Paul Jaray (1889-1974), the other “father of streamlining”, also came from the aviation industry. Also in 1921, he applied for a patent that still reads like instructions for building a modern car body: “The lower part of the body has the shape of a half-streamlined body and covers the chassis with the wheels, the engine compartment and the passenger compartment. The underside is flat and runs parallel to the floor surface.” For the first time, the wheels were no longer free, but were integrated into the body, and the fastback minimised turbulence at the rear. Because conventional drive technology fit under Jaray's body shape, some car manufacturers built vehicles according to his principle, including Mercedes-Benz: in 1935, a correspondingly shaped prototype was created.
The biggest disadvantage of Jaray's streamline was the long trailing rear - a “dead” space. The solution was found in the 1930s by Wunibald Kamm (1893-1966), the first professor of automotive engineering at the Technical University of Stuttgart and in 1930 founder of the private and non-profit Research Institute for Automotive Engineering and Vehicle Engines Stuttgart (FKFS). Kamm sharply cut off the streamlined rear and developed the prototype of an aerodynamically innovative passenger car with the K-Wagen from 1938 to 1941. The term “Kamm-back” for the sharp trailing edge is still a term today. The K3 car was based on a Mercedes Benz 170 V and, with a frontal area of 2.1 m², was characterised by a Cd value of 0.23, which was measured in the model wind tunnel at the time.