The F8 had replaced the
DKW F7 after only a two-year model life. The small DKWs were among the best selling small cars in
Germany during the 1930s, and regular model replacement was part of
Auto Union's successful marketing strategy. It seems that the F8 was itself scheduled for relatively rapid replacement by the steel bodied
DKW F9. War intervened, however, and production of the Reichsklasse and Cabriolet was ended in 1940. Production of the Meisterklasse continued until 1942. By 1942, when passenger car production at Zwickau was ended, approximately 50,000 F8s had been produced. Sales of new F8 cars and chassis continued until 1944, and the Swiss coachbuilding firm of Holka was still bodying new F8 chassis during 1943 and 1944. That firm even introduced a new cabriolet in 1944, though only a small number were produced. Directly after the war it took some time for DKW production to resume, but prewar F8s did soon appear on German roads: the car had been a big seller before the
war and military personnel during the first half of the 1940s had found the modest dimensions and performance of the F8 relatively unappealing, often allowing them to escape military requisition. At the 1947
Leipzig Fair the car reappeared, badged now as the DKW-IFA F8. Production of the
eastern IFA F8 (without DKW badges) recommenced in or before 1949 at the Auto Union's Zwickau factory which was in the
Soviet occupied zone of Germany and was expropriated to become the
VEB Automobilwerke Zwickau (AWZ). It is believed that by 1955 a further 26,267 of the cars had been built as IFA F8s. Under an "inter-zone" trade agreement concluded in 1950/51 approximately 1,000 of the cars were exported to what had by now de facto become the separate country of
West Germany. A wider range of body options included an estate and light commercial variants. In 1953, a Luxus-Cabriolet with special streamlined bodywork by VEB Karosseriewerk Dresden (
Gläser) was introduced, intended primarily as an export special for the
western market. The two-cylinder 700 cc two-stroke engine lived on in the iconic
Trabant. ==Technical date==