Racer X - Motocross & Supercross NewsRacer X
  • All Series
  • Subscribe Now
  • Supercross
    • News
    • Schedule
    • TV Schedule
    • Results
    • Standings
    • Teams
    • Riders
    • Tracks
    • The Vault
  • Motocross
    • News
    • Schedule
    • TV Schedule
    • Results
    • Standings
    • Riders
    • Teams
    • Tracks
    • The Vault
  • SuperMotocross
    • News
    • Schedule
    • TV Schedule
    • Results
    • Standings
    • Teams
    • Riders
    • Tracks
  • MXGP
    • News
    • Schedule
    • TV Schedule
    • Results
    • Standings
    • Teams
    • Riders
    • Tracks
  • GNCC
    • News
    • Schedule
    • TV Schedule
    • Results
    • Standings
    • Riders
    • Tracks
  • Loretta Lynn’s
    • News
    • The Vault
  • More Series
    • MXoN
    • WSX
    • Australian SX
    • Australian MX
    • Canadian MX
    • EnduroCross
    • Straight Rhythm
  • Features
    • 10 Things
    • 30 Greatest AMA Motocrossers
    • 3 on 3
    • 250 Words
    • 450 Words
    • Arenacross Report
    • Between the Motos
    • Breakdown
    • Deals of the Week
    • GNCC Report
    • Great Battles
    • How to Watch
    • Injury Report
    • Insight
    • In the Mag, On the Web
    • Lockdown Diaries
    • Longform
    • MXGP Race Reports
    • My Favorite Loretta Lynn's Moto
    • Next
    • Next Level
    • Observations
    • On This Day in Moto
    • Open Mic
    • Privateer Profile
    • Race Day Feed
    • Racerhead
    • Racer X Awards
    • Racer X Redux
    • Rapid Reaxtion
    • RX Exhaust
    • Saturday Night Live
    • Staging Area
    • The Conversation
    • The List
    • The Lives They Lived
    • The Moment
    • Things We Learned at the Ranch
    • UnPhiltered
    • Wake-Up Call
    • Where Are They Now
    • 50 Years of Pro Motocross
  • Shop
    • New Releases
    • Men's
    • Women's
    • Youth
    • Accessories
    • Sales Rack
    • Stickers
  • About Us
  • The Mag
    • Digital Magazine Bookstand
    • Customer Care
    • Current Issue
    • Newsletter
    • Store Locator
    • Subscribe
    • Sell Racer X
  • One Click Sign-In

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    OR

    Sign in with your username and password

    • Sign In
  • Supercross
  • News
  • Schedule
  • TV Schedule
  • Results
  • Standings
  • Teams
  • Riders
  • Tracks
  • The Vault
  • Subscribe Now
  • Table of Contents
Results Archive
Supercross
Arlington
News
450SX Results
  1. Cooper Webb
  2. Ken Roczen
  3. Chase Sexton
Full Results
250SX West Results
  1. Haiden Deegan
  2. Coty Schock
  3. Michael Mosiman
Full Results
Arenacross
Daytona Beach
News
GNCC
Wild Boar
News
Overall Race Results
  1. Jonathan Girroir
  2. Kailub Russell
  3. Ben Kelley
Full Results
XC2 Pro Race Results
  1. Grant Davis
  2. Angus Riordan
  3. Cody J Barnes
Full Results
Supercross
Daytona
News
450SX Main Event Results
  1. Ken Roczen
  2. Cooper Webb
  3. Aaron Plessinger
Full Results
250SX East Main Event Results
  1. R.J. Hampshire
  2. Tom Vialle
  3. Seth Hammaker
Full Results
MXGP of
Argentina
News
MXGP Results
  1. Maxime Renaux
  2. Romain Febvre
  3. Tim Gajser
Full Results
MX2 Results
  1. Kay de Wolf
  2. Sacha Coenen
  3. Simon Laengenfelder
Full Results
Upcoming
GNCC
Talladega
Sat Mar 8
News
Upcoming
Supercross
Indianapolis
Sat Mar 8
News
Upcoming
MXGP of
MXGP Castilla la Mancha
Sun Mar 16
News
Full Schedule
In The Mag, On The Web: Orange Is the New White

In The Mag, On The Web: Orange Is the New White

February 13, 2019, 10:35am
David Pingree David Pingree
  • Home
  • In the Mag, On the Web
  • Racer X Illustrated: Orange Is the New White

"Orange is the New White" is featured in the April 2019 issue of Racer X Illustrated. David Pingree did the writing. Subscribe now to read the entire article in full. You can pick up the digital edition and read this story right now—and the cost is just $9.98 for the whole year.

When KTM announced in 2013 that it was buying the struggling Husqvarna brand from then-owner BMW, more than a few folks were left scratching their heads. How was this going to work? Would the Austrians at KTM consolidate production of the Swedish-born, Italian-relocated, German-owned Husqvarna? Would they compete in the same markets? Would one brand focus on off-road and the other on motocross? It took some time, and there were some awkward moments along the way, but the KTM/Husqvarna merger is finally making some sense.

So, how do each of the businesses operate? First, you have to go back to where each company came from to understand how they got here and why they’re working together. 

Subscribe today!
Subscribe today!

Mattighofen, Austria

In 1934, Austrian engineer Johann Trunkenpolz set up an auto-repair shop in a little town called Mattighofen. Within a few years he started selling DKW motorcycles, and later Opel automobiles. His shop was known as Kraftfahrzeug Trunkenpolz Mattighofen. During the tumultuous years of World War II, it was Trunkenpolz’s wife who took care of the business, which had been thriving thanks to the need for diesel engine repairs. When demand plummeted and the war ended in 1945, Trunkenpolz pivoted to the idea of building his own motorcycles.

By 1951, Trunkenpolz was ready to build a prototype, with almost all of the motorcycle’s components produced in-house—with the exception of its Rotax R100 engine, which came from the Fichtel & Sachs motor works. Within a couple of years, the R100 reached mass production, though with fewer than two dozen employees, Trunkenpolz’s company could only finish three bikes per day. He looked around for investment help, and in 1953, businessman Ernst Kronreif became a sizable shareholder. The company was renamed and registered as Kronreif & Trunkenpolz Mattighofen—which we now know as KTM.

The next big milestone came at the 1956 FIM International Six Days Trials in Germany, where Egon Dornauer earned KTM its first gold medal. With that honor, the brand’s racing heritage had begun.

The company continued to expand through the sixties, even after Trunkenpolz and Kronreif had both passed. Forty years after it was founded, KTM was offering 42 different models. During the 1970s and 1980s, KTM also started to develop and produce motors and radiators. Radiators sold to European car manufacturers constituted a sizable part of the company's business in the eighties.

Subscribe now to continue reading

Previous Next
Where Are They Now: Steve Lamson Tue Feb 12 Where Are They Now: Steve Lamson Fly Racing Racer X Podcast: Michael Brandes Wed Feb 13 Fly Racing Racer X Podcast: Michael Brandes
Read Now
April 2025 Issue Now Available
Get Racer X on your iPhone
Check out all the exclusive content this month on any device!
Read Now
The April 2025 Digital Issue Availalbe Now

Motocross & Supercross News - Racer X

122 Vista Del Rio Drive, Morgantown, WV 26508 | 304-284-0084 | Contact Us
©1999 - 2025 Filter Publications LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Cookie Preferences | Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information
designed at: Website Design at Impulse Studios