Mercedes 300 SL Gullwing Alloy 1956 – SPRZEDANY

Gullwinga nikomu przedstawiać nie trzeba. 300 SL to prawdziwa ikona motoryzacji rozpoznawalna przez wszystkich. Ten wystawiony na aukcji jest pod wieloma względami szczególny. Po sukcesie W194 w wyścigu 24-godzinnym Le Mans i Carrera Panamericana, Mercedes-Benz chciał stworzyć „oswojoną” wersję 300 SL, którą klienci mogliby jeździć po drogach. Na bazie W194 powstał W198, wkrótce znany jako 300 SL i nieformalnie jako „Gullwing”. Model zadebiutował na Międzynarodowych Targach Motoryzacyjnych w Nowym Jorku w 1954 roku. Rok po rozpoczęciu produkcji, szef inżynierii Mercedesa-Benza, dr Fritz Nallinger, zaproponował zbudowanie specjalnej, sportowej wersji W198. Inżynier przekonał zarząd do realizacji specjalnego zamówienia Leichtmetallausführung — czyli wersji z metali lekkich. Aluminiowy Gullwing nie był powierzchownym projektem, ale pełnowymiarowym samochodem wyścigowym. Wyposażono go nie tylko w lekkie nadwozie, ale także w mocniejszy silnik NSL, sportowe zawieszenie, koła z centralną śrubą (lżejsze niż standardowe), a nawet tylną i boczne szyby z pleksiglasu. Wysokie koszty oraz konkurencja ze strony bardziej uznanych producentów samochodów wyścigowych, zwłaszcza Ferrari, spowodowały, że produkcja aluminiowego Gullwing trwała zaledwie 12 miesięcy i powstało zaledwie 29 egzemplarzy. Okaz, który został wystawiony na aukcji to pierwszy ukończony w 1956 roku aluminiowy 300 SL i jedyny wykończonych w kolorze czarnym (DB 40) z pięknie kontrastującym wnętrzem z czerwonej skóry (1079).

Samochód opuścił fabrykę 16 stycznia 1956 roku, zmierzając do agenta Saporiti w Mediolanie. Tam przekazany został pierwszemu właścicielowi, zdobywcy pierwszego miejsca w 24h Le Mans, Luigiemu Chinettiemu. Luigi wysłał Gullwinga bezpośrednio do swojej siedziby w Nowym Jorku i zatrzymał na około 20 lat, decydując się jedynie na odświeżenie go na srebrno.

Rudi Klein, którego kolekcja licytowana jest na tej aukcji, poznał Luigiego podczas wyścigu Daytona 500 w 1976 roku i tam udało mu się kupić Gullwinga. W aktach znajduje się faktura od Luigi Chinetti Motors z dnia 30 sierpnia 1976 roku, wskazująca, że ​​ostateczna płatność przed dostawą miała zostać dokonana 11 września. Po otrzymaniu samochodu od Chinettiego, Rudi schował go w centralnym budynku złomowiska, gdzie 300 SL pozostał aż do wystawienia go na aukcji RM Sotheby’s Monterey w 2024 roku.

Przy przebiegu 73387 kilometrów odnotowanym w momencie katalogowania, samochód pozostaje bezapelacyjnie, spektakularnie oryginalny: wciąż posiada oryginalny, zgodny z numerami silnik, skrzynię biegów, tylną oś. Wszystko ponumerowane i skorelowane z kartą danych, w tym cztery koła z pasującymi kodami. Fabryczne aluminiowe nadwozie ma numer 26, który odnajdziemy na obu drzwiach, krawędzi deski rozdzielczej i na wewnętrznym panelu dachu. Samochód ten pozostawał w kolekcji Rudiego Kleina przez prawie 50 lat, a teraz jest ostatnim nieodrestaurowanym „Alloy” Gullwingiem na świecie.


Patrick Ernzen ©2024 Courtesy of RM Sotheby’s

Link: https://rmsothebys.com/auctions/rk24/lots/r0244-1956-mercedesbenz-300-sl-alloy-gullwing/

Lot 290
The Junkyard: The Rudi Klein Collection
1956 Mercedes-Benz 300 SL 'Alloy’ Gullwing

$4,500,000 – $6,000,000 USD | Offered Without Reserve
$9,355,000 USD | Sold

United States | Los Angeles, California

Chassis No. 198.043.5500872
Engine No. 198.980.5500868
Gearbox No. 5500854
Body No. 198.043.5500026
Steering Box Number: 5500891
Rear Axle No. 5500418

To be offered on Saturday, 26 October 2024

The 26th of 29 examples produced; the only “Alloy” Gullwing originally finished in Black over Red leather
Ordered new by legendary Ferrari importer and Le Mans champion, Luigi Chinetti
Acquired by Rudi Klein directly from Chinetti in August 1976
Never driven outside the walls of the Klein “yard” in nearly 50 years
Aside from paint, unrestored with its original interior, body, engine, gearbox, rear axle, steering box, and front spindles
Accompanied by Mercedes-Benz delivery information and fascinating documentation
One of the most exciting post-war Mercedes-Benzes to be offered in decades
Following the competition success of the W194 at the 24 Hours of Le Mans and the Carrera Panamericana, Mercedes-Benz sought to create a mildly tamed version that customers could drive on the road. In recognition of the United States as a critical market, and with New York importer Max Hoffman insisting upon the model’s production for his elite clientele, the W198, soon known as the 300 SL and infamously informally as the “Gullwing,” debuted at the 1954 International Motor Sports Show in New York. The 300 SL would, in fact, be the first Mercedes-Benz ever shown overseas before being revealed in its home country.

One year into the production run, Mercedes-Benz’s chief of engineering, Dr. Fritz Nallinger, proposed that a special “competition” variant of the W198 be built, aimed at the privateers and amateur racers who had begun driving their 300 SLs in anger. In February 1954, Dr. Nallinger convinced the board of directors to go ahead with the special-order model, marketed with classic understatement as Leichtmetallausführung—or Light Metal Version. The “Alloy” Gullwing was not skin-deep, but a full-force competition car—fitted not only with a lightweight body, but with the more powerful NSL engine, sports suspension, 4.11:1 rear axle, Rudge knock-off wheels (lighter than the standard wheels), and even a Plexiglas rear window and side screens. All of this added a remarkable $1,307 to the base price of a standard 300 SL.

The prohibitive cost, as well as competition from more established racing car manufacturers, namely Ferrari, resulted in the Alloy Gullwing being made for only 12 months, and just 29 examples were produced.

LIGHT METAL IN SCHWARZ: THE CHINETTI ‘ALLOY’

Completed on 12 January 1956, chassis number 198.043.5500872 was the 26th alloy-bodied Gullwing off the Untertürkheim production line, and actually the first completed in 1956. Significantly, it was the sole example of these rarefied cars finished in Schwarz (DB 40), or black, beautifully contrasted with Red leather (1079) interior. Its data card, a copy of which is included in the file, records all of the usual Leichtmetallausführung glories—alloy body, NSL engine, sports suspension, Rudges, etc.—as well as a windshield washer system, special-order paint (including 1 kilogram additional for touch-ups), and 3.42:1 rear axle ratio.

On 16 January the completed car departed the factory, bound for Milan agent Saporiti. It would be delivered by Saporiti to none other than Luigi Chinetti, the renowned figure who had won the 24 Hours of Le Mans as a racing driver and gone on to become Ferrari’s North American importer and owner of the famous North American Racing Team (N.A.R.T.). It is believed that Chinetti commissioned his Alloy Gullwing in order to compare the Mercedes offering against his then-current Ferrari stock, and that, shortly after he accepted delivery, it was sent directly to his headquarters in New York. Apparently taken with the car, he retained it for some 20 years, at some point in his ownership choosing to refinish it in silver but otherwise leaving it largely alone.

NEVER SHOWN

Rudi Klein met Luigi Chinetti while attending the 1976 Daytona 500, and there agreed to purchase the Alloy Gullwing for the sum of $30,000; Rudi placed a $3,000 deposit with one of Chinetti’s employees at the race. An invoice from Luigi Chinetti Motors, dated 30 August 1976, is present in the history file, indicating that the final payment before delivery on 11 September was due to be made; however, further letters from Hagwood Trucking indicate that the car was not actually collected from Chinetti until early March 1977. Photographs in the file show the Gullwing as acquired by Rudi, in silver with its original red leather interior, and in a letter Rudi notes that the car was “sound [with] no damage. Equipment on car includes radio, spare, etc. and knock-offs.” A further photograph depicts the car finally arriving on the premises of Porche Foreign Auto.

The Klein sons believe that the Alloy Gullwing was the only prize among Rudi’s collection of various significant vehicles that he never drove or exhibited. Upon its receipt from Chinetti, the car was tucked away inside the central building of the junkyard, and until its display at the RM Sotheby’s Monterey auction in 2024, remained there. Over time, as was its owner’s wont, a few pieces were sold off, the front bumpers, the shift knob, the tool kit, the jack, and the spare wheel among them. Yet, with 73,387 kilometers (~45,600 miles) recorded at the time of cataloguing, the car remains, unimpeachably, spectacularly genuine: retaining its original, matching-numbers engine, gearbox, rear axle, steering box, and front spindles, all numbered and correlating to the data card; its four road wheels, all with matching date codes; and its factory alloy bodywork, with the two digits of the body number, 26, found on both doors, the edge of the dashboard, and in the interior roof panel. Extremely few of these oft-raced, oft-wrecked competition cars led such an apparently benign life, and have survived so well.

In fact, the only collision damage readily evident on the car is a prominent dent in the rear: At some point in 1981, Rudi apparently backed into the Gullwing with his forklift.

While not technically “lost,” having been listed with Rudi Klein in multiple 300 SL rosters and registers, chassis number 198.043.5500872 has, like so many vehicles in this storied location, been inaccessible to the world. In fact, it may well have been the most secretive vehicle in a collection legendary for its introversion, having actually remained within the walls of Porche Foreign Auto—and, in fact, largely within one building on the property—for nearly 50 years. It is now released as the final unrestored “Alloy” Gullwing, first owned by Luigi Chinetti, the sole example delivered in black—a car with what can safely be called an unduplicatable history.

Just mind the forklift.