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Mercedes-Benz Classic

One of two ultra-rare original 300 SLR Uhlenhaut Coupes from the Mercedes-Benz Classic Collection has been auctioned for 135 million euros – that’s equivalent to RM626,822,715 at today’s exchange rate – to a private collector. It’s the highest price ever paid for any car and the money will be used to establish a ‘Mercedes-Benz Fund’.

One of only two units
Only two units of the prototype sportscar were built and named after the chief engineer, Rudolf Uhlenhaut. Apart from its rarity, the 300 SLR Uhlenhaut Coupe is considered to be one of the finest examples of automotive engineering and design by automotive experts and enthusiasts worldwide.

1955 300 SLR Uhlenhaut Coupe

The auction was held at the Mercedes-Benz Museum and managed by renowned auctioneer RM Sotheby’s. The sportscar auctioned was part of the non-public vehicle collection belonging to Mercedes-Benz Classic, which has more than 1,100 automobiles ranging from the invention of the automobile in 1886 until today.

“The private buyer has agreed that the 300 SLR Uhlenhaut Coupe will remain accessible for public display on special occasions, while the second original 300 SLR Coupe remains in company ownership and will continue to be displayed at the Mercedes-Benz Museum in Stuttgart,“ said Marcus Breitschwerdt, Head of Mercedes Benz Heritage.

1955 300 SLR Uhlenhaut Coupe

Global scholarship programme
“The 300 SLR Uhlenhaut Coupes are milestones in sportscar development and key historical elements that have shaped our brand. The decision to sell one of these two unique sportscars was taken with very sound reasoning – to benefit a good cause. The proceeds from the auction will fund a global scholarship programme. With the ‘Mercedes-Benz Fund’, we would like to encourage a new generation to follow in Rudolf Uhlenhaut’s innovative footsteps and develop amazing new technologies, particularly those that support the critical goal of decarbonisation and resource preservation,” said Ola Kallenius, CEO of Mercedes-Benz Group AG.

“At the same time, achieving the highest price ever paid for a vehicle is extraordinary and humbling: A Mercedes-Benz is by far the most valuable car in the world,” he added.

1955 300 SLR Uhlenhaut Coupe

The proceeds from the auction will serve as seed capital for the global initiative, and Mercedes-Benz is committed to investing additional resources in the coming years. The Mercedes Benz Fund will be divided into two sub-categories: University Scholarships in order to connect, educate and encourage students to realize/conduct research on environmental science projects, and School Scholarships focussing on pupils to realize local environmental projects in their communities.

The programme funds will be directed to individuals who otherwise do not have the financial means for their projects and career paths. The programme will go beyond financially supporting the young people and include extracurricular elements like Mercedes-Benz mentorships opening up new career prospects.

Rudolf Uhlenhaut and his Coupe
The special circumstances behind its creation, its unique design and its innovative technology have endowed the 300 SLR Uhlenhaut Coupe with a remarkable level of mystique that endures to this day. The design set benchmarks that put it among the world’s most significant automotive icons – not least on account of its distinctive gullwing doors. Added to this is the outstanding performance delivered by its thoroughbred racing technology.

Serving as the head of passenger car development at Mercedes-Benz which included the racing division, Uhlenhaut was also the father of the 300 SL and the W 196 R “Silver Arrows”. The Coupe exceeded the technical possibilities of its time and became the pinnacle in the life’s work of the genius engineer who persistently strove for the maximum.

1955 300 SLR Uhlenhaut Coupe

Mercedes-Benz Museum offers a new perspective with indoor drone tour (w/VIDEO)

Although most people only came to know about the rotary engine in the 1970s, Felix Wankel, who developed it, had received a patent in Germany as far back as 1929 and produced a working prototype at NSU (which would later become part of Audi) in 1957. The rotary engine was uniquely different from the reciprocating internal combustion engine and had besides its compactness and low weight, it also generated a high power output from a smaller displacement.

The engine was of great interest to many carmakers and at least 12 – including even Rolls-Royce – took licences to develop their own versions. However, apart from Mazda, which persevered to make it commercially viable and produced a number of models with rotary engines, the other companies eventually gave up work on it as they could not find solutions to its drawbacks.

Mazda Cosmo-Suzuki RE5
Mazda and Suzuki were two of the few companies that managed to commercialise the rotary engine in production models.

Mercedes-Benz was interested
At Mercedes-Benz, the rotary engine certainly generated much interest. The company’s R&D department worked on it during the early 1960s, with a prototype SLX sportscar proposed using the engine. Even though the power and smoothness were attractions, fuel consumption and emissions were high and by 1976, Mercedes-Benz decided to end its rotary engine work.

Mercedes-Benz rotary engines
Mercedes-Benz rotary engines being produced for the C 111 in the early 1970s.

However, during the development period, the company decided to use the rotary engine as a highlight of a futuristic super sportscar – the C 111. The designation had started off as ‘C 101’ but Peugeot was known to be very protective of its model numbering system which had a ‘0’ in the middle of the 3 digits (eg 304, 505, etc) and Mercedes-Benz decided to avoid any issues with the French carmaker by changing to ‘C-111’. In fact, it is believed that Peugeot had even approached Mazda to get it to change the designation of its 808 model in the 1970s but the request was probably not entertained.

Debut of the C 111
It was displayed at the 1969 Frankfurt Motor Show as an experimental vehicle with only 12 units produced. Wealthy customers imagined the C 111 to be a successor to the legendary 300 SL ‘Gullwing’ of 1954 and even sent blank cheques to factory to try to get one!

Mercedes-Benz C111
Debut of the C 111 at the Frankfurt Motor Show in 1969.

The C 111 was a fascinating mid-engine sportscar which allowed the engineers to explore the performance of the rotary engine. The first one used in 1969 had a 3-rotor design with a chamber volume of 3 times 600 cc which could produce 280 bhp. After further development, the second version of the C 111 presented at the Geneva Motor Show in 1970 featured a 4-rotor engine with 4 times 600 cc and 350 bhp.

Mercedes-Benz C 111
The second version of the C 111 on display at the 1970 Geneva Motor Show.

Running technology platform
Alongside the rotary engine, other technologies were tested in the C 111 like bodywork made of glass-fibre reinforced plastic and joining techniques such as adhesive bonding and riveting. This technological look into the future was underlined by the visionary design of the wedge-shaped super sportscar.

Mercedes-Benz C 111

Mercedes-Benz C 111

The iconic character of the C 111 was also reinforced by the unusual paint finish in metallic orange. The designation ‘Weissherbst’ derived from wine-making referred to the glowing orange/rosé colour of these popular wines. The vehicle displayed in Frankfurt was the first C 111 in this spectacular paint finish. The other vehicles in the first series, which were used as demonstration vehicles during the show, were still in a white paint finish, but were later likewise repainted in ‘Weissherbst’.

Mercedes-Benz C 111

The rotary engine was not only visionary in concept but also delivered performance that was outstanding in its time. The first version of the C 111 reached a top speed of 260 km/h, and the second one even managed 300 km/h.

‘Second career’ as a record-breaker
In 1976, the C 111 appeared again as a record-breaking car with conventional reciprocating engines. Two versions with 5-cylinder turbodiesel engines were built, as well as the C 111-IV with a V8 petrol engine in 1979. On the high-speed track in Nardo, Italy, the C 111s established numerous new records, one of them the circuit world record with 403.978 km/h by the C 111-IV on May 5, 1979.

Mercedes-Benz C 111

Mercedes-Benz C 111
Preparing the C 111 at the Nardo circuit in Italy
Mercedes-Benz C 111
The C 111-III of 1978 was one of the record-breakers in Italy.
Mercedes-Benz C 111
One of the final versions of the C 111 which ran in 1979.

In 2014, the specialists at Mercedes-Benz Classic restored one of these dream sportscars from their collection to drivable condition. To preserve the few still available rotary engines for the future, they installed an M 116 3.5-litre V8 engine. This engine had already been installed in a C 111 for comparative and test purposes in 1970.

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 This year’s Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance in California will see Mercedes-Benz Classic using the carmaker’s ‘125 Years of Motorsport’ anniversary year theme. It will bring a reconstructed Mercedes-Benz SSKL streamlined racing car from 1932 to the annual event and it will be driven in the Tour d’Elegance along the legendary 17-mile Drive coastal route of the Monterey peninsula.

Mercedes-Benz SSKL reconstructed
The 1932 Mercedes-Benz SSKL reconstructed by Mercedes-Benz Classic

First car competition
The SSKL was an aerodynamically encased racing car with a Daimler 2-cylinder V-engine, which represented the beginning of motorsport. Vehicles equipped with engines of this type won in the first car competition in history 125 years ago – the race from Paris to Rouen on July 22 1894.

The aerodynamics pioneer Reinhard von Koenig-Fachsenfeld designed the streamlined body for the. On May 22 1932, Manfred von Brauchitsch entered the important international Avus race in Berlin with this racing car which was unusual to spectators of the time (the public promptly dubbed it ‘gherkin’) and won ahead of Rudolf Caracciola in an Alfa Romeo.

Reconstructed Daimler two-cylinder V-engine from 1889 used by the winning vehicles in the first car competition in history 125 years ago. used it.

Mercedes-Benz Classic has reconstructed the innovative ‘silver arrow’, as it was described in a radio report at the time, with the highest level of authenticity. This includes the lightening holes in the chassis, typical of the SSKL, which were undertaken according to the original drawings.

Mercedes-Benz SSKL

In total, the racing car weighs 125 kgs less than the Mercedes-Benz SSK, which served as its basis. The complete reconstruction of the streamlined body according to historical documents was particularly laborious. For this purpose, the experts researched the archives of Mercedes-Benz Classic and those at Schloss Fachsenfeld, which the engineer and inventor Reinhard von Koenig-Fachsenfeld transferred to a foundation in 1982.

Mercedes-Simplex 40 PS (1903)
Mercedes-Simplex 40 PS (1903)

Automotive contemporary witnesses
Alongside the unique SSKL, an elegant Mercedes-Benz 320 n combination coupe (W 142) from 1938 will also be present. Other models displayed will be an authentic replica of the Benz Patent-Motorwagen. The Mercedes-Simplex 40 hp from 1903 is a representative of the family of the first modern car in the world and a high-performance vehicle of its time.

Mercedes-Benz 320 n Kombination-Coupe (1938)
Mercedes-Benz 320 n Kombination-Coupe (1938)

Further automotive contemporary witnesses from ‘125 Years of Motorsport’ include a 3-litre W 154 Formula racing car from 1939, a Mercedes-Benz 300 SLR racing sportscar (W 196 S) from 1955, a Sauber-Mercedes C 9 Group-C racing sports car from 1989, and the Penske-Mercedes PC-23 IndyCar from 1994.

The Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance has been held since 1950. Since 1955, collector’s cars have been the focus of the event and today, around 200 exquisite cars from all around the world typically take part, are judged and receive awards.

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