Background
The Mercedes Benz SL series of cars can legitimately trace their lineage right back to the 1952 300SL racing car (W194) that was the firm’s first post WWII competition car and the first to bear the “SL (Super Light)” nomenclature. This racer would go on to provide the basis for 300SL road car (W198) and its revolutionary “gullwing” doors. Then on through the popular 190SL (W121) to the R107’s direct predecessor, the W113 “Pagoda” SL of the 1960s and early 1970s.
Mercedes Benz were never a company to take the easy way out, so the R107 was an all-new design based more heavily on the saloon range of the time. It was a savvy move, giving the R107 more grown up and significantly more advanced underpinnings. Consequently, the R107 became the company’s second most long-lived model after the G-Wagen and went on to sell over 300,000 units over its 17-year production life. Once again, the car enjoyed great success in the USA with 60% of R107s being sold there.
The 300SL appeared as the result of a 1985 late-life update of the range. This delivered a number of enhancements to the range, including bigger wheels, a common front spoiler and various suspension and interior upgrades. Possibly the most obvious change, however, was the replacement of the “entry level” 280SL with the 300SL. This marked the revival of the 300SL name and helped remind the world of where the SL story began, over 30 years earlier.







