The first Opel car to carry the Kadett name was presented to the public in December 1936 by Opel's commercial-technical director,
Heinrich Nordhoff, who would in later decades become known for his leadership role in building up the
Volkswagen company. Production was interrupted in 1940 by World War II. The new Kadett followed the innovative
Opel Olympia in adopting a chassis-less
unibody construction, suggesting that, like the
Vauxhall 10 introduced in 1937 by Opel's English
sister-company, the Opel Kadett was designed for high-volume, low-cost production. File:Blue oldtimer pic1.JPG|Opel Kadett "Limousine" 11234, with the 1937 front. The grille was restyled for 1938. File:1938 Opel Kadett in the Erwin Hymer Museum, front left.jpg|1938 Opel Kadett File:Opel_Strolch_1938.JPG|Opel Kadett
Strolch (1938)
Kadett serie 11234 (1937) For 1937 the Kadett was offered as a small and unpretentious two door "Limousine" (saloon) or, at the same list price of , as a soft top "Cabrio-Limousine". The body resembled that of the existing larger
Opel Olympia and its silhouette reflected the "streamlining" tendencies of the time. The 1,074 cc side-valve engine came from the 1935
Opel P4 and came with the same listed maximum power output of at 3,400 rpm. The wheelbase, at , was right between the little P4 and the larger Olympia. The "11234" nomenclature stands for the engine's displacement in deciliters (11) followed by the wheelbase in centimeters (234). The brakes were now controlled using a hydraulic mechanism. The suspension featured
synchronous springing, a suspension configuration already seen on the manufacturer's larger models and based on the
Dubonnet system for which General Motors in France had purchased the license. The General Motors version, which had been further developed by Opel's North American parent, was intended to provide a soft ride, but there was some criticism that handling and road-holding were compromised, especially when the system was applied to small lightweight cars such as the Kadett. By the end of 1937 33,402 of these first-generation Kadetts had been produced.
Kadett "KJ38" and "K38 Spezial" (1938–1940) From December 1937 a modified front grill identified an upgrade. The 1,074 cc Opel engine and the wheelbase were unchanged, with few differences between the cars for 1937 and those for 1938. The manufacturer now offered two versions of the Kadett, designated the "Kadett KJ38 and the "Kadett K38" the latter also being sold as the "Kadett Spezial". Mechanically and in terms of published performance there was little to differentiate the two, but the "Spezial" had a chrome stripe below the window line and extra external body trim in other areas such as on the front grill. The interior of the "Spezial" was also better equipped. To the extent that the 300 Mark saving for buyers of the car reflected reduced production costs, the major difference was that the more basic "KJ38" lost the
synchromous springing with which the car had been launched, and which continued to be fitted on the "Spezial". The base car instead reverted to traditional rigid axle based suspension similar to that fitted on the old
Opel P4. The base car was available only as a two-door "Limousine" (saloon). Customers looking for a soft-top "Cabrio-limousine" would need to specify a "Kadett Spezial". For the first time Kadett buyers, provided they were prepared to choose a "Kadett Spezial" could also specify a four-door "Limousine" (saloon) bodied car, priced at as against for a "Spezial Cabrio-Limousine" and for a two-door "Spezial Limousine". The "Kadett KJ38" was intended to fill the market segment of the
Opel P4, but the KJ38, priced at , was more expensive than the P4 and its reduced specification left it with the image of a car for poor people (
..Image des Arme-Leute-Autos..) at a time when economic growth in Germany was finally fostering a less minimalist approach to car buying. were produced on the assembly line at Opel's Rüsselsheim plant, which had been the first major car plant in Germany to apply the assembly-line techniques pioneered by
Henry Ford.
Soviet afterlife After the Second World War, the Soviet Union requested the tooling from the Opel Rüsselsheim car plant in the American occupation zone as part of the war reparations agreed by the
victorious powers, to compensate for the loss of the production lines for the domestic
KIM-10-52 in the
siege of Moscow. Faced with a wide range of German "small litrage" models to choose from, Soviet planners wanted a car that closely followed the general type of the KIM — a 4-door saloon with an all-metal body and 4-stroke engine. They, therefore, rejected both the rear-engined, two-door
KdF-Wagen (future VW Beetle) and the two-stroke powered, front-wheel-drive, wooden-bodied
DKW F8, built by the
Auto Union Chemnitz plant in the Soviet occupation zone. The closest analog of the KIM to be found was the 4-door Kadett K38. On 26 August 1945, the
State Defense Committee published Order No. 9905, which prescribed the start of production of the 4-door Kadett on the Moscow small car plant "without any changes to the design". The implementation of the plan was far from smooth. The Rüsselsheim plant had been deeply involved in the Nazi war effort, producing aircraft engines for the Luftwaffe, and consequently has been heavily damaged by the Allied air raids. Very little was left to be salvaged – mostly incoherent drawings and plans, with several stamping dies for the 2-door version of the Kadett to add. Still, a number of Kadetts had been captured as trophies by the Red Army and were available for study and reverse-engineering. This project was conducted by design bureaus formed as Soviet-German joint ventures under the
Soviet Military Administration in Germany (SMAD). There were 11 of them in total. One in
Berlin reverse-engineered the engine and transmission. Another in
Schwarzenberg worked on the steel body. The wooden-bodied estate car was developed in
Chemnitz. The vast majority of the personnel of these design bureaus were German specialists and craftsmen hired by the Military Administration. These design bureaus not only prepared the necessary blueprints and documentation, but also provided the wooden master model for the body. They even developed the new trim pieces which distinguished the Moskvitch from its Opel prototype, including hood emblems and hubcaps with a large "M" (for "Moskvitch"). However, the stamping dies and most of the tooling had to be produced in the USSR. Production started on 4 December 1946. The
Moskvitch 400/420 continued to be made in
Moscow with some minor changes until 1956, when it was replaced by the
Moskvitch 402. The latter was an all-new design apart from the engine, for which Moskvitch continued to use the Kadett side-valve engine until 1958, when it was replaced with a domestically designed
OHV engine. ==Kadett A (1962–1965)==