1937 Mercedes-Benz W125

For the 1937 season, Mercedes-Benz developed a new racing car, the W 125. It was one of the fastest & most powerful grand prix cars manufactured. It reached the tremendous speed of 193 mph on the SPA circuit. The results list for the 1937 season testify to the almost total dominance of the W 125:

For the 1937 season, Mercedes-Benz developed a new racing car, the W 125. It was one of the fastest & most powerful grand prix cars manufactured. It reached the tremendous speed of 193 mph on the SPA circuit. The results list for the 1937 season testify to the almost total dominance of the W 125: Victories in the Grand Prix in Tripoli and the Avus Race, double victories in the Grands Prix in Germany, Italy and Brinn, triple victories in the Grands Prix in Monaco and Switzerland.

The W125 served as a replacement to the highly sucessfull W25 and the last Mercedes-Benz to comply with 750 kg formula regulations. Design elements were largely affected by the formula race regulations at the time. During the years of 1934, 35, 36 & 37 there were no rules governing the size and aspiration of engines. This allowed for cars of extreme power and speed to race during that era. In 1937 the only primary limit imposed on the teams was a maximum weight of 850kgs. This was rasied from the 750kgs imposed in the previous 1936 season.

The W125 backbone consisted of an extremely sturdy, tubular oval frame made from special steel, with four cross members. It benefited from tests with production car frames as, for instance, the one used on the 1938 generation of the Mercedes-Benz 230. The wheels were located differently, by double wishbones and coil springs at the front, as on the celebrated, noble 500 K and 540 K models, and by a double-joint De Dion rear axle which ensured constant camber, plus longitudinally installed torsion bar springs and lever-type shock absorbers. Lateral links transferred thrust and brake moments to the chassis.

After extensive tests on the Nürburgring, the engineer Rudolf Uhlenhaut came up with a revolutionary suspension configuration: setting a precedent for later Grand Prix car designers, Uhlenhaut just reversed the basic suspension set-up used until then, stiff springing but little damping: the W 125 had soft springs with long spring travel and stiff dampers and thus served as a role model for all modern Mercedes-Benz sports cars. Its outer appearance resembled its predecessor’s, unmistakable all the same by the three cooling air inlets. For the ultra-fast Avus race on 30 May 1937 (Hermann Lang achieved an average speed of 261.7 km/h), it was kitted out with a streamlined body. The transmission and differential formed an integrated unit. The car’s eight-cylinder in-line engine represented the highest evolutionary stage of the Grand Prix machine used since 1934. The supercharger was positioned behind the carburettors and thus supplied with the mixture itself – a first with Mercedes-Benz racing cars.

Although the W 125 served its fast purpose for one year only, it did so with great variability. It could precisely be adjusted to the respective racetrack by means of different transmissions, tank volumes and petrol cocktails, carburettors, superchargers, rim and tire sizes, tire treads and even exterior dimensions. Engine power, torque, top speed and the speeds achieved in the individual gears varied accordingly. As many as eight different transmission ratios were available, for instance, plus two rear-wheel sizes (7.00-19 and 7.00-22). An output of 592 hp (435 kW) at 5800 rpm quoted by the factory refers to the Gran Premio d’Italia in Livorno on 12 September 1937. The engine, which had arrived at a capacity of 5660 cc in the meantime, devoured one litre per kilometre, an aggressive special mixture made up of 88 percent methanol, 8.8 percent acetone and traces of other substances. Ready to race, the W 125 weighed 1097 kilograms (1021 kilograms without driver) in that configuration, including 240 litres of petrol, seven litres of water, nine litres of engine oil and 3.5 litres of transmission oil. The Untertürkheim engineers evoked up to 646 hp (475 kW) from the 222-kilogram engine on the test bench, corresponding to a massive power-to-swept-volume ratio of 114 hp (84 kW) and an equally astounding power-to-weight ratio of 1.16 kilograms per horsepower. Those were values that were surpassed only decades later, just like Hermann Lang’s average speed of 261.7 km/h in that year’s Avus race.

W125 Victories:
Jul25/37 German GP-N?rburgring, Rudolf Caracciola
Aug08/37 Monaco GP-Monte Carlo, M. v. Brauchitsch
Aug22/37 Swiss GP-Bremgarten, Rudolf Caracciola
Sep12/37 Italian GP-Livorno, Rudolf Caracciola
Sep26/37 Masaryk GP-Brno, Rudolf Caracciola

Pictures & Galleries

Specs & Performance

submitted byRichard Owen
engineM 125 F V8
positionFront Longitudinal
aspirationSupercharged
valvetrainDOHC 4 Valves / Cyl
displacement5660 cc / 345.4 in³
bore94 mm / 3.7 in
stroke102 mm / 4.02 in
power441.5 kw / 592 bhp @ 5800 rpm
specific output104.59 bhp per litre
bhp/weight710.68 bhp per tonne
redline6000
body / frameAluminum over Oval Tube Frame
driven wheelsRWD
front tires5.25×17
rear tires7.00×19
front brakesLockheed Hydrualic Drums
rear brakesLockheed Hydrualic Drums
steeringWorm & Nut
f suspensionUnequal Wishbones w/Coil Springs, Hydrualic Shock Absorbers
r suspensionDe Dion Axle w/Torsion Bar Springs, Hydrualic Shock Absorbers
curb weight833 kg / 1836 lbs
wheelbase2798 mm / 110.2 in
front track1473 mm / 58.0 in
rear track1412 mm / 55.6 in
length4200 mm / 165.4 in
width1750 mm / 68.9 in
height1200 mm / 47.2 in
transmission4-Speed Manual
gear ratios2.13:1, 1.37:1, 1.18:1, 0.94:1
final drive3.52:1
top speed~321.9 kph / 200.0 mph

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