- Fritz Fiedler
Fritz Fiedler (1899-1972), a qualified
engineer , joined theBMW firm in 1932 as chief designer at the age of 32 after working forHorch , designed 8 cylinder and 12 cylinder cars. Working with Fiedler wasRudolf Schleicher , who had joined Horch in 1927 after being at BMW on theirmotorcycle design team. Fritz persuaded Schleicher to return to BMW and these two were responsible for the new series of six cylinder cars that were to set thecar division of BMW on the road to success. The first car that Fiedler was fully responsible for was theBMW 326 saloon that was shown at theInternational Automobile Ausstellung inBerlin in 1936.While Schleicher was at
Munich on motorcycle development and the competition side of BMW motor car activity, Fiedler was atEisenach in overall command of the car side of BMW, specialising inchassis , suspension andaerodynamic design and development. The last great work of his to emanate from Eisenach was the 3.5litre 6cylinder BMW 335 saloon, a fine 90mph car for the Germanautobahn s. During the war he was occupied withmilitary vehicle design and development and finished up at Munich, fortunately, so that after the war he was in the American zone. During the war he was a Director of BMW, but left the board on 1945 and in 1947 joined AFN Ltd at the persuasion of H.J. Aldington. Although he wasloan ed to Bristol as a consultant on their Type 400 project, he did most of his work inEngland atIsleworth , where he was always known as Dr Fiedler, although he did not have that title in Germany. He was very popular with the workforce at AFN, most people describing him as a kindly and charming man, and everyone admired his engineering qualities. He took charge of the development of the post-warFrazer Nash , dealing with chassis, suspension,body design andconstruction and development of the FNS Bristolengine . On the Isleworthdynamometer he got over 100 bhp from the Bristol engine before the Bristol men did.After three years with AFN Ltd, he went back to Germany and returned to BMW where he was responsible for the new
V8 engine and the 500 seriesBMW 501 ,BMW 503 ,BMW 507 of cars. He waschairman of BMW AG from 1955 to 1956 and he finally retired in 1966, after a long and active life devoted to BMW, but he attended the firm each day as a consultant for a further two year and died in 1972.References
*“From Chain Drive to Turbocharger- The AFN Story”, Denis Jenkinson, 1984.
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