ILO-Motorenwerke
id:
ilo-motorenwerke-165-283167
title:
ILO-Motorenwerke
text:
The ILO-Motorenwerke GmbH 2-stroke motor company in Pinneberg, Germany existed from 1911 to 1990 and was one of the biggest manufacturers of two-stroke engines in Germany. The term ‘ILO’ comes from the constructed language Esperanto and means "tool". In 1959 it was sold to Rockwell Manufacturing Company. 1911 to 1930s. The company was founded in Hamburg in 1911. The founder Heinrich Christiansen bought a bankrupt machine factory, with 25 employees producing a track tamper-compactor for Prussian
brand slug:
wiki
category slug:
encyclopedia
description:
original url:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ILO-Motorenwerke
date created:
2016-11-24T14:11:03Z
date modified:
2024-08-29T07:47:41Z
main entity:
{"identifier":"Q318937","url":"https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q318937"}
image:
{"content_url":"https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/11/ILO-Logo.svg","width":502,"height":502}
fields total:
13
integrity:
15