Mercedes C 111
(from DaimlerChrysler
Press Release) The compact wedge in bright orange, a shade
internally called “weissherbst”, expressed power, elegance and
speed. C 111 was the designation of the futuristic study displayed
by Mercedes-Benz in September 1969 at the Frankfurt International
Motor Show (IAA). The car broke new ground in terms of both
engineering and design. Motor show visitors crowded around the
sports car, marveling at its intriguing – as well as polarizing –
design. Was this the worthy successor to the famous 300 SL Gullwing?
The car’s style, dynamic lines and classic gullwing doors promised
just that to lovers of refined cars with the three-pointed star on
the hood. This happened 35 years ago, at the C 111’s presentation in
Frankfurt. In the spring of 1970, an even more elegantly clad C
111-II made its appearance at the Geneva Motor Show, prompting
interested parties to send blank checks to Stuttgart to secure one
of these cars for themselves.
However, it had never been planned to produce the new Gullwing in
series, and the C 111 was not to appear in showrooms. The coupe may
have looked like the systematic further development of the Sport
Light models from the 1950s, but it was not a design study for a new
SL: it was to serve as an experimental car. Laboratory machines as
beautiful as this Mercedes-Benz, designed among other things to test
glass-fiber-reinforced plastics as bodywork material, were – and
still are – few and far between, however. The coupe’s lightweight
skin, opening up new possibilities in the aerodynamic design of
sports cars, was bonded to a steel frame/floor unit.
Powered by a Wankel engine
The second revolutionary
feature of the C 111 was hidden under its skin. The first
experimental car of 1969 was powered not by a reciprocating-piston
engine but by a Wankel – or rotary-piston - engine. At the time,
many manufacturers were interested in Felix Wankel’s unconventional
propulsion system. Mercedes-Benz, too, had been experimenting with
Wankel engines – KP through to KC series – since 1962. However, the
Wankel engine was to be extensively road-tested before being fitted
in production cars. The last Mercedes with a rotary-piston engine
from this series was the four-rotor DB M950 KE409 of the C 111-II in
1970.
The performance of the C 111 even with the three-rotor engine was
convincing right from the start. In 1969, the Wankel engine
developed 280 hp from 600 cubic centimeters of chamber volume per
rotary piston and gave the car a top speed of 260 km/h; with this
engine, the car accelerated from standstill to 100 km/h in five
seconds. The C 111-II of 1970 was powered by a large four-rotor
Wankel engine which developed 350 hp and gave the car a top speed of
300 km/h. The second C 111 accelerated from standstill to 100 km/h
in highly respectable 4.8 seconds. While some of the engines in the
C 111-I cars had still featured dual ignition which was difficult to
adjust, the four-rotor engine was equipped with single ignition
exclusively. Both engines were direct-injection units.
The development department of Mercedes-Benz eventually succeeded in
solving the engineering-design problems involved in the
rotary-piston principle, especially in engine mechanics, but the
problem of the Wankel engine’s poor degree of efficiency, due to the
elongated, variable combustion chambers of the rotary-piston
principle, was not to be overcome with technical modifications. This
problem was simply inherent in the design: in a Wankel engine, the
fuel burns within the space between the convex side of the rotary
piston and the concave wall of the piston housing rather than the
cylindrical combustion chamber of a reciprocating-piston engine. The
variable, anything but compact combustion chambers of the Wankel
engine were responsible for poor thermodynamic fuel economy as
compared to a reciprocating-piston engine, resulting in
significantly higher fuel consumption for the same output. The
engines of the first two C 111 versions were straightforward
gas-guzzlers. And since the pollutant content in the exhaust gas of
the Wankel engines was also too high, Mercedes-Benz discontinued
work on this type of engine in 1971, in spite of its impressively
smooth running characteristics and compact size.
In retrospect, Dr. Kurt Obländer, head of engine testing in the C
111 project, described the Wankel engine as follows: “Our four-rotor
engine with gasoline injection represented the optimum of what could
be reached with this engine concept. The multi-rotor design called
for peripheral ports for the intake-air and exhaust-gas ducts. We
were able to solve the difficult problems in engine cooling and
engine mechanics by technical means. But the main problem of the
concept, its low thermodynamic degree of efficiency, remained. Due
to the elongated, not exactly compact combustion chambers, fuel
economy was poor, resulting in high fuel consumption and
unacceptably high pollutant emissions. These drawbacks were inherent
in the design principle.”
Testing of the diesel engine
Then, in the fall of
1973, a boycott of the oil-producing countries brought about the
so-called oil crisis and crude oil, hitherto an inexpensive
commodity, became a precious resource. Developers were requested to
come up with new engines which, more than anything else, used the
expensive fuel sparingly. The most obvious proposition was the
low-consumption diesel engine but the compression-ignition unit was
still thought to be sluggish and noisy. There had certainly been
examples of either vice in automotive history but the diesel engine
had long since been developed into a refined power unit, perfectly
capable of driving sporty passenger cars.
In 1976, Mercedes-Benz decided to disprove the old prejudice – and
what could have been better suited to providing counter-evidence
than a C 111 with diesel engine? The engineers installed a
three-liter naturally-aspirated compression-ignition engine with
five cylinders in the C 111-II for the first tests. In the car, now
called C 111-IID, the OM 617 LA engine developed as much as 190 hp,
thanks to turbocharging and intercooling, as opposed to the 80 hp
output of the production engine which powered the Mercedes-Benz 240
D 3.0 (W 115, Stroke Eight) and, at a later stage, other models. In
June 1976, the C 111-IID reached spectacular speeds on the test
track at Nardo near Lecce in Italy. In the course of 60 hours, four
drivers established a total of 16 world records – thirteen of these
applying to diesel-engined cars and three to cars in general,
irrespective of their type of engine. During the tests, an average
speed of 252 km/h was recorded, and Mercedes-Benz proved
impressively that diesels also have sprinter qualities.
Second career as a record-breaking car
The success of the
sparsely modified C 111-II in Nardo spurred the developers on to new
heights. This time, they did not create a design study for a
road-going sports car but a thoroughbred racing car for the sole
purpose of establishing speed records: the C 111-III. The new car
was built in 1977; it was narrower than the first C 111, had a
longer wheelbase and perfect aerodynamic properties, thanks to
complete streamlining and rear airfoils. In 1978, the C 111-III
lined up at the start in Nardo. Once again, a diesel engine growled
under the silver-painted plastic bodywork. While this engine had
been derived from a production unit, it had been tuned to develop
230 hp and gave the streamlined car a top speed well over 300 km/h.
With this Silver Arrow, Mercedes-Benz established nine absolute
world records in the late 1970s.
However, the C 111 was still to take the final evolutionary step
towards becoming an all-out racing machine. The last version of the
sports car, the C 111-IV presented in 1979, broke the track record
by reaching a speed of 403.978 km/h. This time, it was no longer a
diesel engine working under the plastic skin but a V8 gasoline
engine with a displacement of 4.5 liters and an output of 500 hp.
The shape of the bodywork was equally a far cry from the first
version. Ten years on, and the bodywork crafted with esprit and
courage in 1969 had become a slim, elongated rocket with two
airfoils and massive spoilers in a silvery livery.
Setting the standards for the design of modern sports cars
Even the first C 111
hadn’t deserved its nickname, “test lab on wheels”. As well as
incorporating highly innovative parts and assemblies, the coupe set
the standards for the design of modern sports cars.
The gullwing doors, retained for all four series of the C 111,
identify this charismatic experimental car as a member of the
legendary Mercedes-Benz sports car family. These doors, hinged at
the roof, developed into hallmarks of Mercedes-Benz sports cars.
They first featured on the filigree 300 SL (W 194) which was entered
in racing in 1952; from this car, a road-going sports car (W 198/I)
was derived of which just about 1,400 units were built between 1954
and 1957. The coupe with its breathtaking metal skin on a spaceframe
was powered by a modified version of the six-cylinder in-line engine
from the 300 “Adenauer Mercedes”. Rudolf Uhlenhaut, head of the
passenger car testing department at Mercedes-Benz and creator of the
300 SL, topped the development of the dynamic sports car line with a
300 SLR in 1955. The engine of the “Uhlenhaut Coupe” was based on
that of the open-top 300 SLR racing sports car in which Stirling
Moss and Denis Jenkinson won the Mille Miglia in 1955: the sports
car was powered by the eight-cylinder in-line engine from the
company’s racing cars at the time but the plans to put the SLR coupe
to the acid test in the Carrera Panamericana long-distance race in
Central America were thwarted.
Gullwing doors – intriguing to this day
The stylish gullwing
doors of the SL and SLR models of the 1950s are still being regarded
as an expression of elegance and dynamism today – and quite rightly
so. However, they were also a technical necessity, dictated by the
filigree spaceframe which had to be combined with wide,
stability-enhancing sills, thereby requiring door hinges at the top.
On the four series of the C 111, the gullwing doors were design
quotations relating back to the Silver Arrow era. The C 112 research
car presented at the IAA in 1991 equally featured gullwing doors
hinged at the roof.
This elegant door design did not return to series production until
the up-to-date Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren. The new coupe with styling
features reminiscent of the current McLaren-Mercedes Formula One
racing car swings its doors upwards into the air as elegantly as the
C 111 did 35 years ago and the 300 SL 50 years ago. There is,
however, one major difference: after half a century, the dream of a
series-produced road-going Mercedes-Benz racing coupe has finally
come true.
The C 111 reviewed by the press
In November 1969, Ron
Wakefield, writing for “Road & Track”, directly compared the C 111
with Italian sports cars: “During my first ride I was immediately
struck by the quietness of the power unit inside the car. It was far
quieter than, say, a 12-cyl. (Lamborghini) Miura though not so
hushed as the Ford V8 of the De Tomaso Mangusta. As the engine wound
up I once again noticed the motorcycle sound and it was a smooth,
steady pull all the way up to what seemed like much too early a
shift at 7000 rpm.”
In April 1970, racing driver and journalist Paul Frère wrote in
“Motor” about his experiences in trial driving: “This car provides
an unequalled combination of comfort and handling, the latter being
quite definitely in the racing car class.”
In late 1969, “Auto Motor & Sport” wrote: “The quiet running of the
Wankel engine and the virtually complete absence of wind noise will
initially deceive you into wrongly assessing the actual speed. When
you think you’re doing 150 or 160 km/h, a glance at the speedometer
will quickly tell you that you are in fact doing 240 km/h.
Incidentally, 7000 rpm in fourth gear correspond to 226 km/h.”