RE: HWA Evo | PH Meets

Friday 18th April

HWA Evo | PH Meets

Plenty of special cars have left Affalterbach over the years - but none is quite like HWA's 500hp 190


You probably weren’t alone in overlooking or underestimating the HWA Evo. Barely a week passes these days without another backdate of some description being announced, and at a cursory glance, the 190 homage could look something like that. It would be fair to say as well that a homologation special of a small Mercedes saloon isn’t quite the global icon that a Porsche or Ferrari sports car is, and - dare it be uttered - the E30 M3 might be the more revered classic DTM racer. Might be.

Whatever the truth of that, it doesn’t take very long at HWA’s Affalterbach HQ - or just a little bit longer learning about the company - to establish the Evo is some way from what’s typically expected from a new car that looks a bit like an old one. This is Hans Werner Aufrecht’s company, after all; he’s literally the ‘A’ in AMG. So when Mercedes bought the company wholesale, Herr Aufrecht wanted to continue with awesome race cars and mad Mercedes Benzes, he founded HWA in the late '90s. What AMG was, before it was hybrid SUVs and badly bodykitted A-Classes, HWA still is: a super successful race team, and builders of some extraordinary limited-run road cars. This isn’t a few dedicated individuals re-engineering in a shed; it’s a globally renowned (in the right circles) motorsport outfit, with a sprawling factory bursting with expertise, decades of history - and a mission with the Evo to get those skills better known.

No team has won more in DTM than HWA. Those glorious (and extremely fast) GT3 Benzes that have been built with the 6.2 in are HWA’s work. They’re helping DeTomaso with the P72. None of that is directly associated with the Evo, yet it demonstrates the sort of attention to detail and expertise that’s going into this project. Race teams making road cars don’t just sweat every detail - they obsess over it. And the results tend to be very special indeed. 

That company ethos is exemplified by CTO Gordian Von Schöning. He fizzes around the factory tour like it’s the first time anyone’s been allowed into HWA, pointing out every detail from how they’ve changed the centre cap dish on the optional wheel from last year to the C-pillar vent like an original. “We want to create a project everyone can be proud of, that everyone feels responsible for, our own product,” he says. For too long, they’ve lived in the shadow of their (literal) Affalterbach neighbours. Timeframe and price have gone over initial estimates because everyone involved— nobody more than von Schöning— wants to make the Evo the very best it can be. 

Because not many people are aware of HWA, what it does, and what it’s capable of - Gordian says that on more than one occasion - it was assumed AMG owned the company, so there couldn’t be a collaboration with other OEMs. The Evo is part of the strategy to spread the word, but as an opening gambit, it must be the very best. “We have to do it the right way to promote the company because nobody knows the brand,” he adds, so early solutions that were maybe okay have been redone to the highest standard. Apparently, the stakeholders don’t love that approach, but HWA knows no other way. So the oil pump comprises 70 pieces, for example. 

Seeing 190s being prepped for an Evo overhaul demonstrates just how little is carried over. If you want to see why they don’t like the ‘restomod’ term, you need to say the bare frame that’ll be used - a shell implies too much Mercedes in there. (What you see here will be stripped down even further.) HWA has engineered a floor, a roof, subframes, essentially a whole new chassis for the Evo; each will get an HWA VIN, and investment is being made now for future cars and collaborations. “We can make it a longer wheelbase, wider tracks for the next car” adds Gordian, in case any further confirmation of their future ambition was required. They have a tonne of proprietary bits, including electronics, that can be used again or sold to third parties. The Evo is the beginning of something much bigger, not some flash-in-the-pan cash-in on a broader trend. 

Indeed, the fact that Bosch is a supplier on the project demonstrates just what an undertaking the Evo is. Two cars are being tested by Bosch for a year, at a cost of many millions, to hone the ABS and driver assists for every condition and every drive mode. Pretty much as any large OEM would, albeit with fewer cars and for a bit less time. This isn’t a case of picking some nice off-the-shelf bits and hoping it all works together; HWA is re-engineering here, from the ground up, with help from the best in the business. It says a lot that Bosch is involved, really - they don’t help develop every reimagination. And those details perhaps get lost when thinking about whether the wheels or the lights look quite right. 

The engine is a surprisingly familiar Mercedes M276 V6. But it’s really only the block and the heads that will make it to the Evo, HWA putting in their own pistons, conrods, and turbos to deliver the experience they’re after. And something like 500hp. “We don’t want it to be comparable”, Gordi says, suggesting he’s fond of some lag, some turbo excitement, and some drama when it comes to the driving experience. Even if Euro 6E - told you it was a proper new car - makes the sound hard to get right. “This is an emotional project, we want to make an emotional car”, he adds. 

That extends to the gearbox, Merc’s turbo V6 allied to a Dana Graziano six-speed manual. The same manual, in fact, as found in the original Lamborghini Gallardo and Audi R8. So that’s surely another box ticked for emotion. The steering wheel has deliberately been designed for minimal distraction from the task at hand. Let’s just hope buyer personalisation can extend to a nicer gearknob than is currently installed.

It’s easy to be confident about that, because the fit and finish of prototypes is deeply impressive. The way the carbon melds with the original bodywork, the way the engine sits a long way back (the weight distribution will favour the rear), and even silly stuff like the way the boot floor is sculpted all point to countless hours spent sweating the small stuff. Of course, we’re long past the time of anything being hastily assembled, and it’s easy to be impressed in a dedicated production facility, but they’re really pouring everything into making the best car they can. Gordian even concedes that not having a motorsport rulebook is hard, because the freedom of a road car project means it’s hard to know where to stop.

This finessing and obsessing will go until September, when final production specs will be locked in. Discussions remain ongoing, for example, with three tyre manufacturers about the right rubber, whether right-hand drive will be offered, and just how track-focused the Affalterbach package needs to be. Because there is a hope to race these Evos one day, and who better to provide support for that endeavour than the people who’ve had a hand in some of the greatest Mercedes race cars ever?

Whatever HWA decides the final Evo will come out like, it’s hard to imagine the 100 customers being anything but overawed. This car is receiving the level of investment a conventional new model would, only it’s a 500hp, manual rear-drive saloon that looks like a superhero-spec 190E and is being built by a race team. With more models to follow. Those that don’t know HWA for the moment are sure to soon.


Author
Discussion

1781cc

Original Poster:

612 posts

108 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
Everything about this is right for me, except not having the funds for one.

CountyLines

2,836 posts

17 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
Pretty special thing.

Motormouth88

585 posts

74 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
Absolutely fantastic.

Twinair

859 posts

156 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
That’s no backstreet garage ‘upgrade’ - buy this, drive this & keep it, it’s a forever car. Wow - that’s some attention to detail & OEM build quality. Superb.

Gecko1978

11,300 posts

171 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
2 things I hate about this.

1) we will never see cars like this again. No EV will ever conjure up such emotions

2) I can't afford it


Newbie2023

313 posts

24 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
I don't think that the super wide arches suit it at all personally, especially at the rear. The original looks better proportioned to me although I could imagine somewhere between the two being a sweeter spot. The interior looks very enticing with it simplistic quality and you have to respect the level of detail being thrown at the project - right down to them re-engineering the structure to provide more modern levels of crash protection.

ZX10R NIN

29,108 posts

139 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
1781cc said:
Everything about this is right for me, except not having the funds for one.
+1 biglaugh

I've been following this project & it's joint number one (Kimera 037) on my list should a big Euromillions come in.

Maccmike8

1,315 posts

68 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
5 stars that.

Its Just Adz

16,124 posts

223 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
Gecko1978 said:
2 things I hate about this.

1) we will never see cars like this again. No EV will ever conjure up such emotions

2) I can't afford it
Come now, in 20 years there will be a Omoda restomod with wide arches and a new battery, don't you think?

Magikarp

1,262 posts

62 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
Absolutely remarkable. I love this.

BOR

4,979 posts

269 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
Superb work, but I'm left asking, why?

Why start there, if you are going to toss so much of the original away?

You might aswell start with a clean sheet, and build something from scratch.

A good advert for their capabilities, but a bit hollow.

Skaben

321 posts

155 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
I guess it’s what they know, having worked on Mercedes for so long. Looks a bit OTT for me, but can’t fault the engineering

Guvernator

13,740 posts

179 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
My old man had an original 190 Evo many moons ago so I have a real soft spot for them and with HWA involved, I should love this but it doesn't quite hit the spot for me.

Don't get me wrong it's a fantastic piece of kit but as someone else has mentioned, the wide arch kit is just a bit too OTT for me and where it my money, I'd want something a little closer to the original.

Also this might be a bit churlish but turbo's in a 190 Evo just don't seem right. The original had a fantastic fizzy NA engine, I'd have preferred if they stuck to that and just tuned the NA engine. The 2.5 v6 engine in the original produced 360bhp in race spec so I'm sure with modern tech, they could have got 400bhp in NA guise which would be plenty for a car of this type.

BigChiefmuffinAgain

1,355 posts

112 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
If they are building just 100 cars, I suspect they are not spending "many millions" with Bosch...

JJJ.

2,629 posts

29 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
I've no doubt it will awesome in every respect, nice too, that it's far from any retro mod, as it seems to be 95% new.
But, if push came to shove I'd take an original 190E EVOII over this. Actually, I'd take an EVOI with the AMG pack.
No, no scrap that I'd want both. biggrin


Guvernator

13,740 posts

179 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
JJJ. said:
I've no doubt it will awesome in every respect, nice too, that it's far from any retro mod, as it seems to be 95% new.
But, if push came to shove I'd take an original 190E EVOII over this. Actually, I'd take an EVOI with the AMG pack.
No, no scrap that I'd want both. biggrin
Yep pretty much my thoughts too.

Similar to that Prodrive Subaru Impeza retro mod thingie that was out last year. It's nice but for half the price, I'd rather take an original Impreza 22b.

JJJ.

2,629 posts

29 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
Guvernator said:
JJJ. said:
I've no doubt it will awesome in every respect, nice too, that it's far from any retro mod, as it seems to be 95% new.
But, if push came to shove I'd take an original 190E EVOII over this. Actually, I'd take an EVOI with the AMG pack.
No, no scrap that I'd want both. biggrin
Yep pretty much my thoughts too.

Similar to that Prodrive Subaru Impeza retro mod thingie that was out last year. It's nice but for half the price, I'd rather take an original Impreza 22b.
I'm biased, having had a very long relationship with a 190E 2.5-16. Many car's came and went but it always remained.

Guvernator

13,740 posts

179 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
JJJ. said:
I'm biased, having had a very long relationship with a 190E 2.5-16. Many car's came and went but it always remained.
My old man had one many moons ago. One of my core memories is getting to drive it on a "private road" when I was 19. Up till then, the quickest car I'd driven was a Golf GL. The 190 only had around 200bhp but it blew my mind. The dogleg gearbox took a bit of getting used to but that v6 engine was an absolute peach.

JJJ.

2,629 posts

29 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
Guvernator said:
JJJ. said:
I'm biased, having had a very long relationship with a 190E 2.5-16. Many car's came and went but it always remained.
My old man had one many moons ago. One of my core memories is getting to drive it on a "private road" when I was 19. Up till then, the quickest car I'd driven was a Golf GL. The 190 only had around 200bhp but it blew my mind. The dogleg gearbox took a bit of getting used to but that v6 engine was an absolute peach.
I presume you mean 16V engine. Yes, it was a peach and more refined than the S14's in the M3's. Mine was dyno'ed at 202bhp (f/wheel) after full head overhaul. Not much in today's terms, but excellent for an N/A at the time, it was a reasonable light car too. The dog leg was a non issue once the brain got use to it. Truly great car's.


Newbie2023

313 posts

24 months

Friday 18th April
quotequote all
Guvernator said:
JJJ. said:
I've no doubt it will awesome in every respect, nice too, that it's far from any retro mod, as it seems to be 95% new.
But, if push came to shove I'd take an original 190E EVOII over this. Actually, I'd take an EVOI with the AMG pack.
No, no scrap that I'd want both. biggrin
Yep pretty much my thoughts too.

Similar to that Prodrive Subaru Impeza retro mod thingie that was out last year. It's nice but for half the price, I'd rather take an original Impreza 22b.
Me too, one of my favourite pics below;



I, on the other hand, definitely would take a P25 over a 22B regardless of it's price. It would actually be the very first choice for me if I ever got the opportunity to compile a dream garage in reality simply due to it's size, practicality, capabilities and most importantly the knowledge of who put it together and what went in to it.