Carrera DIGITAL 132 Ford Capri Zakspeed Turbo

Carrera DIGITAL 132 Ford Capri Zakspeed Turbo

Carrera Digital 132 Ford Capri Zakspeed Turbo "D&W Zakspeed Team"

Art.Nr. 30887

Today, we’re not focusing on the car itself—the new CARRERA Ford Capri Zakspeed D&W No. 3 in 1:32 scale—but rather on the race car’s main sponsor: D&W.
D&W Auto, Sport + Zubehör Handelsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG was founded in 1971 by Detlef Sokowicz and Werner Bauer as a car accessories shop.

My generation (born in 1970 or later) in particular & still remembers the famous & DW catalog from our youth. You’re 18, you’ve finally gotten your driver’s license, and you’ve finally got your first car. Usually some cheap clunker that was often mercilessly underpowered. Sure, there were already guys back then who really invested in performance, but the fact was simple: we had little to no money for cars with powerful engines, and on top of that, there was an insurance rating that started somewhere around 225% (you were lucky if you’d managed to get a low-rate policy from your dad, grandpa, or another relative).
And that’s where D& W came&into play. If the cars weren’t fast, then at least they had to look fast. Low, wide, aggressive, spoilers. The spoiler excesses of the 1980s are legendary; nowadays, the classic car scene is even seeing vehicles being restored true to the originals, just as was customary back then. D& W supplied everything back then that made the cars lower and wider. The catalog was the size and thickness of a telephone book from that era and was passed from hand to hand. Of course, the first few pages featuring scantily clad girls—a standard feature in every catalog and scrutinized accordingly—were very important. And the ones in D & W were staged by outstanding photographers in front of cars fitted with spoilers. The D & W girls were cult figures and stars at every tuning show.

The ’80s and ’90s were also the years when& DW made the most money. In that sense, it was almost inevitable that the company would eventually enter motorsports as a sponsor. And who was better suited for that than the then-nearly unbeatable Ford Capri? Back then, a BMW wasn’t yet a first car for a new driver; the used ones were simply too expensive. "Guys" drove Fords, Opels, VWs—the brave ones might even go for an Alfa or a Fiat. And D & W had something for everything: lowering kits, spoiler packages from KAMEI, ZENDER, and so on. Wheels from Borbet, BBS, sport steering wheels from Momo or Raid. Even seat covers were all the rage back then; sometimes a simple set of trim strips had to suffice. D&W had it all.

By the late ’90s, the entire tuning business was slowly but steadily declining, partly because the “first car” was becoming increasingly exclusive and manufacturers were taking over more and more of the tuning business themselves (BMW: M GmbH, Audi: S-Line, Mercedes: AMG models, etc.). On top of that, the internet emerged. Pilgrimages to the famous D&W temples were out. & Incidentally, D & W’s main store&in Bochum was one of the filming locations for the 1991 feature film “Manta, Manta” starring Til Schweiger; there were additional branches in Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, and Bielefeld, about 50 D& W centers, and over 200 D & W sales outlets in Germany.

As a result, the company was forced to file for bankruptcy in 2009. D &W survived; the company still exists today. But the company has not regained the prestige it enjoyed in the 1980s and 1990s.



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