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Tuesday, June 29, 2021

History of Mercedes-Benz R 107, 1971-1989


A total of 237,287 open-top two-seaters produced in 18 years
  • Engines again and again updated to the state of the art
  • Coupés of the SLC series available until 1981 parallel to the open-top version
  • The first SL with eight cylinders


In April 1971, a new SL rolled out onto the highway, the Mercedes-Benz 350 SL. For the first time in the history of the model series an eight-cylinder power plant did duty under the long bonnet. From all sides it made the impression of a strong, self-confident, imposing open-top vehicle. Its parents also gave it an equally well designed, removable coupé roof for the road. Besides elegance and quality the body radiated safety, since the crash behaviour of the two-seater was far ahead of its time. 
A hard decision
The decision to manufacture the R 107 series (for the first time an SL series received the internal designation “ R” as in Roadster instead of “W” as in Wagen = car) was taken by the Board of Management after intensive debates on 18 June 1968. At issue was whether there should be a Targa roof version, i.e., one with a removable roof panel, instead of the fabric-topped variant, because owing to higher safety standards alarming news was to be heard from the USA regarding the licensing of open-top cars. 
That a decision was finally made in favour of an open-top two-seater with a fabric roof and an additional removable hard top can be attributed to Hans Scherenberg, the head of Development, who fought tooth and nail for it: “The SL gave me great pleasure, but also caused me great trouble. This was no easy decision for us,” he summed up the decisive meeting. 
The history of the roadster is intimately linked to that of the coupé. For the coupé question still remained unanswered. It was not decided that day. Discussion centred around whether one should additionally, and soon, make a four-seater sports coupé based on the R 107 series, or wait for the coming S-Class (W 116) to build it on that basis. But then a production model would not have arrived until much later, in the mid-1970s. 
Karl Wilfert, then Head of Body Design in Sindelfingen, developed – pretty much on his own authority – a coupé based on the R 107 and presented it one day to the Board of Management as a “rough draft”. Rejected at first, Wilfert managed to push through his idea of a sports coupé with the tenacity which was so characteristic of him. 
And so just six months after its première the SL was followed in October 1971 by a comfortable four-seater sports coupé, the 350 SLC, whose unconventional lines also found it many friends around the world in the course of the years. Internally the series was designated C 107 (the “C” stands for “ coupé”). Up to the windscreen its appearance matched that of the open-top variant; behind the windscreen the overall height and length grew. A flat roof spanned the four-seater passenger compartment in a gentle curve, going over into a large and very steep rear window that arched in two directions. The boot lid was slightly convex in shape, unlike the SL’s. 
In the side prospect the length of the coupé is documented, firstly, by the 360-millimetre longer wheelbase (2820 millimetres versus 2460), secondly by the line of the side windows. Without interfering B-pillars they were completely retractable, as is usual in a Mercedes-Benz coupé. The SLC’s drag coefficient was better than that of the SL so that the coupé attained the same performance despite an added weight of some 50 kilograms. A particularly noteworthy fact is that it fully lived up to its classification as a “Sports Coupé”, gaining wins for Mercedes-Benz in many rallies and long-distance races. 
Safety as agenda
Béla Barényi’s safety concept with front and rear crumple zones and a rigid passenger cell found expression in the 107 series in a further developed form. The backbone of the R 107 is not simply a shortened and reinforced Saloon floor assembly, as in the predecessor, but an independent frame-floor unit with a closed transmission tunnel and box-shaped cross and longitudinal members which featured differing sheet metal thicknesses and a resultant carefully defined crumple pattern. 
The SL definitely had to be an open-top car, and that being the case the only protection in a possible roll-over would be provided by the A-pillar plus windscreen. They were thoroughly redesigned and had 50 per cent more strength to show than in the previously-built version. In addition, to enhance its strength the windscreen was bonded into the frame. This resulted in a remarkable power of resistance in the roof-drop test with the result that it was possible to license the open-top car for the USA even without a Targa bar. To complete the logic the rear window of the hardtop was also bonded into its frame. 
In the interior there were pioneering changes to report, as well. The hard dashboard made way for an ingenious sheet-steel design that yielded on impact both in the top section and the knee area and was foam-padded. The switches and levers were recessed. The four-spoke steering wheel based on the latest findings of accident researchers, was also new. The proven impact absorber was still in place, but the steering-wheel rim, spokes, padded boss and hub were covered with polyurethane foam. As further safety feature the fuel tank was no longer installed in the rear end but above the rear axle, protected against collision. From March 1980, the anti-lock braking system ABS was offered; from January 1982, also airbag and belt tensioner. 
A bestseller right off the bat
But it was not the safety aspects that motivated customers around the world to quickly reach for the new SL. It was the promise of an open-top automobile that was a successful piece of engineering all round – and it was in fact the only one of its kind offered in the USA over a period of several years . Its distinctive front end with the dominant SL face, the wide-band headlamps and grooved turn indicator covers had a powerful aura; the lines of the low silhouette were harmonious – soft top open or closed, or with hardtop. And the very slight inward curve of the boot lid, along with the concave hardtop, were reminiscent of “Pagoda” days. The wide-band tail lights with their ribbed surface not only were largely insensitive to soiling, but additionally gave the rear end a touch of vigour. 
Extremely conducive to comfort and ease of operation was the easily and speedily operated soft top, a refined version of the “Pagoda” top. It took just 30 seconds to open or close it. Folded, it disappeared underneath a cover that was meanwhile customary in the SL series. 
A number of details underscored the car’s safety aspirations. The seats were available from the start with head restraints, and seat belts also were included. Physical well-being and driver-fitness safety were served by the heating system with its very spontaneous response, supported by new air ducting in the doors. Newly developed wind-deflecting mouldings on the A-pillars, which also served to channel off mud-laden water in the rain, and dirt-repelling covers on the exterior mirrors enabled good visibility. They kept the side windows clean even in inclement weather. The windscreen wipers arranged closely to each other in the centre of the car swept a respectable 70 per cent of the windscreen area, were always optimally positioned in the flow of air and did not lift off even at higher speeds. 
Engines with catalytic converter
During its 18-year “production time” (which was not planned to last that long, but in the end was indeed successful), the R 107 was driven by a whole series of six- and eight-cylinder engines. Its model designations are accordingly quite varied. 
The eight-cylinder models were led by the 350 SL (1971 to 1980), whose 3.5-litre engine (M 116) already was known from the W 108, W 109 and W 111 series. The  147 kW (200 bhp) which it delivered at 5800 rpm helped the sports car, which weighed 1600 kilograms after all, to clock nine seconds for 0 to 100 km/h and reach a top speed of 210 km/h. The 350 SLC had identical performance figures. 
From autumn 1971 onwards, the 450 SL was produced, initially for the US market. At 5000 rpm its M 117 engine delivered  132 kW (180 bhp) in the California version and  140 kW (190 bhp) in the version for the other states, and from 1973 on, and  165 kW (225 bhp) in the European version. Top speed was 215 km/h: it surged from 0 to 100 km/h in 8.8 seconds. In 1972, the 450 SLC, the corresponding coupé version, followed, with identical engine and identical performance. Prior to March 1973, both were destined exclusively for export to North America, after that they were included in the general sales range. 
In July 1974, the SL model range was extended: the SL and SLC were now available as models 280 SL and 280 SLC with the 2.8-litre M 110 engine. It developed  136 kW (185 bhp) at 6000 rpm and had proven its reliability in the two years before in the “Stroke Eight” series W 114/115 and in the W 116-series S-Class. Both models had identical performance: the top speed was 205 km/h; they could sprint from 0 to 100 km/h in 10.1 seconds. 
Thus three SL engines were now available to choose from – nothing unusual nowadays, but a real innovation for this model category in those days. Only the attentive observer could distinguish between the three variants: The 280 SL could be recognised by its tyres, narrower than those of the 350 SL and the 450 SL. In addition, the 450 SL featured a discreet front spoiler attached to the rear lower end of the front apron and which significantly increased the radiator’s air throughput. 
Between November 1975 and February 1976, the fuel injection systems of all three engines were changed for better compliance with emission standards, which had meanwhile also become stiffer in most European countries. The electronically-controlled Bosch D-Jetronic was abandoned for the newly-developed mechanically-controlled Bosch K-Jetronic. The adaptation entailed minor losses in output in all three cases: in the 280 SL to  130 kW (177 bhp) at 6000 rpm, in the 350 SL to  143 kW (194 bhp) at 5500 rpm, and in the 450 SL to  160 kW (218 bhp) at 5000 rpm. 
At the same time the compression ratios of the 2.8 and 3.5-litre engines were slightly reduced. In addition, the 3.5 and 4.5-litre engines were equipped with a contactless transistorised ignition system and hydraulic valve clearance compensation to facilitate maintenance. 
The compression ratio of the 2.8-litre unit was raised to the old figure again in April 1978. With a few supporting measures the engine then regained its earlier power potential of  136 kW (185 bhp), which it now delivered already at 5800 rpm. 
In September 1977, Mercedes-Benz launched the 450 SLC 5.0 with a V8 engine (M 117) enlarged to a displacement of five litres. A hidden innovation was the first-time application of hypereutectic cylinder contact surface machining, a special smelting process which made it unnecessary to insert cylinder liners. The engine delivered  177 kW (241 bhp) at 5000 rpm, good for 0 to 100 km/h acceleration in 8.5 seconds and a top speed of 225 km/h. The vehicle’s bonnet and boot lid were made of aluminium, and it had light-alloy wheels as standard. On the outside the 450 SLC 5.0 was recognisable by, among other things, a narrow spoiler on the rear end. 
Revising the series
At the Geneva Motor Show in March 1980, Mercedes-Benz presented the SL and SLC in updated form. Their interior appointments, including the steering wheel were harmonised with those of the 126-series S-Class, and the engineering was brought up to the same level. The previous three-speed automatic transmission with torque converter was replaced with a four-speed variant. Models 280 SL and 280 SLC were given a five-speed manual transmission as basic equipment. In addition, the hardtop was now included in the standard specifications of the open-top variant. But above all the light-alloy eight-cylinder engines of the 126-series S-Class, slightly modified, made their arrival in the 107-series. The six-cylinder engine of the 280 SLC remained unchanged. 
The new 500 SL, equipped with the 5.0-litre V8 (M 117) familiar from the 450 SLC 5.0, replaced the 450 SL and delivered an output of  177 kW (241 bhp) at 5000 rpm, to give the new top-of-the-range model a 0 to 100 km/h acceleration of 7.8 seconds and a top speed of 225 km/h. 
Models 350 SL and 350 SLC were sent off into retirement after nine years of production. Their successors were the 380 SL and 380 SLC, whose 3.8-litre light-alloy engine (M 116), with  160 kW (218 bhp) at 5500 rpm, originated after the pattern of the five-litre unit, by enlarging the bore of the long-serving 3.5-litre V8 with grey cast iron cylinder block. Both models attained top speeds of 215 km/h and accelerated to 100 km/h from a standstill in just 9 seconds. From the outside the new models were almost indistinguishable from the previous models, except for the badge with the model designation. All three SL models had now a light-alloy bonnet and the discreet front spoiler familiar from the 450 SLC 5.0; the 500 SL was also given a light-alloy boot lid with a black plastic rear spoiler, already familiar from the five-litre coupé. 
In autumn 1981, both V8 engines were thoroughly redesigned in the context of the “Mercedes-Benz Energy Concept” to reduce their consumption and pollutant emissions. Along with an increase in compression ratio the measures included camshafts with variable valve timing, air-bathed injection valves, and an electronic idling speed control. Owing to the altered camshaft tuning the maximum torque could be shifted to a lower engine speed range and, in the case of the 3.8-litre engine, even increased. This power plant underwent particularly far-reaching changes: to get a more favourable volume-to-surface ratio the bore was reduced and the stroke increased. The modified 3.8-litre V8 thus had a slightly larger displacement. In both eight-cylinders, in exchange, so to speak, for the improved economy, minor losses in power had to be accepted, output dropping to  150 kW (204 bhp) at 5250 rpm in the 380 SL and to  170 kW (231 bhp) at 4750 rpm in the 500 SL. As in the 126 series the final drive ratio was adjusted to the changed engine characteristics and made higher, from 3.27 to 2.47 in the 380 SL and from 2.72 to 2.24 in the 500 SL. 
For the SLC Coupés these changes came too late, however: at the Frankfurt on the Main International Motor Show in September 1981, along with the “Mercedes-Benz Energy Concept” the 380 SEC and 500 SEC models of the C 126 series were presented, spelling retirement for the SLC models, which had been built for exactly ten years. 
But even after ten years of production there was no thought of a replacement for the SL models; what’s more, four years after the Energy Concept was presented, they came in for extensive refinements, and so in September 1985, again at the Frankfurt show, a completely revised SL model range was introduced. The emphasis was on a restructured engine range. A discreet facelift, primarily recognisable from the front spoiler and wheels with aluminium rims (diameter: 38.10 centimetres), was also part of the package. The front axle was reworked and the brakes enlarged with fixed callipers. To prevent the cars from pulling to one side when braking, the steering offset was reduced. 
A comprehensive facelift
All engines were available in two versions: with a catalytic converter and slightly lower output, and as so-called catalyst retrofit version without a catalytic converter. The catalyst retrofit versions could be equipped later on with a catalytic converter, for example when the widespread supply of unleaded petrol was ensured, and had their ignition system, electronics and cable harness prepared for this. 
A newly-designed 3.0-litre six-cylinder engine (M 103) which had made its first appearance in the 300 E of the mid-range W 124 series nine months earlier replaced the tried and tested 2.8-litre engine, as it had already done previously in the respective S-Class Saloon. As a result the 280 SL was discontinued, and after a 22-year interruption there was again a sports car with the magic model designation 300 SL. It delivered an output of  138 kW (188 bhp) at 5700 rpm without catalytic converter (top speed: 203 km/h; 0 to 100 km/h in 9.6 seconds) and  132 kW (179 bhp) with catalytic converter (200 km/h; 9.9 seconds). 
A new addition to the range was the 420 SL with the 4.2-litre V8 engine (M 116), which delivered  160 kW(218 bhp) at 5200 rpm without a catalytic converter and  150 kW (204 bhp) with one. It was created by adopting the bore of the original 3.8-litre engine and combining it with the stroke of the “Mercedes-Benz Energy Concept” 3.8-litre engine, and it now replaced that unit in the SL, the S-Class Saloon and the SEC Coupé. The 420 SL accelerated from 0 to 100 km/h in 8.5 seconds (with catalytic converter: 9 seconds) and reached a top speed of 213 km/h (205 km/h). 
The 5.0-litre engine (M 117) was modified, too; with catalytic converter operation in mind it now had an electronic ignition system and the electronically/mechanically controlled Bosch KE-Jetronic injection system, delivering  180 kW (245 bhp) at 4750 rpm. With a catalytic converter the output was  164 kW (223 bhp) at 4700 rpm. These values helped the 500 SL reach a top speed of 225 km/h (with catalytic converter: 215 km/h) and accelerate from 0 to 100 km/h in 7.3 seconds (7.8 seconds). 
The most spectacular new development in the engine range was a 5.6-litre eight-cylinder engine (M 117), which was created by increasing the stroke of the 5.0-litre V8 and which gave the SL an output of  170 kW(231 bhp) at 4750 rpm. The 560 SL was reserved for the USA, Australia and Japan export markets. Fitted with an emission control system in the US version it had a top speed of 223 km/h and sprinted from 0 to 100 km/h in 7.7 seconds. 
Production of the R 107 series ended in August 1989, more than 18 years after start-up of the 350 SL. This SL series set an internal record that will probably never be broken: in the entire history of the company no other passenger car series has ever been produced over such a long period, with the exception of the G-Class. All told, in Sindelfingen 237,287 open-top cars were built, a number which impressively demonstrates the great popularity of the 107 series. Of the coupé a total of 62,888 units were built from 1971 to 1981. 
The R 107 series in the press
In a first test of the Mercedes-Benz 350 SL “ auto motor und sport”, Germany, No. 9/1971, wrote: “Good suspension comfort, definitely up to saloon standard, proves to be an essential feature of the 350 SL: at low and high speeds it absorbs big bumps well and takes small bumps in a way that they are never a disturbance even on very poor roads.” 
In 1986, “Road & Track”, USA, No. 11/1986, compared the Mercedes-Benz 560 SL, which was in the last era of its production, with the Cadillac Allanté and summed up: “ Legendary quality is Mercedes’ primary stock in trade. But brilliant performance and outstanding ABS braking have freshened [the vehicle] this year. Against these attributes, Cadillac brings better handling and greater luxury to bear while failing to match Mercedes’ performance and quality.” 
“auto motor und sport”, Germany, No. 5/1986, reported: “In curves, too, the modified SL displays a behaviour that does not go well with the image one tends to have of the vehicle. With its precise power-assisted steering, extremely high possible transversal acceleration and now only reduced load change behaviour, the long-snouted, rather staid-looking car delivers precisely that which one would expect from a purebred Gran Turismo.“ 
Technical highlights of the Mercedes-Benz SL, R 107 series
  • Further developed safety body 
  • Frame floor assembly with sheet metal of different thicknesses and a resulting carefully-defined crumple behaviour 
  • Rugged roll-over protection: high-strength A-pillars and windscreen frame with bonded glass for greater stability 
  • Special air ducting in doors ensures low soiling of side windows and exterior mirrors 
  • Bosch K-Jetronic contactless transistorised ignition, hydraulic valve clearance compensation (1975) 
  • First SL with exhaust gas catalytic converter (1985) 
Production figures for Mercedes-Benz SL, R 107 series and SLC,  C 107 series
Model 
Internal designation 
Production period: pre-production to end 
Number of units 
Roadsters: 
  
  
  
280 SL 
R 107 E 28 
1974-1985 
25,436 
300 SL 
R 107 E 30 
1985-1989 
13,742 
350 SL 
R 107 E 35 
1971-1980 
15,304 
450 SL* 
R 107 E 45 
1971-1980 
66,298 
380 SL 
R 107 E 38 
1980-1985 
53,200 
420 SL 
R 107 E 42 
1985-1989 
2,148 
500 SL 
R 107 E 50 
1980-1989 
11,812 
560 SL** 
R 107 E 56 
1985-1989 
49,347 
Total 
  
  
237,287 
  
  
  
  
Coupés: 
  
  
  
280 SLC 
C 107 E 28 
1974-1981 
10,666 
350 SLC 
C 107 E 35 
1971-1980 
13,925 
380 SLC 
C 107 E 38 
1980-1981 
3,789 
450 SLC* 
C 107 E 45 
1972-1980 
31,739 
450 SLC 5.0 
C 107 E 50 
1977-1980 
2,769 
500 SLC 
C 107 E 50 
1980-1981 
*** 
Total 
  
  
62,888 
* Before March 1973 only for export to North America.  
** Export model for North America, Japan, and Australia.  
*** Number of units contained in the figures for the 450 SLC 5.0.

Monday, June 28, 2021

Review of Gretchen Sorin's "Driving While Black: African American Travel and the Road to Civil Rights"





Gretchen Sorin, Driving While Black: African American Travel and the Road to Civil Rights. New York: Liveright, 2020.

 

It has been said that the most creative is the most personal, and that is certainly the case of Gretchen Sorin’s Driving While Black: African American Travel and the Road to Civil Rights. This engaging book is a story within a story. Each chapter begins with the author’s personal family narrative of automotive travel, whether it be back to ancestral roots in North Carolina, adolescent memories in New Jersey, or a vacation to Niagara Falls. I eagerly looked forward to each autobiographical preface, as these openings prepared me for meaty historical discussions on identity, emotions, and conflict within the context of racism.  The author’s own accounts made the academic material that followed more real and meaningful.

The author is a distinguished professor and director to the Cooperstown Graduate Program of the State University of New York. While scholars have discussed the African America 20th century automotive travel experience (and the importance of The Negro Motorist Green Book)  piecemeal  on numerous occasions of late, Sorin’s work is the first book dedicated to the topic that I know of. Her monograph follows up on Cotton Seiler’s seminal Republic of Drivers: A Cultural History of Automobility in America (Chicago, 2008), a study that first pointed out The Green Book as a rich source for understanding the 20th century past. And as Seiler, Sorin focuses on automobile users rather than makers, reflecting a more recent trend among academics.

In a nutshell,  Sorin argues how the automobile had both profound and unexpected consequences in the lives of 20th century African Americans. As a self-directed mode of transport, cars allowed Blacks a way to avoid humiliating situations brought on by Jim Crow laws, took them with minimized risk between “black spaces” and “white spaces,” challenged segregation, and took them on business travel and vacations. To do this, travel strategies were employed involving maps and itineraries, including the most significant of those tools, Victor and Alma Green’s The Negro Motorists Green Book (Later The Negro Travel’s Green Book). A close read of The Green Book reveals that its publishers firmly believed that travel by automobile was transformative for Blacks, as it elevated not only the traveler but also those encountered along the way. And on the way the 1940s and 1950s African American traveler could count on an infrastructure of Black-owned hotels, resorts, and service stations, such as American Beach in Florida; Oaks Bluffs on Martha’s Vineyard; Idlewild in Northwest Michigan; and Val Verde near Los Angeles.  After the Civil Rights Act of 1964, however, these businesses began to suffer as Black consumer preferences changed.

            While the automobile as an artifact is in the background in this book, I did learn something surprising that one would find in a more traditional automotive history. Namely, I had no idea that the most popular make among Blacks in 1950 in Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Washington, D.C. was far and away a Buick. Next were Ford and Chevys as one might expect. Interestingly, the Cadillac was in 8th place, although percentages do not reflect cultural preferences as mirrored in song and urban legend.

            This book’s 332 pages contain an overarching message that goes well beyond automotive travel, however. Sorin’s big point centers on racism in America, on the justice system as being fair and equal and deep divisions that the automobile has done not enough to ameliorate. In sum, the United States remains a deeply divided nation. She closes this way: “Nowadays the phrase driving while black refers, needless to say, to the ongoing mutual distrust between African Americans and law enforcement in so many communities across the country” (p.262).  And while race is certainly important to any understanding of the American past, I would not at the same time neglect class. Class divisions are a second elephant in any room that purports to unravel the American past and present. 

 

To conclude, I wholeheartedly recommend this work, as it gives us pause to think about ourselves and the nation during these challenging days. As required reading in my Fall 2021 class, I hope it makes an impact on my students as it did me.

Saturday, June 26, 2021

The Noll Auto Co. Packard Dealership in Southern Californi


 

Terrific pastel colors were very much a part of the American automotive scene during the mid-1950s. This splendid image is why you should take photos or create images either early in the morning or near or at dusk

From Ed -- 

Until the very end of the Packard brand it was still selling vehicles out of elaborate and often quite ornate dealerships.  Packard always put lots of money into creating sophisticated and architecturally splendid dealership facilities to enhance the perceived prestigiousness of the brand.  

Here's a photo of a Packard dealership in southern California in a blend of the Spanish Colonial Revival and Moorish styles.  To think, however, that only a couple of years after this photo was taken Packard no longer existed.

Tuesday, June 15, 2021

When matching luggage was an important automotive accessory!


 


From Ed --

One of the joys of going to more high-end car shows (although one sees this on occasion at even neighborhood cruise-ins) is the reality that many folks like to display inside, or near, their vehicles various period travel items.  

Over the years I've taken scores of photos of classic and antique cars where period pieces are displayed, like in this photo of a late 1940s Kaiser with a set of vintage Samsonite luggage.

But here's something "back in the day" that today we don't see any longer -- look at the small piece of luggage -- a piece that was often called a "vanity case," a "make-up case, "overnight case," or a "train case."  My sister had one and she always called it her "make-up case."  

But today everything is a "roller bag" and soft-sided. 😊  

Enthusiast Events at the Mound in Front of the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Summer and Early Fall, 2021


    Motoring enthusiast summer gatherings “Classics & Coffee” and “A Star among the Stars” at the Mercedes-Benz Museum from June to October 2021. Photo of the event under its former name of “Cars & Coffee” in the special “Nightshift” edition with “Salsa under the Stars” on 10 August 2019. (Photo signature in the Mercedes-Benz archives: D612270)

    Popular summer meetings for motoring enthusiasts will once again be taking place on the mound in front of the Mercedes-Benz Museum. As well as being part of the urban culture programme, they are a focal point of the Mercedes-Benz Museumʼs activities for the summer of 2021. In future, these open-air meets will be called “Classics & Coffee” (previously “Cars & Coffee”) and “A Star among the Stars”. The much appreciated character of these casual get-togethers of fans with and without their cars remains unchanged.

    “The summer of 2020 showed that open-air gatherings of private vehicle enthusiasts, with adequate social distancing between participants and further hygiene measures, work well even under the exceptional corona conditions – which is why weʼve even expanded the programme this year. We can all hardly wait to launch the 2021 season with new momentum and proven flair,” enthused Bettina Haussmann, Head of the Mercedes-Benz Museum.

    “Classics & Coffee” all day on Sundays and after work on Thursdays

    In addition to Sundays (all day until 6 p.m.), the meetings – which are open to all car brands – are now also held regularly as after-work meets on Thursday evenings (5 to 11 p.m.). For Mercedes-Benz drivers, there are also special-focus events: the programme includes “Mercedes-Benz SL Sports Cars”, “Unimog & G-Class”, “Commercial Vehicles” and the “Gentlemenʼs Drive”.

    “A Star among the Stars” will always be on Fridays

    “A Star among the Stars” is a new format which is open to all drivers of a Mercedes-Benz – irrespective of whether they drive up onto the mound in a classic vehicle, a young classic or a new model. These meetings are always every Friday evening from 6 p.m. The Museum is also actively involving the recognised Brand Clubs in this series of events.

    Catering

    The team at Berthaʼs Restaurant will be offering all participants of “Classics & Coffee” and “A Star among the Stars” a food truck with a wide variety of summery food and beverages in addition to the obligatory coffee.

    The Mercedes-Benz Museum is open Tuesdays to Sundays from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. 
    The ticket desk always closes at 5 p.m.

    Registration, reservations and latest information: Monday to Sunday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. by telephone on +49 711 17 30000, by email to classic@daimler.com or online at www.mercedes-benz-classic.com/museum.

    Monday, June 14, 2021

    Next time in Moscow you have to visit this automobile museum!


    Every car has a story as they say, but these cars have connections with WWII Nazi leaders. The stories of how they got into the museum could make for a great book!

    90th Anniversary pf Rudolf Caracciola's Mille Miglia win


     The one-thousand-mile “Mille Miglia” race that started and finished in Brescia, 12/13 April 1931. The subsequent winner, Rudolf Caracciola, in a Mercedes-Benz model SSKL (W 06 RS) at the start. Co-driver: Wilhelm Sebastian. (Photo signature in the Mercedes-Benz Classic archive: R1304

    What a surprising victory: The large and, despite numerous weight-saving measures, still heavy Mercedes-Benz SSKL (W 06 RS) with Rudolf Caracciola at the wheel was not considered to be a favourite in view of the Italian competition in the fifth Mille Miglia on 12 and 13 April 1931. And yet, the team from Stuttgart mastered the 1,635-kilometre route from Brescia to Rome and back faster than all the local heroes: Caracciola and his co-driver, Wilhelm Sebastian, crossed the finishing line after 16 hours, 10 minutes and 10 seconds. Their average speed was 101.6 km/h, which alone was a sensation. No driver before them had ever achieved an average of more than 100 km/h. And, to top it all, Caracciola was the first non-Italian driver to win the Mille Miglia.

    The original Mille Miglia race was held from 1927 to 1957. Since 1977, it has been a regularity drive for historic vehicles and today, as the 1000 Miglia, it is one of the world’s most popular events for classic cars. This year, the 1000 Miglia is scheduled to take place from 16 to 19 June 2021.

    Mille Miglia 1931: No less than 151 teams registered for the road race. The route was from Brescia via Parma to Bologna, from there over the Apennines to Florence and then from Siena to Rome. The return route was via Perugia and Macerata to the Adriatic Sea and via Rimini, Bologna and Verona back to Brescia. The Italian teams had a home advantage in terms of route knowledge and also in terms of supply. “The route was virtually paved with spare parts stores,” said Rudolf Caracciola in retrospect, “we, on the other hand, had to economise.” Race director Alfred Neubauer was only able to set up four stores along the route to support the Caracciola/Sebastian team, which was entered as a private team.

    The car: Officially, the racing sports car was still called “SSK Model 1931” at that time. The car was not designated SSKL (“Super-Sport-Kurz-Leicht” – super, sports, short, light) until 1932, when it became the fourth and last model in the legendary S model series, of which only four were built – exclusively for racing. With tremendous effort, the team headed by development director Dr Hans Nibel succeeded in keeping the racing car, which was by no means state-of-the-art any more, competitive. By using a thinner-walled frame construction and adding numerous drilled holes, the unladen weight was reduced by 125 kilograms to 1,352 kilograms. The six-cylinder 7,069 cc engine was also thoroughly reworked. With the Roots supercharger activated, it produced 221 kW (300 hp) and its top speed was 235 km/h.

    The race itself: Caracciola/Sebastian hit the track at 3:12 p.m. on 12 April 1931. The roads were narrow and crossed mountain passes so it was only towards the end of the race that Caracciola was able to drive at full throttle for many kilometres. It was a great achievement for the slightly built racing driver to manoeuvre the heavy Mercedes-Benz quickly and seemingly effortlessly. He himself said: “For sixteen hours I sat at the wheel, for sixteen hours we thundered along the length and breadth of Italy, feeling our way through the night by the beam of the headlights, driving into the blinding light of the spring morning, ... for sixteen hours I had no idea what our position was in the enormous field of several hundred cars.” Caracciola commented on the moment of return to Brescia: “At the finishing line, Alfred Neubauer was completely out of his mind and was performing a completely crazy dance. What on earth was going on? At first, I didn’t realise what had happened, not yet, but slowly it dawned on me: I had won the Mille Miglia.” Behind him, 31 Italian-built cars reached the finish before a Graham-Paige car came in in 32nd place.

    1931 was a difficult year: The collapse of the New York Stock Exchange in October 1929 had dramatic consequences for the world economy, including the automotive industry. In Germany, vehicle production plummeted from 139,869 vehicles in 1929 to 88,435 vehicles the following year and then to 64,377 units in 1931. The turnover of the then Daimler-Benz AG also fell by about half to RM 68.8 million. The Board of Management took appropriate action: in view of the economic situation, the Board stopped development of the new “1931 model racing car” in 1930. Despite winning the European hill-climb championship in 1930, works driver Caracciola was dismissed. However, race director Alfred Neubauer succeeded in reaching an agreement with him that provided for pared-down factory support and the provision of an SSKL. In return, Caracciola undertook “to work exclusively for Daimler-Benz in races and sporting events during the 1931 sporting year”. The 1931 racing programme turned out to be more modest than planned, but nevertheless led to eleven victories from eleven starts and the team defended their title of “European hill-climb champion”.

    Rudolf Caracciola: The Mercedes-Benz works driver was the star of the first Silver Arrow era in the 1930s. He was crowned European Grand Prix Champion in 1935, 1937 and 1938, a title that – in terms of sporting prestige – is comparable to the Formula One World Championship, which was established in 1950. He also became European hill-climb champion three times in a Mercedes-Benz. Caracciola was born on 30 January 1901 in Remagen and died on 28 September 1959 at the age of only 58.

    A thousand Italian miles: Stirling Moss and Denis Jenkinson held a Mille Miglia record for eternity. In their Mercedes-Benz 300 SLR (W 196 S), they covered the famous 1955 road race in 10 hours, 7 minutes and 48 seconds. Their average speed of 157.65 km/h has not been surpassed since. 1957 was the last year the original Mille Miglia was held as a road race – several serious accidents resulted in it being cancelled. However, 20 years later, it experienced a resurrection as a regularity race and has since enjoyed great popularity among participants and the public alike. Any cars whose models participated in the original Mille Miglia between 1927 and 1957 are entitled to participate. At today’s 1000 Miglia events, more than 400 historic vehicles usually take part, and many hundreds of thousands of spectators follow the race along the route. As a Global Automotive Partner, Mercedes-Benz regularly supports the event by supplying famous classic cars and well-known racing drivers.

    In the eyes of the press: In its Issue 9/1931, the renowned “Allgemeine Automobil Zeitung” commented on Caracciola’s success in the style of the time: “In newspapers issued by the German Reich, we have read of a success of the German automobile industry. With respect, we feel that such a generalisation is out of place here. It was a success for Mercedes-Benz, which should not be credited to the German motorcar industry as a whole, because, apart from Mercedes-Benz, there is no motorcar brand in the whole of Germany that could take part in such a major international race. [...] Think what you will about the races, they still amount to the best possible advertising for the winning brand, which spread all over the world only a few hours after the race