Targa Florio 1924. Alfred Neubauer at the wheel of the Mercedes Targa Florio racing car. He takes third place in this race. On the right in the picture: Dr Ferdinand Porsche. (Photo index number in the Mercedes-Benz Classic Archives: 61994
Ferdinand Porsche becomes Technical Director of Daimler-Motoren-Gesellschaft (DMG)
- Legendary luxury cars can be traced back to the designer
- Supercharging in series production vehicles and in motorsport
- Porsche leaves the company again at the end of 1928
Luxury cars and supercharged engines: Ferdinand Porsche takes over as head of the design office of Daimler-Motoren-Gesellschaft (DMG) from 30 April 1923. His predecessor until the end of 1922 is Paul Daimler, who among other things introduces supercharging. The latter leaves DMG following a disagreement with the Supervisory Board. The committee is calling for cheaper and thus better-selling models, but Daimler wants to develop an eight-cylinder model. Ferdinand Porsche, who comes from Austro Daimler, admittedly has similar development priorities: large and expensive cars. For these and for motorsport vehicles, he takes over the supercharging. Porsche’s name is associated with the Mercedes 15/70/100 hp and 24/100/140 hp production cars (both 1924), Mercedes-Benz Model K (1926, also known as model 630 K) and, from 1927, the first three cars in the legendary S series (S, SS, SSK). Two cars from the 1924 season are also famous: the winning racing car for the Targa Florio as well as the 2-litre eight-cylinder supercharged racing car “Monza”. At the end of 1928, the then Daimler-Benz AG, formed in 1926 by the merger of DMG with Benz & Cie., parts company with Porsche. Once again, the reason is that smaller and lighter vehicles are urgently desired. Porsche’s successor is Hans Nibel, who comes from Benz & Cie.
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