RE: Gallery: 300 SEL 6.8 AMG Meets S63 AMG
RE: Gallery: 300 SEL 6.8 AMG Meets S63 AMG
Thursday 10th June 2010

Gallery: 300 SEL 6.8 AMG Meets S63 AMG

Fantastic images of two AMG uber-saloons at Spa-Francorchamps



AMG has issued some spectacular images of its legendary 1971 touring car, the 300 SEL 6.8, on track at Spa with its latest S 63 AMG showcar.

We covered the S 63 back in March, but for anyone unaware of the 300 SEL's heritage, here are some excerpts from the accompanying press release:

Spa-Francorchamps (Belgium) - Wide, spectacular and clad in an authentic racing car outfit - two very special S-Class saloon models from the AMG stable. One is the racing touring car of 1971, the 300 SEL 6.8 AMG, and the other is the S 63 AMG showcar. With identical sponsoring and the memorable start number "35", the new high-performance model is a reminder of an historic success: on 25 July 1971, the bright red four-door saloon crossed the finishing line in second place at the 24-hour race in Spa-Francorchamps. This triumph in the car's very first race made AMG world-famous overnight.


AMG was anything but the favourite to win this classic Belgian long-distance race: it faced the mighty opposition of the Ford Capri RS, BMW 2800 CS, Chevrolet Camaro, Opel Commodore and Alfa Romeo GTA. Nobody expected that the large luxury saloon would be able to keep up.

The red four-door saloon already showed its potential in training, when Clemens Schickentanz surprised everyone with the fifth-fastest training time. Indeed nobody at AMG had expected fifth place in a starting line-up of 60 cars.


Pole position was occupied by the favourite, the Chevrolet Camaro driven by Ivo Grauls and Peter Hoffmann, followed by the Alpina-BMW 2800 CS of Niki Lauda/Gérard Larousse, then the first works Ford Capri with Dieter Glemser and Alex Soler-Roig, and the Schnitzer-BMW 2800 CS piloted by Rauno Aaltonen and Helmut Kelleners. All in all, 60 racing touring cars were seeking to beat the stopwatch on the then 14.1 kilometre course in the Ardennes, driven by well-known names such as Hans-Joachim-Stuck, Jochen Mass, Toine Hezemans, Willy Kauhsen, Achim Warmbold and Rainer Braun.


On the first lap, driver Hans Heyer in the 300 SEL 6.8 AMG was able to manoeuvre into 3rd place right behind the Ford Capri (Glemser/Soler-Roig) and the Chevrolet Camaro (Grauls/Hoffmann). After a turbulent race with a rainstorm at midnight and numerous breakdowns, the "35" finally crossed the finishing line in second place behind the works Capri driven by Glemser/Soler-Roig. The AMG saloon had absolved exactly 308 laps in the 24 hours.


Hans Heyer looks back fondly on this race: "We knew we could win, but the others did not know that yet!" The AMG saloon was unbeatable on the straight, however the braking system substantially adopted from the standard model had problems coping with the weight of the car (1635 kilograms). "But on the old Spa course the discs had plenty of time to cool down, and nobody was able to catch us on the long straights," the now 67 year-old reminisces. With a top speed of 265 km/h, the 300 SEL 6.8 AMG was tailor-made for the fast Belgian track. The interior had a luxurious atmosphere with its standard appointments such as power steering, air suspension, carpets, panelled doors and a dashboard with exotic wood trim. The spectators along the trackside enthusiastically cheered the large saloon with its unmistakable V8 sound. "The outsider quickly became the public's favourite," says Hans Heyer.


The AMG racing saloon was technically based on the Mercedes-Benz 300 SEL 6.3. With an engine output of 184 kW (250 hp) at 4000 rpm and a top speed of 220 km/h, this luxury saloon was Germany's fastest regular production car at the time. It was not only an enlarged displacement from 6330 to 6835 cc that increased the output to 315 kW (428 hp) at 5500 rpm, and torque from 500 to 608 newton metres. AMG co-founder Erhard Melcher "tweaked" the eight-cylinder power unit using classic methods: high-precision camshafts and modified rocker arms, lighter connecting rods, new Mahle pistons, larger intake valves, modified combustion chambers, polished intake and exhaust ducts, a new intake tract with two throttle flaps and a racing exhaust system ensured a better gas throughflow and made higher engine speeds possible. Endurance was improved by installing an additional oil cooler and finely balancing the crankshaft.


The wings were flared to make room for the lightweight size 10 x 15 and 12 x 15-inch magnesium wheels adopted from a C 111 test car. Aluminium doors helped to reduce the car's weight from the original 1830 to 1635 kilograms. Larger front wishbones, a more robust rear axle with a heavy-duty differential and smaller, stiffer suspension air bellows made the saloon fit for the racetrack.

The unexpected success in the 24-hour race at Spa-Francorchamps made AMG, which was founded in 1967, well-known overnight - and marked the start of an impressive success story."







Author
Discussion

Oddball RS

Original Poster:

1,757 posts

244 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
Wierd isn't it, you can see how style has progressed and moved in different directions, bigger, higher waistlines, silly size wheels, characterless interiors etc, style is definately developing but is it improving?

Garlick

40,601 posts

266 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
I love these pics so, so much.

I know which one I want to own though, and it's not the new one.....

odysseyireland

16 posts

264 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
It really does show just how bloated most modern cars have become through both legislation and popular consumer demand for ever bigger and more luxurious cars.

I would have loved to see the old one in action in the race, and just look at that grille, I wonder how many times the mechanics whacked their head on that...that's gonna leave a mark wink !

GTO Scott

3,816 posts

250 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
I'd love to have a 300 SEL 6.3. Far more style and character than the current S63.

Mermaid

21,492 posts

197 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
GTO Scott said:
I'd love to have a 300 SEL 6.3. Far more style and character than the current S63.
The happy pre-computer and health & safety days.

dan101smith

17,023 posts

237 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
I was really hoping that the S63 would be stripped out with just a rollcage and bucket seat.

ceriw

1,117 posts

231 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
GTO Scott said:
I'd love to have a 300 SEL 6.3. Far more style and character than the current S63.
for me the wonder of this 6.3 is that it is so 'christinesque' - the engineers took a respectable limobarge and transformed it into a psychotic monster. beautiful for that.
Ein Stein full of character! Genius.

911stu

677 posts

239 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
Now thats a proper race car.

Wammer

394 posts

214 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
Does anyone know where these images are from.

dan101smith

17,023 posts

237 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
Wammer said:
Does anyone know where these images are from.
I saw them on PistonHeads, I think.

mat205125

17,790 posts

239 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
dan101smith said:
Wammer said:
Does anyone know where these images are from.
I saw them on PistonHeads, I think.
Here's a link wink

http://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&a...

nelly_h

138 posts

205 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
That old SEL is fantastic. Love the "racing" interior. Excellent decision to keep the wood dash and panelled doors. Winning is all very well, but it's better if you look cool doing it cool

havoc

32,993 posts

261 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
Lovely old beast...and that they came 2nd with so much of the interior just-so makes it even more impressive!

Oh - Pic of the week, please Paul!

Garlick

40,601 posts

266 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
POTW is already in the bag, and it's not this frown

Next week maybe?

Wammer

394 posts

214 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
mat205125 said:
dan101smith said:
Wammer said:
Does anyone know where these images are from.
I saw them on PistonHeads, I think.
Here's a link wink

http://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&a...
Oh your so funny. What i was meaning was where the original source was.

havoc

32,993 posts

261 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
Garlick said:
POTW is already in the bag, and it's not this frown

Next week maybe?
frownbanghead

It had better be good then... wink

LukeBird

17,170 posts

235 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
Nurse, nurse!!
sperm

Truly gorgeous car! thumbup
I rather want a 300SEL 6.3... smile

ArtVandelay

6,692 posts

210 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
havoc said:
Garlick said:
POTW is already in the bag, and it's not this frown

Next week maybe?
frownbanghead

It had better be good then... wink
Garlick's dyno print out probably hehe

Garlick

40,601 posts

266 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
scratchchin good idea

Nickellarse

533 posts

215 months

Thursday 10th June 2010
quotequote all
Such a solid motor the old SEL.

You could have a pretty severe prang in one and simply walk away!

Even if the straights were long, that's one heavy motor and those brakes must have taken a beasting.