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Mercedes-Benz W196

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Formula One racing automobile
This article is about the Formula One car. For the W196S sports racing car derived from it, seeMercedes-Benz 300 SLR.
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Racing car model
Mercedes-Benz W196
Karl Kling driving the W196 at theNürburgring in 1976
CategoryFormula One
ConstructorMercedes
DesignerRudolf Uhlenhaut
SuccessorMercedes MGP W01
Technical specifications
EngineMercedes-BenzM196 2,497 cc (152.4 cu in)I8naturally aspirated
TyresContinental
Competition history
Notable entrantsDaimler Benz AG
Notable driversArgentinaJuan Manuel Fangio
United KingdomStirling Moss
GermanyHans Herrmann
GermanyKarl Kling
Debut1954 French Grand Prix
First win1954 French Grand Prix
Last win1955 Italian Grand Prix
Last event1955 Italian Grand Prix
RacesWinsPodiumsPolesF/Laps
1291789
Constructors' Championships0
Drivers' Championships2 (1954,1955)

TheMercedes-Benz W196 (sometimes written as theMercedes-Benz W 196 R[1]) was aFormula Oneracing car produced byMercedes-Benz for the1954 and1955 F1 seasons. Successor to theW194, in the hands ofJuan Manuel Fangio andStirling Moss it won 9 of 12 races entered and captured the only two world championships in which it competed.

Firsts included the use ofdesmodromic valves andDaimler-Benz developed mechanicaldirect fuel injection adapted from theDB 601 high-performanceV12 used on theMesserschmitt Bf 109E fighter during World War II.

The 3-litre300 SLR was derived from the W196 for the1955 World Sportscar Championship season. Itscrash atLe Mans that year ended not only its own short-lived domination but also spelled the end for the W196. Mercedes pulled out of competitive racing in 1955 and did not return for another three decades.

Types

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Monza

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StreamlinedType Monza bodywork
Mercedes W196 (Alfa 159 in background)

The W196's delayed debut at the1954 French Grand Prix saw the introduction of the aerodynamic closed-wheel aluminium "Type Monza" streamliner body for the high speed track atReims.Juan Manuel Fangio andKarl Kling claimed a 1–2 finish, andHans Herrmann posted the fastest lap. The same body was later used only three more times: in the1954 season at theBritish Grand Prix atSilverstone and theItalian Grand Prix atMonza, where it picked up its nickname, and in the1955 season again at theItalian Grand Prix at Monza.

In total the "Type Monza" won three races (the 1954 French Grand Prix, 1954 and 1955 Italian Grand Prix), all with Fangio at the wheel.[2] These three Grands Prix have remained the only races won by a closed-wheel car in Formula One history.

Open wheel

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Attractive as the Monza was, its streamlined body was really only suited to high-speed tracks made up of straights and slow corners, leading to defeat at its second race, theBritish Grand Prix at the high-speed corner dominatedSilverstone circuit, where Fangio hit a number of oil barrels that marked out the circuit. A conventional open-wheel-version was introduced for the most important race on the calendar for Mercedes, theGerman Grand Prix at the twisty and longNürburgring. Fangio, who had already won the first two GPs of 1954 with aMaserati in his home city ofBuenos Aires and atSpa, won this and the two following GPs inSwitzerland with the 'open wheel' version andItaly, as said, on the closed-wheel streamlined 'Type Monza', securing his 2nd World Championship.

At theSpanish Grand Prix in Barcelona, the last race of the 1954 season the low-mounted Mercedes air-intake clogged with leaves, costing the race toMike Hawthorn in a Ferrari, and leading to the intake's relocation atop the hood.

In the shortened1955 Formula One season, abbreviated after theLe Mans disaster, the W196 won every race except theMonaco Grand Prix, whereHans Herrmann crashed in practice and the other three team Mercedes cars failed to finish. A highlight for driver Stirling Moss was his finish 0.2 seconds ahead of stable mate Fangio at his home event, theBritish Grand Prix, his first GP win, a race where Mercedes romped home with a 1–2–3–4 finish.

After capturing the two world championships it competed in, Mercedes withdrew from motorsport at the end of the 1955 season. Despite its strong reliability and good track performance, drivers Fangio and Moss described the car in MotorSport magazine as being "a bit difficult to drive, with a tendency for snap oversteer". Moss also later said that "I'm surprised that the Merc wasn't a little bit easier to drive, because it wasn't. It was a driver's car, but not an easy car to drive."[3] Fangio shared similar feelings, also saying in MotorSport Magazine in 1979 that the car was "not so nice to drive as a Maserati 250F, but you were almost sure to finish. So the Mercedes was incredible in that way."[4] 1970s/80s Formula One driverJohn Watson drove the W196 at Hockenheim, providing some insight as to why the car was difficult to drive. He said that "if you gave this car wider and grippier tyres and altered the suspension to suit, then the handling would be of a very high order indeed." The W196 was so advanced and ahead of its time, that the narrow tyres available at the time simply could not fully handle the car's exceptional performance and potential.[5]

Engine

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The new 1954 Formula One rules allowed a choice of naturally aspirated engines – up to 2.5 litres or 0.75 litressupercharged. The expected target range for competitive engines was 250 to 300 bhp (190 to 220 kW).

Mercedes' 1939 2-stage supercharged 1.5-litre, bore/stroke: 64 mm (2.5 in) × 58 mm (2.3 in) V8 (1,493 cc or 91.1 cu in) gave 278 bhp (207 kW) at 8,250 rpm with about 2.7 atm (270 kPa) pressure. Halving this would have only produced 139 bhp (104 kW).

Studies by Mercedes showed that 390 bhp (290 kW) at 10,000 rpm could be achieved from 0.75 litres with a supercharger pressure of 4.4 atm (450 kPa), with 100 hp (75 kW) required to drive the supercharger. Fuel consumption of this 290 bhp (220 kW) net engine would have been 2.3 times higher than a naturally aspirated one developing the same power. Since 115 bhp/L (86 kW/L) at 9,000 rpm was being developed by naturally aspirated motorcycle racing engines, it was decided that a 2.5-litre engine was the correct choice. This was a significant change of philosophy, since all previous Mercedes-Benz Grand Prix engines since the 1920s had been supercharged. Mercedes' solution was to adapt thedirect fuel injection that Daimler-Benz engineers had refined on theDB 601 high-performanceV12 used on theMesserschmitt Bf 109E fighter.

By its introduction at the 1954 French GP the 2,496.87 cc (152.368 cu in) bore/stroke: 76 mm (3.0 in) × 68.8 mm (2.71 in)desmodromic valvesstraight 8 delivered 257 bhp (192 kW). The W196 was the only F1 car with such advanced fuel technology, giving it a considerable advantage over the other carburetted engines. Variable length inlet tracts were experimented with and four wheel drive considered. An eventual 340 bhp (250 kW) at 10,000 rpm was targeted for the 2.5-litre F1 motor.

Chassis and suspension

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A 1954 Mercedes W196 on display at theIndianapolis Motor Speedway's Hall of Fame and Museum

The W196 was front mid-engined, with its long longitudinally mounted engine placed just behind the front axles instead of over them to better balance front/rear weight distribution. A welded aluminium tubespaceframe chassis carried ultra-lightElektron magnesium-alloy bodywork (having a specific gravity of 1.8, less than a quarter of iron's 7.8), which contributed substantially to keeping dry weight down.

To enhance stopping power extra wide diameterdrum brakes too large to fit inside 16" wheel rims were used, mounted inboard with short half shafts and twouniversal joints per wheel.Torsion bars fitted inside the frame's tubes were used in thedouble wishbone front. To prevent cornering forces from raising the car, as occurs with shortswing axles, the rear used a low-roll center system featuring off-centered beams spanning from each hub to the opposite side of the chassis crossing one-another over the centerline. Nevertheless,snap-oversteer could still be a notable problem at speed.

W196S

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Main article:Mercedes-Benz 300 SLR

TheMercedes-Benz 300 SLR (W196S) was a 2-seat, 3-litre sports racer derived in 1955 from the W196, sharing most of its drivetrain, chassis, and engine. To compete in theWorld Sportscar Championship, the W196'sfuel-injected 2,496.87 ccstraight 8 was bored and stroked to 2,981.70 cc, boosting output to 310 bhp (230 kW).

The W196'smonoposto driving position was modified to standard two-abreast seating, headlights were added, and a few other changes made to adapt a strictly track competitor to a 24-hour road/track sports racer. The 300 SLR/W196S tooksportscar racing by storm in 1955, winning that year's championship before a catastrophic crash and fire atLe Mans ended its domination prematurely.

W196R sale

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Stirling Moss presenting a W196R at the 2014Goodwood Festival of Speed

The auction houseBonhams – in its Goodwood Festival of Speed Sale on 12 July 2013 – sold Mercedes-Benz W196R Chassis no. 196 010 00006/54 for a new World Record £19.7-million Sterling ($29.6 million, incl. auction premium).[6] The total bill, including UK VAT on commission charged, came to £20,896,800.00 Sterling.[7] This high price was achieved in recognition of the fact that Chassis no. 196 010 00006/54 is the only example of the model available in private hands – all its surviving sisters being in original manufacturer or institutional museum hands. This particular car is also the most successful of all surviving W196R cars – being the individual driven by Juan Manuel Fangio to win the 1954 German & European Grand Prix at the Nurburgring, and then adding a second consecutive victory in the 1954 Swiss GP at Berne's Bremgarten circuit. With that second race win, added to his early-season victories in the Argentine and Belgian GPs in a Maserati 250F, Fangio clinched the second of his ultimately five Formula 1 Drivers' World Championship titles.

Technical data

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Technical dataW196 RW196 S
Engine: Front mounted 8-cylinderin-line engine
Displacement2496 cm³2983 cm³
Bore x stroke: 76 x 68.8 mm78 x 78 mm
Max power at rpm: 257 hp at 8 250 rpm300 hp at 7 500 rpm
Max torque at rpm: 247 Nm at 6 300 rpm295 Nm at 5 950 rpm
Valve control: 2 overheadcamshafts, 2 forced-controlled valves per cylinder
Compression9:1
Gearbox5-speed manual,transaxle
suspension front: Double wishbones, longitudinaltorsion bar, hydraulicshock absorber
suspension rear: Single-link pendulum axle, longitudinaltorsion bar, hydraulicshock absorbers
BrakesHydraulic drum brakes
Chassis &bodySpace frame with Elektron magnesium-alloy body
Wheelbase215–235 cm
Dry weightAbout 700 kg
Top speed: 290 km/h290 km/h

Complete Formula One World Championship results

[edit]

(key)

YearEntrantEngineTyresDrivers123456789
1954Daimler Benz AGMercedes M196 2.5L8CARG500BELFRAGBRGERSUIITAESP
ArgentinaJuan Manuel Fangio124211123
West GermanyKarl Kling22724RetRet25
West GermanyHans HerrmannRet2Ret2342Ret
West GermanyHermann LangRet
1955Daimler Benz AGMercedes M196 2.5L8CARGMON500BELNEDGBRITA
ArgentinaJuan Manuel Fangio1Ret11212
West GermanyKarl Kling41RetRet3Ret
West GermanyHans Herrmann41DNQ
United KingdomStirling Moss419221Ret2
FranceAndré SimonRet
ItalyPiero Taruffi42

^1 Indicates shared drive.
^2 Indicates streamlined version used.

See also

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References

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Notes

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  1. ^"Mercedes-Benz W 196 R 2.5-liter streamlined racing car".Mercedes-Benz. Retrieved29 May 2023.
  2. ^"Mercedes-Benz W196 Streamliner – Images, Specifications and Information". Ultimatecarpage.com. 11 February 2020. Retrieved9 August 2011.
  3. ^The History of the Grand Prix Car Pt 5 onYouTube
  4. ^Foster, Ed (8 August 2012)."The morning I met the maestro".Motor Sport. Retrieved27 January 2015.
  5. ^The Grand Prix Car 1945–1965 – Part 2/3 (UK Channel 4 1988) onYouTube
  6. ^"1954 Mercedes-Benz W196R Formula 1 Racing Single-Seater".Bonhams. 12 July 2013. Retrieved9 July 2023.
  7. ^"Fangio's rare F1 Mercedes sells for £17.5m".BBC News. 12 July 2013. Retrieved12 July 2013.

Bibliography

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  • Ackerson, Robert (2015).Two Summers: The Mercedes-Benz W 196 R Racing Car. Dorchester, Dorset, UK: Veloce Publishing.ISBN 9781845847517.
  • Ludvigsen, Karl (2009).Mercedes-Benz Grand Prix W196: Spectacular Silver Arrows 1954-1955. Ludvigsen Library Series. Hudson, WI, USA: Iconografix.ISBN 9781583882504.
  • Nixon, Chris (1999).Rivals: Lancia D50 & Mercedes-Benz W196. Isleworth, Middlesex, UK: Transport Bookman Publications.ISBN 0851840590.
  • Riedner, Michael (1990).Mercedes-Benz W196: Last of the Silver Arrows. Foulis Motoring Book series. Sparkford, Somerset, UK: Haynes Publishing.ISBN 0854297170.
  • Sugahara, Louis (2004).Mercedes-Benz Grand Prix Race Cars 1934–1955. Fredericksburg, TX, USA: Mercedes-Benz Classique Car Library.ISBN 1933123001.

External links

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