Mercedes-Benz R107 and C107

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Mercedes-Benz SL (R107) and SLC (C107)
20181208 Retro Classic Bavaria Mercedes Benz 300SL R107 850 3316.jpg
Mercedes 300SL R107
Overview
ProductionSL: 1971–1989
SLC: 1971–1981

300,175 built [1]
SL: 237,287
SLC: 62,888
Model years SL: 1971–1989
SLC: 1972–1981
Assembly
Designer Joseph Gallitzendörfer; Friedrich Geiger (1968)
Body and chassis
Class Sports car/Grand tourer
Body style two-door roadster
two-door coupé
Layout FR layout
Related Mercedes-Benz W114
Powertrain
Engine
Transmission
Dimensions
Wheelbase SL: 2,460 mm (96.9 in)
or 2,455 mm (96.7 in)
SLC: 2,820 mm (111.0 in)
or 2,815 mm (110.8 in)
LengthSL: 4,390 mm (172.8 in)
US: 4,630 mm (182.3 in)
SLC: 4,750 mm (187.0 in)
US: 4,990 mm (196.5 in)
560 SL: 4,580 mm (180.3 in)
Width1,790 mm (70.5 in)
HeightSL: 1,290 mm (50.8 in)
SLC: 1,330 mm (52.4 in)
Curb weight 3,494 lb (1,585 kg)
Chronology
Predecessor Mercedes-Benz W113 (SL)
Mercedes-Benz W111 (coupé)
Successor Mercedes-Benz R129 (SL)
Mercedes-Benz C126 (coupé)

The Mercedes-Benz R107 and C107 are sports cars which were produced by Mercedes-Benz from 1971 until 1989, being the second longest single series ever produced by the automaker after the G-Class. They were sold under the SL (R107) and SLC (C107) model names in a variety of names indicating the displacement of the engines.

Contents

The R107/SL was a two-seat convertible with a detachable roof. It replaced the W113 SL-Class in 1971 and was replaced by the R129 SL-Class in 1989.

The predecessor W113 was notably successful in North America, with 19,440 units (40%) of 48,912 total units sold in the US. [2] The R107 and C107 were even more focused on the American market, with specialized engines, bumper designs, headlights, and emissions management designs. The R107 and C107 sold 204,373 units in the US (68%) of 300,175 total units sold (excluding grey market sales into the US). [3]

During its production run, the SL was the only roadster offered by Mercedes-Benz. The C107/SLC was a four-seat car with a fixed roof and an optional sliding steel sunroof. It replaced the W111 Coupé in 1971 and was in turn replaced by the C126 S-class coupé in 1981.

Model history

1977 Mercedes-Benz 280SL 1977 Mercedes-Benz 280SL in Red (cropped).jpg
1977 Mercedes-Benz 280SL

The R107 and C107 took the chassis components of the midsize 1968 Mercedes-Benz W114 model and mated them initially to the M116 and M117 V8 engines used in the W108, W109 and W111 series. The body styles for both R107 and C107 did not change materially from introduction in 1971 to their end of production in 1981 (coupé) and 1989 (soft-top) respectively.

The SL (R107) variant was a 2-seat convertible/roadster with standard soft-top, with optional winter hardtop and only rarely ordered bench for the tiny rear cabin.

SLC rear quarter window slats Mercedes-Benz SLC (C107) window.JPG
SLC rear quarter window slats

The SLC (C107) derivative was a 2-door hardtop coupé with normal rear seats. The SLC is commonly referred to as an 'SL coupé',[ citation needed ] and it was the first and only time Mercedes-Benz based their S-class coupé on a stretched 2-seat SL roadster platform, rather than on a large S-class saloon. The SLC replaced the former saloon-based 280/300SE coupé in the Mercedes lineup, while there was no two-door version of the W116. The SLC model run ended in 1981, much earlier than the SL. It was replaced by the considerably larger 380SEC and 500SEC, once again based on the new 1980 S-class line.

Volume production of the first R107 car, the 350SL, started in April 1971 alongside the last of the W113 cars; the 350SLC followed in October. The early 1971 350SL are very rare and were available with an optional 4 speed fluid coupling automatic gearbox. The 1971 4sp auto were quick cars for the day with 0-60 mph in 8 seconds. In addition, the rare 1971 cars were fitted with Bosch electronic fuel injection.

European models and engines

The C107 SLC has had a successful rally career Mercedes 450 SLC 5.0 - 2008 Rallye Deutschland.jpg
The C107 SLC has had a successful rally career
Mercedes 560SL (Australia) 1987 Mercedes-Benz 560 SL (R 107) roadster (2012-06-04) 02.jpg
Mercedes 560SL (Australia)

The 350SL and 350SLC for the European market used a 3.5 liter V8 engine.

Mercedes-Benz 450SLC 5.0 Mercedes-Benz C107.026 450SLC5.0 20011030.jpg
Mercedes-Benz 450SLC 5.0
1989 Mercedes-Benz 560SL interior Mercedes-Benz, Techno-Classica 2018, Essen (IMG 9338).jpg
1989 Mercedes-Benz 560SL interior

From July 1974 both SL and SLC could also be ordered with a fuel-injected 2.8L straight-6 as 280SL and 280SLC.

In September 1977 the 450SLC 5.0 joined the line. This was a homologation version of the big coupé, featuring a new all-aluminium five-liter V8, aluminium alloy bonnet and boot lid, as well as a black rubber rear spoiler and a small front lip spoiler. These changes resulted in a reduction in weight of over 100kg when compared to the 'old' 450SLC. The '5.0' was built in limited numbers, only 2,769 being completed between 1977 and 1981. Maximum speed of the '5.0' was some 10km/h faster than that of the '4.5' at around 225km/h. The 450SLC 5.0 was produced in order to homologate the SLC for the 1978 World Rally Championship. [4]

Starting in 1980, the 350SLC, 450SLC, and 450SLC 5.0 models (like the 350SL and 450SL) were discontinued in 1980 with the introduction of the 380SLC and 500SLC in March 1980. At the same time, the cars received a very mild makeover; the 3-speed automatic was replaced by a four-speed unit, returning to where the R107 started in 1971 with the optional 4 speed automatic 350SL (3.5lt).

The 280SLC, 380SLC, and 500SLC were discontinued in 1981 with the introduction of the W126 series 380SEC and 500SEC coupés. A total of 62,888 SLCs had been manufactured over a ten-year period of which just 1,636 were the 450SLC-5.0 and 1,133 were the 500SLC. Both these models are sought by collectors today. With the exception of the R171 SLK 55 AMG Black Series and the SL65 AMG Black Series, the SLC remains the only fixed roof Mercedes-Benz coupé based on a roadster rather than a saloon.

Following the discontinuation of the SLC in November 1981, the 107 series continued, initially as the 280SL, 380SL, and 500SL. At this time, the V8 engines were re-tuned for greater efficiency, lost a few horsepower and consumed less fuel, largely due to substantially higher (numerically lower) axle ratios that went from 3.27:1 to 2.47:1 for the 380SL and from 2.72:1 to 2.27:1 for the 500SL.

From September 1985 the 280SL was replaced by a new 300SL and the 380SL by a 420SL; the 500SL continued and a 560SL was introduced for certain extra-European markets, notably the USA, Australia, and Japan.

Also in 1985, the Bosch KE Jetronic was fitted. The KE Jetronic system varied from the earlier, all mechanical system by the introduction of a more modern engine management "computer", which controlled idle speed, fuel rate, and air/fuel mixture. The final car of the 18 years running 107 series was a 500SL painted Signal Red, built on 4 August 1989; it currently resides in the Mercedes-Benz museum in Stuttgart, Germany.

North American models

1988 Mercedes-Benz 560SL, US-spec with prominent bumpers 1988 560SL.jpg
1988 Mercedes-Benz 560SL, US-spec with prominent bumpers
1977 Mercedes-Benz 450SLC, US-spec with prominent bumpers and sealed-beam headlamps 1977 Mercedes-Benz 450 SLC in Astral Silver Metallic (US model), front right.jpg
1977 Mercedes-Benz 450SLC, US-spec with prominent bumpers and sealed-beam headlamps

North America was the key market for this Personal luxury car , and two thirds of R107 and C107 production was sold there. [5]

The R107/C107 for the North American market sported four round low-output sealed beam headlights, due to unique U.S. regulations.

Sales in North America began in 1972, and cars wore the badge 350SL, but actually had a larger 4.5L V8 with 3 speed auto (and were renamed 450SL for model year 1973); the big V8 became available on other markets with the official introduction of the 450SL/SLC on non-North American markets in March 1973. R107 and C107 cars were exported to the US with low compression 4.5 liter V8 engines to meet stringent US emissions requirements, yet still provide adequate power.

US cars sold from 1972 through 1975 used the Bosch D Jetronic fuel injection system, an early electronic engine management system. US models sold from 1976 through 1979 used the Bosch K Jetronic system, an entirely mechanical fuel injection system.

From 1974, the front and rear bumpers were dramatically lengthened, by 8 inches (203 mm) on each end, to comply with the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration regulations that mandated no damage at an impact of 5 miles per hour (8.0 km/h). [6] North American market SL and SLC models retained the protruding 5 mph bumpers, even after the wisdom of the law was reconsidered in 1981. [7] [8] [9]

The 450SL was produced until 1980.

The smaller engined 380SL replaced the 450SL from 1981 to 1985. The Malaise era 380SL was the least powerful of the US market R107 roadsters. Starting in 1980, US cars were equipped with lambda control, which varied the air/fuel mixture based on feedback from an oxygen sensor. The 380SL was published by Mercedes-Benz as having 0-60 mph time of 9.3 seconds for a top speed of 205 km/h (127 mph). Torque for the 380SL is 232 lb⋅ft (315 N⋅m).

US gray market sales

Mercedes Benz SL500 (7496432144).jpg
1984 Mercedes-Benz 500SL (gray market import)
Mercedes-Benz 450SLC -- 07-08-2010.jpg
Mercedes-Benz 450SLC 5.0 (gray market import)

The more powerful 500SL with a 5.0 liter engine, produced from 1980–1989, was not available in the US. This drove many customers to obtain the European specification car in the "gray market," where the vehicles were converted to meet Federal mandates, until this option was eliminated by Congress in 1988.

From 1986 to 1989, a more powerful version was available from the factory, the 560SL. It was exclusive to the USA, European, Japanese and Australian markets. Despite the larger 5.6 liter engine of the U.S. 560SL, the forbidden Euro-spec 500SL was the fastest production R107 produced (mostly because of the lack of emission reducing components).

The 500SL was published by Mercedes-Benz as having 0-60 mph times of 7.4 seconds for a top speed of 225 km/h (140 mph). Torque for the 500SL is 296 lb⋅ft (401 N⋅m) at 3200 rpm and for the 560SL 287 lb⋅ft (389 N⋅m) at 3500 rpm.

Mechanical troubles

Model years 1975 and 1976 for the 450SL suffered from vapor lock and hard restart because of the under-bonnet position of the catalytic converter. Starting in MY 1977, the catalytic converter was moved to replace the resonator, located just behind the transmission in the exhaust system.

The 380SL/SLC engine came with a single row timing chain from 1981 through 1983. These early 380SL/SLC models were plagued with chain failure problems and the problem was corrected by Mercedes-Benz, free of charge. Some vehicles escaped the retrofit and may at some point fail as a result. MYs 1984 and 1985 came with a double row timing chain from the factory to address this issue.

Another problem area for late 450SLs was the automatic climate control system. Based on a servo which controlled coolant flow to the heater core, as well as vacuum to actuate the vents in the interior of the car, the system proved unreliable. It was installed on 450SLs through end of production in 1980. Models produced prior to 1978 had a manual climate control system, 380SL models produced from 1981 received a more reliable automatic climate control system.

South African assembly

Both the SL and SLC models were also assembled in South Africa by UCDD (United Car and Diesel Distributors) for the captive domestic market from early 1977 (on a contractor basis before Daimler-Benz A.G. acquired a majority stake of UCDD in 1984). [10] [11] Only about 40 units per month were built. [10]

Technical data

Europe

Technical data Mercedes-Benz R107/C107 (standard version - non USA, S, J, AUS) [12] (Manufacturer's figures except where stated)
Model280 SL
280 SLC
300 SL350 SL
350 SLC
380 SL
380 SLC
420 SL450 SL
450 SLC
450 SLC 5.0 [lower-alpha 1]
500 SL
500 SLC
Produced:MY 1974–1985
MY 1974–1981
MY 1985–1989MY 1971–1980MY 1980–1985
MY 1980–1981
MY 1985–1989MY 1973–1980MY 1978–1979
MY 1980–1989
MY 1980–1981
Layout: longitudinal engine
Engine type: M 110 M 103 M 116 M 117
Configuration: 6-cylinder-inline (four-stroke)90° 8-cylinder-V (four-stroke)
Bore x Stroke:86 mm (3.386 in) x 78.8 mm (3.102 in)88.5 mm (3.484 in) x 80.25 mm (3.159 in)92 mm (3.622 in) x 65.8 mm (2.591 in)92 mm (3.622 in) x 71.8 mm (2.827 in) [lower-alpha 2] 92 mm (3.622 in) x 78.9 mm (3.106 in)92 mm (3.622 in) x 85 mm (3.346 in)96.5 mm (3.799 in) x 85 mm (3.346 in) [lower-alpha 1]
Displacement:2,746 cc (167.6 cu in)2,962 cc (180.8 cu in)3,499 cc (213.5 cu in)3,818 cc (233.0 cu in)4,196 cc (256.1 cu in)4,520 cc (275.8 cu in)4,973 cc (303.5 cu in)
Fuel feed:Fuel injection: Bosch D-Jetronic (–1976) · K-Jetronic (–1980) · K-Jetronic with Lambda (–1985) · KE-Jetronic (from 1985)
Fuel tank capacity:90 L (23.8 US gal; 19.8 imp gal) · from 1985: 85 L (22.5 US gal; 18.7 imp gal)
Valvetrain: DOHC · duplex chain SOHC · simplex chain SOHC · duplex chain
Cooling:Water
Compression Ratio:9.0: 19.2: 19.5: 19.0: 19.0: 18.8: 19.0: 1
Max. Power
@ rpm:
185 PS (136 kW; 182 hp)
@ 6000 [lower-alpha 3]
190 PS (140 kW; 187 hp)
@ 5700
200 PS (147 kW; 197 hp)
@ 5800 [lower-alpha 4]
218 PS (160 kW; 215 hp)
@ 5500 [lower-alpha 2]
218 PS (160 kW; 215 hp)
@ 5200
225 PS (165 kW; 222 hp)
@ 5000 [lower-alpha 5]
240 PS (177 kW; 237 hp)
@ 5000 [lower-alpha 6]
Max. Torque
@ rpm:
238 N⋅m (176 lb⋅ft)
@ 4500
255 N⋅m (188 lb⋅ft)
@ 4400
286 N⋅m (211 lb⋅ft)
@ 4000
299 N⋅m (221 lb⋅ft)
@ 4000
324 N⋅m (239 lb⋅ft)
@ 3750
377 N⋅m (278 lb⋅ft)
@ 3000
402 N⋅m (296 lb⋅ft)
@ 3200
Gearbox:4- or 5-speed manual
4-speed automatic on request
4- or 5-speed manual
3-speed automatic on request [lower-alpha 7]
4-speed automatic3-speed
automatic
4-speed
automatic [lower-alpha 1]
Automatic model:
Automatic type:
W4B 025
722.1
W4A 040
722.3
W3A 040
722.0
[lower-alpha 7]
W4A 040
722.3
W3B 050
722.0
W4A 040
722.3
[lower-alpha 1]
Transmission:rear wheel drive
Electrical system:12 volt
Front suspension:Double wishbones · coil springs · additional rubber springs · stabilising bar
Rear suspension:Diagonal swing axle · coil springs · stabilizing torsion barDiagonal swing axle · coil springs · stabilizing torsion bar · anti-squat device
Brakes:Disc brakes (Ø front/rear: 278 mm (10.9 in)/279 mm (11.0 in) · from 1985: 284 mm (11.2 in)/279 mm (11.0 in))
power assisted · from 1980: ABS on request or standard
Steering:Recirculating ball steering
Track front · rear:1,452 mm (57.2 in) · 1,440 mm (56.7 in)
from 1985: 1,461 mm (57.5 in) · 1,465 mm (57.7 in)
Wheelbase:2,460 mm (96.9 in)
2,820 mm (111.0 in)
2,455 mm (96.7 in)
2,815 mm (110.8 in)
Body structure:Sheet steel · unibody construction
Length:4,390 mm (172.8 in)
4,750 mm (187.0 in)
Width:1,790 mm (70.5 in)
Height:1,300 mm (51.2 in)
1,330 mm (52.4 in)
Curb weight:1,560 kg (3,439 lb)
1,610 kg (3,549 lb)
1,530 kg (3,373 lb)1,600 kg (3,527 lb)
1,650 kg (3,638 lb)
1,640 kg (3,616 lb)
1,690 kg (3,726 lb)
1,600 kg (3,527 lb)1,640 kg (3,616 lb)
1,690 kg (3,726 lb)
1,600 kg (3,527 lb)
1,570 kg (3,461 lb)
Loaded weight:1,920 kg (4,233 lb)
2,040 kg (4,497 lb)
1,930 kg (4,255 lb)1,960 kg (4,321 lb)
2,050 kg (4,519 lb)
1,960 kg (4,321 lb)
2,050 kg (4,519 lb)
2,020 kg (4,453 lb)2,015 kg (4,442 lb)
2,095 kg (4,619 lb)
1,960 kg (4,321 lb)
2,005 kg (4,420 lb)
Wheel size:6J x 147J x 156,5J x 147J x 156,5J x 14 [lower-alpha 8]
Tire size:185 HR 14205/65 VR 15205/70 VR 14205/65 VR 15205/70 VR 14 [lower-alpha 9]
Top speed:207 km/h (129 mph)210 km/h (130 mph)212 km/h (132 mph)215 km/h (134 mph)210 km/h (130 mph)218 km/h (135 mph)225 km/h (140 mph)
Fuel Consumption (estimates):15.5 L/100 km (15.2 mpgUS; 18.2 mpgimp)14.5 L/100 km (16.2 mpgUS; 19.5 mpgimp)18.5 L/100 km (12.7 mpgUS; 15.3 mpgimp)18.5 L/100 km (12.7 mpgUS; 15.3 mpgimp)15.5 L/100 km (15.2 mpgUS; 18.2 mpgimp)18.5 L/100 km (12.7 mpgUS; 15.3 mpgimp)18.5 L/100 km (12.7 mpgUS; 15.3 mpgimp)
  1. 1 2 3 4 to introduce the new aluminum engines (type M 116 and M 117) from MY 1978/79 the 450 SLC 5.0 was launched: bore x stroke 97 mm (3.819 in) x 85 mm (3.346 in) · 5,025 cc (306.6 cu in) · 240 PS (177 kW; 237 hp) @ 5000 · 3-speed automatic W3B 050 ·722.0
  2. 1 2 from MY 1981/82 a different 3.8 L engine was used ·bore x stroke 88 mm (3.465 in) x 78.9 mm (3.106 in) · 3,839 cc (234.3 cu in) · 204 PS (150 kW; 201 hp) @ 5250) · this engine was already used in North America
  3. from MY 1976/77 (change from D-Jetronic to K-Jetronic) 177 PS (130 kW; 175 hp) @ 6000 · from MY 1980/81 185 PS (136 kW; 182 hp) @ 5800
  4. from MY 1976/77 (change from D-Jetronic to K-Jetronic) 195 PS (143 kW; 192 hp) @ 5750 · from MY 1978/79 205 PS (151 kW; 202 hp) @ 5800
  5. from MY 1975/76 (change from D-Jetronic to K-Jetronic) 217 PS (160 kW; 214 hp) @ 5000 · from MY 1978/79 225 PS (165 kW; 222 hp) @ 5000
  6. from MY 1981/82 231 PS (170 kW; 228 hp) @ 4750 · from MY 1985/86 245 PS (180 kW; 242 hp) @ 5200 · catalyst version 223 PS (164 kW; 220 hp) @ 4700
  7. 1 2 MY 1971–1972: 4-speed automatic K4A 040 · 722.2
  8. from 1985: 7J x 15
  9. from 1985: 205/65 VR 15

North America

Technical data Mercedes-Benz R107/C107 (North American models) [13] (Manufacturer's figures except where stated)
Model350 SL · 450 SL
350 SLC · 450 SLC
380 SL
380 SLC
560 SL
Produced:MY 1972–1980MY 1981–1985)
MY 1981
MY 1986–1989
Layout: longitudinal engine
Engine type: M 117 M 116 M 117
Configuration:90° 8-cylinder-V engine (four-stroke)
Bore x Stroke:3.622 in (92 mm) x 3.346 in (85 mm)3.465 in (88 mm) x 3.106 in (78.9 mm)3.799 in (96.5 mm) x 3.732 in (94.8 mm)
Displacement:275.8 cu in (4,520 cc)234.3 cu in (3,839 cc)338.5 cu in (5,547 cc)
Fuel feed:Fuel injection: Bosch D-Jetronic · later K-Jetronic with Lambda · KE-Jetronic
Fuel tank capacity:23.8 US gal (90 L) · from 1985: 22.5 US gal (85 L)
Valvetrain: SOHC · 1981-1983: single chain · all others: duplex chain
Cooling:Water
Compression Ratio:8.0: 18.3: 19.0: 1
Max. Power @ rpm:190 hp (142 kW) @ 4750
later 180 hp (134 kW) @ 4750
155 hp (116 kW) @ 4750227 hp (169 kW) @ 5200
Max. Torque @ rpm:240 lb⋅ft (325 N⋅m) @ 3000
later 220 lb⋅ft (298 N⋅m) @ 3000
196 lb⋅ft (266 N⋅m) @ 2750287 lb⋅ft (389 N⋅m) @ 3500
Gearbox:3-speed automatic4-speed automatic
Automatic model
automatic type:
W3A 040 · later W3B 050
722.0
W4A 040
722.3
Transmission:rear wheel drive
Electrical system:12 volt
Front suspension:Double wishbones · coil springs · additional rubber springs · stabilizing torsion bar
Rear suspension:Diagonal swing axle · coil springs · stabilizing torsion barDiagonal swing axle · coil springs · stabilising bar · anti-squat device
Brakes:Disc brakes (Ø front/rear: 10.9 in (278 mm)/11.0 in (279 mm) · from 1985: 11.2 in (284 mm)/11.0 in (279 mm))
power assisted · later ABS on request or standard
Steering:Recirculating ball steering
Track front · rear:57.2 in (1,452 mm) · 56.7 in (1,440 mm)57.5 in (1,461 mm) · 57.7 in (1,465 mm)
Wheelbase:96.9 in (2,460 mm)
111.0 in (2,820 mm)
96.7 in (2,455 mm)
Body structure:Sheet steel · unibody construction
Length:172.8 in (4,390 mm)
187.0 in (4,750 mm)
182.3 in (4,630 mm)
196.5 in (4,990 mm)
180.3 in (4,580 mm)
Width:70.5 in (1,790 mm)
Height:50.8 in (1,290 mm)
52.4 in (1,330 mm)
Curb weight:3,597 lb (1,632 kg)
3,625 lb (1,644 kg)
3,460 lb (1,569 kg)
3,440 lb (1,560 kg)
3,650 lb (1,656 kg)
Wheel size:6,5J x 147J x 15
Tire size:205/70 VR 14205/70 HR 14205/65 VR 15
Top speed:N/A
Fuel consumption (estimates):N/A

Models timeline

Motorsport

450SLC 5.0

1979 Mercedes-Benz 450SLC 5.0 1979 Mercedes-Benz 450 SLC 'Rallyewagen'.jpg
1979 Mercedes-Benz 450SLC 5.0

In 1978 the factory prepared two examples for the one-off Vuelta a la América del Sur, a month-long event of some 7,000 kilometres in length that took the competitors from Buenos Aires and back via Rio, Manaus, Caracas, Bogota, Lima, La Paz, Santiago and Ushuaia. The car driven by Andrew Cowan and Colin Malkin won by 20 minutes from team-mates Sobiesław Zasada and Andrzej Zembrzuski.

In 1979 a 5.0-litre 450SLC driven by Hannu Mikkola won the Bandama Rally in Côte d'Ivoire, with others finishing 2nd, 3rd and 4th. That same year the factory had used the 450SLC '5.0' to contest the Safari Rally, only narrowly missing out on victory because of suspension breakages. Nevertheless, the car driven by Hannu Mikkola finished 2nd.

Results in 1980 were worse, and the factory team was disbanded at the season's end. [14] An Albert Pfuhl proceeded to buy all six cars, equipment, and spare parts from the works team. Pfuhl and his team built a series of cars to compete in the 1984 Paris–Dakar Rally with a white and blue "BOSS" livery. The cars finished well down the order. [15]

See also

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mercedes-Benz W114/W115</span> Motor vehicle

The Mercedes-Benz W114 and W115 are the internal designations Mercedes-Benz used for a generation of front-engine, rear-drive, five-passenger sedans and coupés introduced in 1968, with three-box styling by Paul Bracq — succeeding the W110 models introduced in 1961; and manufactured until model year 1976, when the W123 was released.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mercedes-Benz W123</span> Executive car produced from November 1975 to January 1986

The Mercedes-Benz W123 is a range of executive cars produced by German manufacturer Mercedes-Benz from November 1975 to January 1986. The W123 models surpassed their predecessor, the Mercedes-Benz W114, as the most successful Mercedes, selling 2.7 million units before production ended in the autumn of 1985 for the saloon/sedan versions and January 1986 for coupés and estates/station wagons.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mercedes-Benz SL-Class (R129)</span> Roadster which was produced by Mercedes-Benz from 1989 until 2001.

The Mercedes-Benz R129 SL is a roadster which was produced by Mercedes-Benz from 1988 until 2001. The R129 replaced the R107 in 1989 and was in its turn replaced by the R230 SL-Class in 2002 for the 2003 model year.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mercedes-Benz W113</span> Car model

The Mercedes-Benz W 113 is a two-seat roadster/coupé, introduced at the 1963 Geneva Motor Show, and produced from 1963 through 1971. It replaced both the 300 SL (W 198) and the 190 SL (W 121 BII). Of the 48,912 W 113 SLs produced, 19,440 were sold in the US.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mercedes-Benz M110 engine</span> Reciprocating internal combustion engine

The M110 engine family is a DOHC crossflow cylinder head design with 2 valves per cylinder straight-6 automobile engine made by Mercedes-Benz in the 1970s and 1980s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mercedes-Benz W108/W109</span> Motor vehicle

The Mercedes-Benz W108 and W109 are luxury cars produced by Mercedes-Benz from 1965 through to 1972. The line was an upgrade of the Mercedes-Benz W114/W115, to succeed the W111 and W112 fintail sedans. The cars were successful in West Germany and in export markets including North America and Southeast Asia. During the seven-year run, a total of 383,361 units were manufactured.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mercedes-Benz W116</span> Motor vehicle

The Mercedes-Benz W116 is a series of flagship luxury sedans produced from September 1972 until 1980. The W116 automobiles were the first Mercedes-Benz models to be officially called S-Class, although some earlier sedan models had already been designated unofficially with the letter 'S' for Sonderklasse. The W116 was selected as European Car of the Year in 1974.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mercedes-Benz SL-Class (R230)</span> Motor vehicle

The R230 generation of the Mercedes-Benz SL-Class was introduced at the 2001 Frankfurt Motor Show and 2001 Bologna Motor Show, replacing the R129. The R230 underwent revisions in 2006 and 2008, and was superseded by the new SL-Class R231 in 2011.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mercedes-Benz W111</span> Motor vehicle

The Mercedes-Benz W111 was a chassis code given to a range of Mercedes-Benz vehicles produced between 1959 and 1971, including four-door saloons (1959–1968) and two-door coupés and cabriolets (1961–1971). Their bodywork featured distinctive tailfins that gave the models their Heckflosse nickname — German for "fintail".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mercedes-Benz M117 engine</span> Reciprocating internal combustion engine

The Mercedes-Benz M117 is an OHC, 2 valve per cylinder V8 engine made in several versions by Daimler-Benz between 1971 and 1992.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mercedes-Benz M116 engine</span> Reciprocating internal combustion engine

The Mercedes-Benz M116 is an automotive V8 engine made in several versions by Mercedes-Benz between 1969 and 1991. All models were gasoline powered, and utilized a single overhead camshaft with 2 valves per cylinder and Bosch Jetronic fuel injection. The larger M117 V8 followed, introduced initially in the US market.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mercedes-Benz SLK-Class (R172)</span> Motor vehicle

The third generation of Mercedes-Benz SLK-Class (SLC-Class) was launched in Stuttgart in January 2011, with a subsequent public launch at the 2011 Geneva Motor Show, with international sales starting spring 2011. It is the successor of R171 series of roadsters which was originally launched in 2004. The SLC was discontinued after the 2020 model year.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mercedes-Benz C-Class (W203)</span> Motor vehicle

The Mercedes-Benz C-Class (W203) is the internal designation for a range of compact executive cars manufactured and marketed by DaimlerChrysler from 1999 to 2010, as the second generation of the C-Class — in sedan/saloon, three-door hatchback coupé and station wagon/estate body styles.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mercedes-AMG SL (R232)</span> Seventh-generation Mercedes-Benz SL-Class

The Mercedes-AMG SL is the seventh-generation of the Mercedes-Benz SL-Class roadster, replacing the R231 model. Marketed under the Mercedes-AMG branding, it was presented on 28 October 2021. Since this generation, the SL became exclusive to Mercedes-AMG and a direct replacement for the GT Roadster.

References

Notes

  1. Oswald, Werner [in German] (2001). Deutsche Autos[German Cars] (in German). Vol. Band [Volume] 4: 1945–1990 Audi, BMW, Mercedes, Porsche und andere [and others]. Stuttgart: Motorbuch Verlag. p. 52. ISBN   3613021315.
  2. "Motor vehicle with a concave top".
  3. "Production figures for the Mercedes-Benz 107 series".
  4. "Miami: 1981 Mercedes-Benz 450 SLC 5.0". RM Sotheby's. Retrieved 4 February 2023.
  5. https://media.daimler.com/dcmedia/0-921-657476-1-1279283-1-0-0-0-0-1-0-0-0-1-0-0-0-0-0.html Daimler.com Retrieved 11 May 2016
  6. Solomon, Jack (March 1978). "Billion Dollar Bumpers". Reason.
  7. "Mercedes-Benz R107 is First Produced". January 1971.
  8. Berndt, Frank (2 April 1982). "Interpretation 1982-1.38". United States Department of Transportation NHSTA. Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  9. Burgess, John (1 October 1981). "U.S. Agency Seeks Eased Auto Bumper Standards". Washington Post .
  10. 1 2 Wright, Cedric, ed. (August 1978). "20 000 km test: Mercedes-Benz 450 SLC sports coupé". CAR (South Africa). Vol. 22, no. 7. Ramsay, Son & Parker (Pty) ltd. pp. 45, 47–48.
  11. Cauvin, Henri E. (24 November 2001). "A Quest to Promote the Quality Of Cars Made in South Africa". The New York Times. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  12. Oswald, Werner [in German] (2001). Deutsche Autos[German Cars] (in German). Vol. Band [Volume] 4: 1945–1990 Audi, BMW, Mercedes, Porsche und andere [and others]. Stuttgart: Motorbuch Verlag. ISBN   3613021315.
  13. Mike Covello, op. cit., pp. 527–545.
  14. "Property from the collection of a Gentleman Driver: 1978 Mercedes-Benz 450SLC 5.0 'Dakar' Replica, Chassis no. 10702612000268". Bonhams (auction listing). Retrieved 4 February 2023.
  15. "Paris-Dakar Rally Specification: Mercedes-Benz 450 SLC 5.0". Silodrome. 25 January 2022. Retrieved 16 February 2023.

Bibliography

  • Clarke, R.M., ed. (1980). On Mercedes Sports & GT Cars 1970-1980. Road & Track Series. Cobham, Surrey, UK: Brooklands Books. ISBN   0907073395.
  • Hofner, Heribert (2011). Mercedes-Benz Typenkunde[Mercedes-Benz Type Study] (in German). Vol. Band 3. Modelle der Oberklasse von 1951 bis 1972, Luxusklasse, S-, SL- und SLC-Klasse [Volume 3. Upper class models from 1951 to 1972, Luxury class, S-, SL- and SLC-Class]. Bielefeld, Germany: Delius Klasing. ISBN   9783768832786.
  • Staud, René (photographs); Lewandowski, Jürgen (text) (2016). Mercedes-Benz: The Grand Cabrios & Coupes. Kempen, Germany: teNeues. ISBN   9783832732936.