RE: Maddest Mercedes G-wagen ever for sale
RE: Maddest Mercedes G-wagen ever for sale
Yesterday

Maddest Mercedes G-wagen ever for sale

Built for Dakar by AMG, powered by a 6.0-litre V8, owned by Clay Regazzoni. Are you not entertained?


Mercedes-Benz G 600 TE AMG. The name rather says it all. Today we’re very familiar with the concept of AMG-perfected, V8-powered G-Class - indeed, they constitute the bulk of UK sales. But back in the ‘80s, that prospect must’ve seemed as distant as the moon. The fledgling G-wagen, originally developed with military use in mind, was arguably more readily associated with the custom-made Popemobile that Mercedes had delivered to the Vatican in 1979 than fast-paced dune bashing. Or indeed Chelsea tractoring. 

However, by the end of the decade, the Dakar rally had become a proving ground for manufacturers with proper off-road motorsport pedigree. Peugeot won in 1987 with Ari Vatanen driving. Mercedes, using AMG as a conduit, eventually decided to horn in on the act, inevitably selecting its teak-tough 4x4 as the ideal desert warrior. Except it wasn’t ideal at all, of course, and required the kind of extensive reconfiguring that would make it suitable for F1 veteran Clay Regazzoni to have a shot at the title. 

Most notably, there was the engine. Characteristically, AMG selected the most powerful one on offer, and still insisted that its displacement be increased to 6.0 litres. Thus the G600 earned its name and around 327hp, with 384lb ft of torque on the side for good measure - figures that might seem modest by today's standards but were suitably muscular for a late-'80s rally machine that needed naturally aspirated reliability as much as power.

The engine was repositioned as far back as possible for optimal weight distribution – a crucial consideration when tackling the treacherous dunes of North Africa. By 1990, the standard G-Wagen steel body was ditched entirely in favour of a lightweight cocktail of fibreglass, Kevlar and aluminium, while the underbody received special carbon Kevlar protection to withstand the punishment that would be inflicted upon it.

No less impressive sounding is the 450-litre fuel capacity, split between multiple safety tanks. That's not a typo – we're talking about carrying the equivalent of nine standard fuel tanks, allowing the G600 and its monster V8 to cover vast distances between refuelling points. There was also the small matter of ensuring the car could be operated by Regazzoni, who had been left paralysed from the waist down by a nasty shunt at the 1980 US Grand Prix. Talk about a challenge on top of a challenge. 

Ultimately, Dakar proved too much for man and machine. The G600, one of only two or three ever made (depending on who you consult), entered the rally on several occasions, but met with little success. Nevertheless, Regazzoni had obviously become attached to this car specifically, and is said to have campaigned it on several other international rallies before retiring it to his personal collection. Sold following his death, the G600 has since featured in other historical events and apparently stands ready to compete in a few more, assuming its next keeper is brave enough to compete in what is essentially a unique historical footnote. Shame not to though, right? 


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

nismo48

Original Poster:

5,960 posts

227 months

Yesterday (12:43)
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P.O.A

Ussrcossack

851 posts

62 months

Yesterday (12:52)
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Nice
But give me a Unimog anyday

LRDefender

372 posts

28 months

Yesterday (12:58)
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Amazing story and a great article, thanks for sharing.

SitCet

170 posts

161 months

Yesterday (13:30)
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Very cool. Took me a few seconds for my eyes to accept it isn't a Shogun / Pajero

Johnspex

4,884 posts

204 months

Yesterday (13:37)
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The advert says "world Champion". What he achieved is, of course, more than millions of people will but he was never world champion.

shakotan

10,836 posts

216 months

Yesterday (14:08)
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That bodywork and using W124 head and S124 taillamps, it looks more like an ML than a G.

eldar

24,726 posts

216 months

Yesterday (14:26)
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shakotan said:
That bodywork and using W124 head and S124 taillamps, it looks more like an ML than a G.
Looks like a well barried pick up to me.

Robertb

3,122 posts

258 months

Yesterday (15:01)
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Just the job for South Oxfordshire A road surfaces

CountyLines

3,858 posts

23 months

Yesterday (15:12)
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And the 6x6 is "madder" IMO.

blue_haddock

4,744 posts

87 months

Yesterday (15:37)
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CountyLines said:
And the 6x6 is "madder" IMO.
Was also my first thought

EK9_CTR

674 posts

154 months

Yesterday (16:28)
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Best sounding Dakar machine?

Purple Jazz

2 posts

Yesterday (16:56)
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I didn’t know until just now that Clay Regazzoni was paralysed from the waist down when he raced this at Dakar. Presumably this has been converted back to ‘standard’?

Frogmella

309 posts

110 months

Yesterday (16:56)
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Watching Duke VHS's in period and seeing this mad world of Dakar, before internet was joyous. Then getting Eurosport to watch highlights of the previous day in the late hours.

In a world of instant gratification, the exhilaration of finding some content was wonderful.

Dapster

8,547 posts

200 months

Yesterday (17:58)
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I doubt Mercedes were anywhere near this - not only would they not campaign something that looked nothing like the production car, they actually DID enter the G Wagon officially.

The official entry was a 280GE in 1982. It did well and finished 3rd. Another year of development saw power raised, aero additions to reduce fuel consumptions, weight savings and various other mods overseen by Mercedes France. The great Jacky Ickx took it to victory in 1983.



https://www.classicandsportscar.com/features/merce...

Jader1973

4,748 posts

220 months

Yesterday (21:45)
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shakotan said:
That bodywork and using W124 head and S124 taillamps, it looks more like an ML than a G.
And doors? They aren’t G doors.

The naming convention is also wrong for a G. The “TE” bit is what was used on the fuel injected W123 / W124 estates (T = estate, E = injected). A fuel injected G would have been GE (G= gelandewagen, E = injected).

It s a proper mix of things.



Edited by Jader1973 on Tuesday 23 December 21:47

BunkMoreland

3,003 posts

27 months

Yesterday (22:43)
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Ussrcossack said:
Nice
But give me a Unimog anyday

You really dont want a Unimog! Its a farm/utility vehicle and not at all suitable for driving on the road any sort of distance! laugh

Not even the 1of1 prototype Mercedes made for a special customer!



Lots of people seem to think these are like a big Land Rover Defender or a jacked up G-wagon. Tough and rugged. And they are, but they are not cars! They are closer to a (brand new) combine harvester in terms of driving or turning circle or speed

https://www.carandclassic.com/search?make=mercedes...

BeastieBoy73

758 posts

132 months

Is it rolling on Fuchs? Apologies if it was mentioned in the article.

soad

34,212 posts

196 months

Purple Jazz said:
I didn t know until just now that Clay Regazzoni was paralysed from the waist down when he raced this at Dakar. Presumably this has been converted back to standard ?
Vendor’s website has many more photos, including the person you mentioned.