Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Adler_2.5-litre> ?p ?o }
- Adler_2.5-litre wheelbase "2800.0".
- Adler_2.5-litre height "1650.0".
- Adler_2.5-litre length "4635.0".
- Adler_2.5-litre width "1740.0".
- Adler_2.5-litre abstract "The Adler 2.5-litre (in German Adler 2,5 Liter) was a sensation when first presented by Adler at the Berlin Motor Show early in 1937, although this did not convert into correspondingly sensational sales.Production got under way in November 1937. Seen as a successor for the six cylinder Adler Diplomat, it was an executive sedan/saloon featuring a strikingly streamlined body designed by Karl Jenschke (1899 – 1969) who till 1935 had been the Director of Engineering with Steyr-Daimler-Puch. Jenschke's last creation during his time with Steyr had been the Steyr 50 which the Adler 2.5-litre, though larger, closely resembled.Both on account of its uncompromisingly stream-lined silhouette and because its launch coincided with Germany’s first Autobahn construction boom, the car was popularly known as the Autobahn Adler.The body for the four-door fast back saloon came from Ambi-Budd whose Berlin based German business made the steel bodies for several of Germany’s large automakers in the decade before the war. The two- and four-door cabriolet bodies came from Karmann of Osnabrück.".
- Adler_2.5-litre assembly Frankfurt.
- Adler_2.5-litre bodyStyle Convertible.
- Adler_2.5-litre bodyStyle Sedan_(automobile).
- Adler_2.5-litre engine Adler_2.5-litre__1.
- Adler_2.5-litre height "1.65".
- Adler_2.5-litre layout Front-engine,_rear-wheel-drive_layout.
- Adler_2.5-litre length "4.635".
- Adler_2.5-litre manufacturer Adler_(automobile).
- Adler_2.5-litre productionEndYear "1940".
- Adler_2.5-litre productionStartYear "1937".
- Adler_2.5-litre thumbnail Bremen_Classic_Motorshow_2010_400_Autos_-_Flickr_-_KlausNahr.jpg?width=300.
- Adler_2.5-litre transmission "4-speed manual".
- Adler_2.5-litre transmission "Synchromesh on top 3 forward ratios".
- Adler_2.5-litre wheelbase "2.8".
- Adler_2.5-litre width "1.74".
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageID "37600649".
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageLength "9012".
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageOutDegree "37".
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageRevisionID "690613479".
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Adler_(automobile).
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Ambi_Budd.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Autobahn.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink BMW.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink BMW_326.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Berlin_Motor_Show.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Category:1930s_automobiles.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Category:Adler_vehicles.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cars_introduced_in_1937.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Category:Executive_cars.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Category:Rear-wheel-drive_vehicles.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Compact_car.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Convertible.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink DKW.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Differential_(mechanical_device).
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Drag_coefficient.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Dresden.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Frankfurt.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Front-engine,_rear-wheel-drive_layout.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Karmann.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Opel.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Osnabrück.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Reichsmark.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Sedan_(automobile).
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Shock_absorber.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Steyr-Daimler-Puch.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Steyr_50.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink Volkswagen_Golf_Mk4.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink World_War_II.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink ZF_Friedrichshafen.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink File:Adler-2-5-liter-cabriolet-1.jpg.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink File:Adler_Autobahn_03.jpg.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLink File:Langenburg_Jul_2012_33_(Deutsches_Automuseum_-_1938_Adler_Autobahn).jpg.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLinkText "2.5 Liter".
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLinkText "Adler 2.5-litre Sport".
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLinkText "Adler 2.5-litre".
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageWikiLinkText "Adler AutoBahn".
- Adler_2.5-litre aka "Adler Typ 10".
- Adler_2.5-litre aka "Autobahn Adler".
- Adler_2.5-litre assembly Frankfurt.
- Adler_2.5-litre bodyStyle "Cabriolet with 2 or 4 seats".
- Adler_2.5-litre bodyStyle "Sport-Limousine".
- Adler_2.5-litre bodyStyle "“ Schiebedach Limousine”".
- Adler_2.5-litre designer "Karl Jenschke".
- Adler_2.5-litre engine "2494".
- Adler_2.5-litre layout Front-engine,_rear-wheel-drive_layout.
- Adler_2.5-litre manufacturer Adler_(automobile).
- Adler_2.5-litre name "Adler 2.5 litre".
- Adler_2.5-litre production "1937".
- Adler_2.5-litre production "21249".
- Adler_2.5-litre transmission "4".
- Adler_2.5-litre transmission "Synchromesh on top 3 forward ratios".
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Convert.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_automobile.
- Adler_2.5-litre wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Adler_2.5-litre subject Category:1930s_automobiles.
- Adler_2.5-litre subject Category:Adler_vehicles.
- Adler_2.5-litre subject Category:Cars_introduced_in_1937.
- Adler_2.5-litre subject Category:Executive_cars.
- Adler_2.5-litre subject Category:Rear-wheel-drive_vehicles.
- Adler_2.5-litre hypernym Sensation.
- Adler_2.5-litre type Automobile.
- Adler_2.5-litre type Disease.
- Adler_2.5-litre type MeanOfTransportation.
- Adler_2.5-litre type Car.
- Adler_2.5-litre type Classification.
- Adler_2.5-litre type Layout.
- Adler_2.5-litre type Vehicle.
- Adler_2.5-litre type Product.
- Adler_2.5-litre type DesignedArtifact.
- Adler_2.5-litre type Thing.
- Adler_2.5-litre comment "The Adler 2.5-litre (in German Adler 2,5 Liter) was a sensation when first presented by Adler at the Berlin Motor Show early in 1937, although this did not convert into correspondingly sensational sales.Production got under way in November 1937. Seen as a successor for the six cylinder Adler Diplomat, it was an executive sedan/saloon featuring a strikingly streamlined body designed by Karl Jenschke (1899 – 1969) who till 1935 had been the Director of Engineering with Steyr-Daimler-Puch.".
- Adler_2.5-litre label "Adler 2.5-litre".
- Adler_2.5-litre sameAs Q358153.
- Adler_2.5-litre sameAs Category:Adler_Autobahn.