Willy Ernst Salzmann was an engineer and graduate of the
Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich (ETH Zurich — Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich). While still a student he designed a sophisticated three-wheel vehicle. After graduating he ran his own engineering design company, the
Ingenieurbureau für Fahrzeugbau (Engineering Office for Vehicle Construction), based in
Solothurn, Switzerland. He made a name for himself and his company by designing equipment for Ford and Ferguson tractors. Salzmann designed a new type of rear automobile suspension system called the Zweigelenk-Elastikachse Salzmann (Salzmann two-joint elastic axle). Key features of the suspension were a fixed or semi-fixed differential with swing axle half-shafts and coil springs, with the half-shafts connected by a transverse member slung under the differential and attached to the shafts with rubber springs. Salzmann wanted to display his new suspension at the
Geneva Motor Show but was told that the main hall was reserved for complete cars, and that he would be restricted to the space for parts and accessories. Salzmann decided to build a car around his new suspension design so that it could appear in the main hall. While some sources say that the car was built in just six weeks, others point out that its appearance at Geneva was announced in 1955, indicating that the design work likely started much earlier. The body was manufactured by the
Carrosserie Hess in
Bellach. "Soletta" is the Italian name for the town of Solothurn. The Soletta 750 debuted at the 1956 Geneva Motor Show. It appeared later that same year at the
Paris Motor Show with revised bodywork. The reaction of the international press to the car was surprised but generally positive. The Soletta 750 was viewed by Sir
Alec Issigonis, future designer of the
Mini, at the 1956 Paris Show. He remarked that there was a market for four-place concepts like the Soletta 750. Renault, Alfa Romeo, and a government agency in the German Democratic Republic (GDR) all expressed interest in the project, but this did not lead to series production. The Soletta 750 appeared at a special exhibition in
Wangen an der Aare in 2009. In 2018 the car again appeared at the Geneva Motor Show as part of the "Le Retour du Futur" (The Return of the Future) exhibit. The car is now owned by the Swiss Car Register and was displayed at the Pantheon Basel in
Muttenz and in 2020 at the
Verkehrshaus Luzern. Since November 2023 the car is displayed at the
Enter Technikwelt Solothurn in
Derendingen SO. Salzmann later designed a compact four cylinder "X-Boxer" engine meant for the car. In the following years he developed another innovative engine with combined piston and connecting rods and continued to experiment with microcars into the 1990s. ==Features==