, but the Goliath GP700 Sport coupé had a transverse engine and front-wheel drive. The GP700's
Ponton,
three-box design reflected the silhouette of Borgward's
Hansa 1500 introduced the year before. Ten years later, the ponton format automobile had become mainstream, but in 1950, while
Opel and
Mercedes Benz were still selling cars with designs dating back to the 1930s, the Goliath's design was bold and innovative. The wings were fully integrated into the bodywork, and the passenger cabin filled the full width of the car. Volkswagen would follow suit only in
1961. Another aspect of the car in respect of which the full significance became obvious only when adopted by
other manufacturers was its front-mounted engine, installed transversely along with the gearbox, which drove the front wheels. It was thereby possible to advertise the car as a five-seater even though the wheelbase was of only . The GP700 Sport appeared in 1952 with a Bosch
fuel injection system. The Sport model was produced only in very limited numbers, but shortly afterwards fuel injection also became available on the GP700 saloon (designated GP700 E: E stood for “Einspritzung”) as an alternative to the carburetor-equipped version. When the larger-engined GP900 E appeared, it was available only with the Bosch fuel injection. This is a Goliath feature that would be taken up across the auto industry during the balance of the twentieth century: however, the fuel-injected GP700 E appeared five years before the fuel-injected
Mercedes-Benz 300 SL. Yet another innovation, available from 1952 on the GP700 and which subsequently became mainstream was the all-synchromesh, four-speed gearbox. ==The Engine==