Audi F103 Introduction
F103 was the home assignment for a serial of automobile models produced by Auto-Union in West Germany from 1965 to 1972, came from the early DKW F102. To mean the difference from a two-stroke to four-stroke locomotive, the DKW brand was dropped in favor of Audi, a figure which had lain sleeping since the Second World War.
The front example was launched only as the Audi, after being renamed the Audi 72 (72 being the minimum might production of the locomotive in Pferdestärke), as far F103 serial models were introduced. In 1972 the F103 serial was broken in favor of the "B1" Audi 80. The F103 body shell was a growth of the early DKW F102.
The locomotive compartment had to be offered then that the other four-cylinder locomotive could be accommodated. The first and tail were too cosmetically revised. All models were offered as saloons with two and four doors.
With the exception of the Audi Super 90, the F103 serial were open too as three-door land example. This was named, like the land models of Volkswagens, Variant.
