WESTERN EUROPE
While the average American consumer is working toward his second and often his third car, most Europeans are still working toward their first. They are working hard: Europe's overall auto sales rose 7% last year, when record years in Britain and West Germany offset slumps in France and Italy. As the annual run of international auto shows began last week in Frankfurt, Europe's 1966 model year headed toward further gains. If, as in the U.S., the new models brought few big surprises, there were striking signs that European automakers are betting heavily on some lessons from Detroit.
Triple Lure. Tens of thousands of auto buffs last week thronged Frankfurt's six cavernous exhibit halls to view the offerings of 69 manufacturers from 15 countries, including those of the big four U.S. auto companies. With scarcely an exception, the foreign firms went all out to adopt the triple lure that U.S. automakers have used successfully for years: more power and luxury features, greater model variety.
Germany's ten manufacturers showed off 30 basic models that come in 155 different versions, all with higher horsepower than before. Notable among them: Opel's completely restyled fastback Kadett, which borrows some of its lines from the Ford Mustang, and NSU's Spider, the only car in the world powered by the Wankel engine. Twelve companies in the U.S., Britain, France, Italy and Japan are now experimenting with the engine (which was developed in 1954 by Felix Wankel, a German engineer). The Wankel replaces conventional pistons and cylinders with a triangular rotor, has only two major moving parts and weighs much less than conventional engines. Other engineering trends showed off: a swing toward a combination of disk and drum brakes even in some of the lower-priced cars, reduction in the number of lubrication points, wider use of double carburetors to provide better fuel mixtures.
Bavaria's Hans Glas, which built its success on the tiny, utilitarian Goggomobil, displayed a flashy new luxury coupé that has the sleek, low lines of Italy's Lancia, does 125 m.p.h. and costs $4,500. Daimler-Benz introduced a new Mercedes, the 250 S, which still bears a strong family resemblance but is longer, lower and rounder. Italy was represented by a glittering array of high-priced Ferraris, Maseratis and Alfa Romeos as well as by the nimble, lower-priced Fiats. As always, the Rolls-Royce exhibit drew large crowds. They may have been looking at a dying swan. The rumor in Britain is that at the London auto show next month the company will unveil a new Rolls with a lower, less boxy profile, disk brakes and independent suspension for the rear wheels.
Escaping Tariffs. In the number of cars producedif not in profits, quality or technologythe European auto industry is closing in fast on Detroit; last year it turned out 7,545,000 cars v. the U.S.'s 7,745,000. Europe's automakers hope not only to sell more cars at home but to increase exports, on which they depend heavily for profits. Germany produces more cars than any of its neighbors (2,650,000 last year), sells more than half of them abroad. Second-ranked Britain last year exported 36% of its 1,870,000 cars.
