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Glas - 3000 series

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About Glas

Hans Glas GmbH is a former German automotive company, which was based in Dingolfing.

History

The mechanic Andreas Glas founded a repair company for agricultural machines at 1895 in Pilsting. He named the company Andreas Glas, Reparaturwerkstätte für landwirtschaftliche Maschinen mit Dampfbetrieb (in English: Andreas Glas, repair-shop for steam-powered agricultural machines). During the summer periods about 16 people worked for him. In 1905 Andreas Glas' company built their first sowing machines. He then had sufficient work to employ all his employees during the winters. The production of sowing machines rose from year to year:

winter period 1905/06 - 10 sowing machines
autumn 1906 - 20 pieces
winter period 1906/07 - 40 machines
1907 - 60 pieces
winter period 1907/08 - 254 sowing machines.

Since 1905 Glas had a branch office in Dingolfing. He started to produce in Dingolfing in 1908 with 150 sowing machines per year. The production count rose each year.

After World War II, the market for sowing machines was getting smaller and smaller. So the company had to decide what it would produce in the future. It decided to build little carrows and later working machines for bakers next to the sowing machines.

Products

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2-door
2+2-seat
V8 16v 3.0L SOHC M-4
119.3 kW / 160.0 hp / 160.0 hp  235.0 N·m / 173.3 lb·ft / 173.3 lb·ft
   

Glas 3000 V8 Coupé (1965)

2-door 2+2-seater fixed-head coupé, petrol (gasoline) 8-cylinder 16-valve V engine, SOHC (single overhead camshaft), 2982 cm3 / 182.0 cu in / 182.0 cu in, 119.3 kW / 160.0 hp / 160.0 hp @ 5100 rpm / 5100 rpm / 5100 rpm, 235.0 N·m / 173.3 lb·ft / 173.3 lb·ft @ 3400 rpm / 3400 rpm / 3400 rpm, manual 4-speed transmission, rear wheel drive, 201 km/h / 125 mph / 125 mph top speed

Infobox

Car Insurance FAQs #3

Why is the insurance company not returning all of my premium after the policy was canceled?

Depending on the type of policy, you may be required to pay a minimum premium, or the premium may be fully "earned." In other instances, if you replaced your coverage with a different company, during the policy term, you may be subject to a "short-rate" penalty, which is usually about 10% of the unearned amount. You might also have some premium due for recent changes in coverage. The company should be able to provide a detailed billing history that explains the return-premium calculation.

Am I required to complete a medical questionnaire?

(...)

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