Family Johansson: Three Generations of Saab History

Posted on 12. Feb, 2008 by in 2000-2009, Sweden

1202843 600 Family Johansson: Three Generations of Saab History
Photo Credit: Saab Automobile AB

You think you have some Saab History? Here is a wonderful piece about the Johansson family of Sweden from Saab Automobile Sweden. This past summer, I personally met with member of this family, Peter Johansson, who is the engineer responsible for the new Saab Haldex XWD system this past summer in Washington, D.C. at the 2008 Saab 9-3 Drive Event. While attending this event, I got the chance to test drive the prototype he designed that included Saab’s new Cross-Wheel Drive’ at a closed airport landing strip as part of the event that began at the House of Sweden.

This writeup below reminds me of my most recent experience visiting a family with a rich Swedish Heritage and Saab History, the Jacobson family of Sports Car Service. Sports Car Service is located in Wilmingon, Delaware, which by the way, is the first port of origin for Swedish immigrants to the United States.

Please enjoy the great addition to Saab’s History here on Saab History with the writeup below on the Johansson family.

Family Johansson: Three Generations of Saab History

The launch of Saab XWD is a remarkable chapter in the family history of Peter Johansson, one of the chassis engineers responsible for the development of the system.

It was Peter’s father, Sigge, a former member of the competition department at Saab, who came up with a design in the 1980s for a limited-slip differential to use in rally cars. He took out a patent and eventually sold the rights to Haldex in 1987. Now, two decades later, that original design forms the basis of the electronically-controlled LSD that his son has worked with in the development of Saab XWD.

In fact, the family connection with Saab goes back even further, right to the beginning of the car company. Peter’s maternal grandfather, Tage Flodén, now a robust 88 year-old, started work for Saab Aircraft as a toolmaker in 1945 and transferred to the newly-created car division in 1949 to make tooling for the first Saab 92 production car.

Through three generations, the extended Johansson family therefore spans the history Saab as a carmaker; from tooling up for its first production car to the launch of its latest product technology. “It’s a bit like a family business for us,” says Peter, 45, whose own seven-year-old son, Simon, is already showing a healthy interest in cars.

Sigge, now 74, was also an accomplished race and rally driver with Saabs in the 60s and 70s, even fitting a turbocharger to a racing Saab 96 V4.as early as 1973. But it was his determination to improve traction and handling that prompted him to pursue his own design for a limited-slip differential.

“Saab suggested that my father should take his design to Haldex for development,” says Peter, also a keen racing driver in his own right who once beat a very young Ayrton Senna in a karting race in Sweden. “At that time, Haldex were not involved in the car industry but they could see the potential of this differential and decided to pursue its development.

“Dad has been for a ride in one of our test cars and was pretty impressed by what we have done with the XWD system. Obviously, we have come a long way from his time by adding four-wheel-drive and all the control electronics that were not around in his day.

“Both my father and grandfather can look back to when Saab was a much smaller company and I don’t think either of them ever imagined it would grow into the big international brand it is now. It is a story that the three of us feel part of, something that is very close our hearts.”

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One Response to “Family Johansson: Three Generations of Saab History”

  1. Vanessa

    20. Feb, 2010

    Are you related to Peter Johansson who came to Samoa years ago and married to a Samoan woman? He is from Switzerland and he has 4 sons and one daughter, his other son died long ago and I am married to his daughters second son. Just want to know if she still has family in Switzerland coz’ she’s shy to make connections with her families there.

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