Scania-Vabis
Scania-Vabis was a famous
Swedish truck manufacturer. Its name came from the merger of
Scania (Maskinfabriksaktiebolaget Scania), which started out by manufacturing bicycles, with
Vabis (Vagnfabriks Aktiebolaget i Södertälje), in
1911. Until
1929 the company manufactured cars in
Malmö, as well as trucks and buses. Over the succeeding years, the company, based in
Södertälje,
Sweden, developed an enviable reputation for the toughness, comfort and reliability of its commercial vehicles. The 1963 LB76 was the model that forged the Scania-Vabis reputation outside
Sweden. This forward-control design was one of the first exhaustively crash-tested truck cabs.
For some time
Daimler-Benz waged a 'logo war' with Scania-Vabis, claiming a possible confusion between the Scania-Vabis 'pedal crank' design featuring on Scania bicycles around 1900 and the Mercedes 'three-pointed star'. In 1968 Daimler-Benz won and the Scania-Vabis logo changed to a simple griffin's head on a white background, and 'Vabis' was dropped from the name.
In 1969 Scania merged with
SAAB, to form the
Saab-Scania AB company, under the
Wallenberg umbrella. This corporation was split in 1995 and the company became simply Scania AB, which is still a manufacturer of advanced truck and bus designs. In 1999, the
European Union blocked a merger with
Volvo.
For Scania-Vabis, there were many inexpensive, imported cars with which to compete so, in order to establish a profile of their own, they made high-class, luxury cars. Examples include the Scania-Vabis Limousine Type III, from 1920, that included a
top hat holder in the roof.
Prince Carl of Sweden had a 1913 Scania-Vabis 3S. The type 3S was fitted with an in-car phone or buttons so the passenger could communicate with the driver. They also made two-seat sports cars (or "sportautomobil").
[{{cite book]| first = Gert | last = Ekström | year = 1984 | title = Svenska bilbyggare | publisher = Allt om hobby | id = ISBN 91-85496-22-7
Scania-Vabis and later Scania also manufactured trucks in Argentina, Botswana, Brazil, Korea, Tanzania, The Netherlands, Zimbabwe and (temporarily) in the USA.
Many examples of Vabis, Scania-Vabis and Scania commercial vehicles are in the Marcus Wallenberg-hallen (the Scania Museum) in Södertälje.
The name Scania almost certainly derived from the name of the region in Sweden where the company originated: Skåne.*Vabis*Scania corporate site *Scania Museum at Södertälje
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