ILO-Motorenwerke

The ILO-Motorenwerke in Pinneberg existed from 1911 to 1990 and were one of the biggest manufacturers of two-stroke engines in Germany. The company was taken over in 1959 by Rockwell Manufacturing Company.

Company logo in the 1950s

ILO comes from the Esperanto word for "tool". The name was stylized as JLO in the company logo.

Engines

The appended "V" stands for Ventilation, i.e. an additional cooling blower.[1]

engineuse
ILO F48motorized bicycles [2]
ILO MG125some Radex motorcycles[3]
ILO L100, L125, L150, L200,
L201, L250, L320 and L375
Used in agriculture equipment (tillers, mowers, pumps,... Some engines are available in a horizontal arrangement (eg. L152L)
ILO MG150V
ILO MG175
ILO M200Vuniversal engine, used in e.g.
Hoffmann MR200, Tornax V200, Fuldamobil, Glas Goggo-Roller 200, Röhr Rolletta, etc.[3]
ILO V200
ILO Twin 250used in e.g. AWD, Buydens, Bücker, Austria-Alpha, Sparta B.V.... motorcycles [4][5]

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.