boy here in Italy i saw many of these cars , we nicknamed it "vasca da bagno" (bath tub), i also remember the prinz 1000 tt (it was kind of "gti")
You right! I remember too! Funny
when I started this video that name popped up in my head! :)
It was not a Prinz TT or TTS, it was a NSU TT. They where great cars. They are driving till today for hill races.
My dad bought one of these new exactly as in the vid in 1968 when we livid in Lusaka, Zambia went all over in it great little car for Africa
My dad had one of these back in the early 70's. It was green, and had semi-automatic transmission. The engine was bigger than this model (I'm guessing 1,000 cc) and was perky to drive. I remember coming back from the West country with my dad, who let me drive all the way home, which was a real hoot. It was a perky little car and I have very fond memories of it.
Maybe the 1200 sc. I had a couple of those back in the day. Great cars.
Great content ideas, but you need to get some help with your sound production.
I remember saying some of this in the 80's and 90's.
When I was at highschool there was a guy living nearby who had at least 2, he must had been a collector.
I remember thinking they looked amazing!
Listen to MAtt's comment at 0.48 secs into the video. "But, outside of Germany, pretty much unheard of". The same car made it 1/2 way around the world into the Southern Hemisphere. I can remember them growing up as a boy in Auckland New Zealand. Astonishing!
wow, thats impressive for them to manage that!
I saw a few of these growing up in Malaysia in the early 70s. They soon disappeared off the roads and were considered 'old fashioned' even by that time
The sports Prinz is a fantastic looking car . Nsu rensport 250 won the world Grand Prix title for three years I think in the fifties . The Munch Mammoth motorcycle used an NSU engine . The NSU 250 manx was a very inovative bike in it's day and would blow a Triumph 500 twin into the weeds at the time . The NSU Ro80 had a Rotary engine it proved to be a disaster with engines breaking and put them out of business . There was some nice twin cylinder cars out of Japan look up kei cars .
My grandmother had one in the 60's; bright red. It needed a bag of cement in the front to cope with the strong winds in Cape Town. We asked her if she had wound up her rubber bands whenever she set off. Not amused!
I would love to see photo's of this car parked next to a Hilman Imp. What was the milage? I bet it was low.
These were almost the same, later the Singer Chamois was a nice car but it had twin headlights.
The last and most powerful version was the 1200 TTS/E. They had between 70 up to 85 hp! Nice and astonishingly agile cars, often used in hill races. Good drivers could outperform BMW‘s or even Porsches. Only negative aspect: they got quite warm in the engine compartment, and several burned out about 10 - 15 minutes after they were parked
It looks so proper with it's little silver belt.
My mother had one in the early 70's it was one of the few cars she ever sold and did not have to scrap.
They also made a scooter the NSU 150 Prima n that was very well build too mate, when i saw your video an Alpha cloverleaf i got very excited as I instantly thought it must be the alpha Sud 1,5 as this n golf MKI both where a driver's car loved them both cheers great job mate thx
Thanks!
@@furiousdriving welcome mate love all your videos just don't stop posting, one of my ALL times favourite can was still is actually the Rover 2000TC it was voted the Best sports saloo can for 2yuears Running in Europe n the best sports sedan in the USA for 2 years Running mate in its day there was Nothing to touch it the BMW 2000 in its TI form was Fast But in comfort n road holding specially in the wet would a been left dead by the Rover 2000TC in comfort too, that Is a car i would happily spend to have it totally rebuild If i had the money in tobaco colour of course the rover n the Elan where by far the best 2 in their class
Not fitted with seatbelts?
not in those days
It's bigger brother the NSU Prinz 1000 lent it air-cooled straight four to what at the time was the most powerful and most expensive motorbike: The Münch Mammoth. Kept the twin headlight unit too.
The actual reason why it was no success was not the engine. It was plain and simple the body design. In 1970 people expected an eye-catcher, even when the car was cheap. But the Super Prinz 4L was considered ugly. A bathtub with four wheels. Citroen Duck was also considered ugly but it was extravagant. That's why people bought it. There was just nothing you could fall in love with the 1970 NSU Super Prinz 4L. Today it might be different, it is a nice minimalist car. Awesome restoration of the 1970 NSU Super Prinz 4L in the video.
My neighbour had one of these in the early 1970s and subsequently traded it in for a Mk2 Cortina 1600 Deluxe which seemed quite upmarket back then.
My father had one back in the mid-1970's. Great little car. The ones you want though are the TT or TTS. Real pocket rockets and NSU's equivalent to the souped up Fiat 500 and 600's of the day from Abarth.
I had two of these , the single overhead can is driven by two rods and eccentric like there motorcycles
Love this little car 😁
40 yrs ago , one of my teachers had one of these , it was the most unreliable bag of shite he ever owned, ,, his words ,, most hideous looking horrible shite box ,,, my words cheers Shane uk 🇬🇧
@ 4:02 It's not a flat 2, but an inline 2. And the cam drive is a gem.. It's not by a chain, many sprockets or a belt, but by exentrics. :-)
Skoda130 More specifically two parallel rods runing on eccentric bearings with a 90° offset, rather like a steam engine drive.
@@michaelXXLF It's 3 rods with 120 degrees offset. ;-)
@@Skoda130 Actually, there are three rods, but only two are moving the cam and at all. The third "rod", the one closest to the engine, is a kind of spacer that ensures a constant distance between crank- and camshaft at all temperatures. Also, there was at least one counterweight at the top which would not have been necessary with three rods at 120°.
I believe the camshaft drive was based on the system designed by W.O. Bentley for his 3-litre and other models in the 1920s.
The Prinz 4 was also very popular in Italy. Unfortunately AudiNSU (like VW) used Italian steel in the early 70s which was VERY prone to rusting.
My sister owned a NSU Prinz in 1975 and let me drive it along country lanes some months before I got my driving license with 18. One time I almost put the car in the bushes because the pedals were so narrow and so close to each other that I accidentally stepped on the gas pedal with the brake pedal and the edge of my foot. 🤣
So what none of those pedals had any effect
My cousin had one. It caught fire on the M5 and completely burnt to the ground by the time the fire brigade arrived.
Someone tell the narrator that Prinz is pronounced Printz.
What kind of gas mileage?
My Dad bought a second hand NSU prinz in the late 1960,s . It burst into flames in leeds city centre, the second day he had it due to bodged wiring.
I wouldn't say it was virtually unknown. They certainly had a presence on British roads back in the 1950s/ 1960s. They were too expensive compared to rivals, so I would call it a niche market for people who appreciated the higher quality of German cars, or wanted something different.
What a wonderful toy-like automobile, I always wanted to get a NSU Prinz
Have you driven an Hillman Imp?
That’s much more interesting than the Mondeo. Now please get the W123 running!
The old HA viva head light side light switch was the same i had one a 1963 model.
It appears to be the same Bosch unit used on the Opel Kadett B.
05:20 Beautiful simplicity