Background
The evocative 300SL Coupe, a.k.a. the Gullwing, was an epochal moment for Mercedes-Benz road car production. Building on the foundations of the 1952 race car that won both Le Mans and the Carrera Panamericana, it featured a space frame chassis and dry-sumped, fuel-injected six-cylinder engine and a majestic body featuring those iconic doors – it was a glorious beast in all respects.
Riding fast on big brother’s coat tails was the 190SL. While the Gullwing was all race-derived glory, its little sibling was aimed directly at North America’s affluent boulevards. Aesthetically, it looked like a scaled down version minus the tin top – no bad thing, at all. That combination was perfect for its target market and between ’54 and ’63 Mercedes-Benz would ship an impressive 25,881 units.
Power came via a twin carburettor version of the standard 190’s 1.9-litre lump, which was good for 105bhp @ 5700rpm. The four-speed ‘box was floor-mounted with synchromesh on every cog and the brakes received a servo in production year 2.
Such was the success of both the Gullwing and the 190SL that a full-fat 300SL Roadster followed in 1957. Ever since those heady Fifties and early Sixties days, the letters SL have held special significance for Mercedes-Benz fans.
Luckily the people behind the Three-Pointed Star have continued to endow us with generation after generation of their Sport Leicht beauties, but none have quite entranced as the elegantly beautiful originals.






