La casa de subastas Bonhams confirmó que mañana saldrá a la venta el Mercedes-Benz W196 que Juan Manuel Fangio condujera para ganar los Grandes Premios de Alemania y Suiza, en 1954. Este ejemplar, con el número de chasis 00006/54, podría alcanzar un precio récord superior a los 10 millones de dólares.

El W196 marcó el regreso de Mercedes-Benz a la Fórmula 1 tras la Segunda Guerra Mundial. Fue el primer auto de Grand Prix de la marca con ruedas descubiertas y tiene un motor ocho cilindros con 2.5 litros de cilindrada.

Este auto introdujo numerosas innovaciones tecnológicas en la Fórmula 1, como la inyección de combustible, la suspensión independiente en las cuatro ruedas y el chasis multitubular.

El W196 Open-Wheel fue una evolución del W196 Streamliner (carrozado). El Streamliner era un auto muy aerodinámico y apropiado para los circuitos veloces, pero difícil de maniobrar con precisión en los autódromos más trabados. La versión con ruedas descubiertas fue creada a pedido de Fangio.

La subasta del W196 se realizará durante el Festival de la Velocidad de Goodwood.

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VIDEO: Mercedes-Benz W196 - "¡Fangio, Fangio!"

(Gracias a Cobra427, LuchoA13 y Alejandro F. por el dato)

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Comunicado de prensa de Bonhams German silver going for gold!

Bonhams' annual Sale at this year's Goodwood Festival of Speed will feature not only one of the most significant motor cars of the 20th Century but also the most important historic Grand Prix racing car ever offered at public auction.

It is the 1954 2½-litre straight-8 Mercedes-Benz W196 einsitzer– chassis number '00006/54' – in which five-times World Champion Driver Juan Manuel Fangio won both the 1954 German and Swiss Grand Prix races. These great victories were the first two to be achieved in succession by the frontier-technology Mercedes-Benz factory Formula 1 team in its postwar racing come-back. Chassis '00006' also has special significance as the first open-wheeled slipper-bodied postwar Mercedes-Benz ever to win a Formula 1 Grand Prix race – having made its debut in that German GP.

The car's innovative W196 design also marked the successful introduction to Formula 1 of the following technologies:

  • Fuel-injected engine
  • All-independent suspension
  • Multi-tubular 'spaceframe' lightweight chassis design
  • All-round inboard-mounted brakes
  • The in-line or 'straight-8' engine 'lay-down' configuration to minimise the car's overall height
  • Power take-off from the centre of the engine's long 8-cylinder crankshaft to minimise vibration

The FIA governing body of International motor sport launched its first truly postwar set of Grand Prix regulations in 1954, demanding unsupercharged engines of no more than 2½-litres engine capacity. Mercedes-Benz – who had previously dominated Grand Prix racing in 1908, 1914 and 1934-39 –missed the first two 1954 World Championship rounds in Argentina and Belgium. But they then made their shattering debut in the 1954 French Grand Prix at Reims-Gueux. Their all-new W196 cars ran there in enveloping-bodied 'Stromlinienwagen' form, instantly setting totally new performance standards as Juan Manuel Fangio and team-mate Karl Kling finished first and second in both qualifying and the race.

National media and the specialist sporting press trumpeted the same simple message: "Mercedes are Back"!

However, the W196 Stromlinienwagen cars with their enclosed wheels proved difficult to place upon the more twisty venue of the following British Grand Prix at Silverstone. Fangio requested an open-wheeled, W196 variant for the following German Grand Prix on the twisty 14.2-mile Nurburging road circuit. Mercedes-Benz reacted instantly, tailoring new cars '00005' and '00006' to Fangio's recommendation.

And it was in this actual car – chassis '00006' - now to be offered by Bonhams at Goodwood -that Fangio immediately won the German Grand Prix. He then repeated the feat in the following Swiss Grand Prix on the daunting Bremgarten forest circuit at Berne – storming round at uncatchable pace in '00006' to win by 58.7 seconds from Argentine compatriot Jose Froilan Gonzalez's out-classed Ferrari. This Swiss victory was Fangio's third in four Grand Prix races, and assured him of his second Drivers' World Championship title.

Thus, Bonhams Goodwood Festival of Speed auction will offer this iconic landmark-technology Mercedes-Benz W196 as the double-Grand Prix-winning car in which Fangio – no less – clinched the second of his long-standing record five Drivers' World Championship titles.

This Bonhams sale of the ex-Fangio 1954 German and Swiss GP-winning Mercedes-Benz W196 is – on so many fronts –a classic car auction first.

Robert Brooks, Chairman of Bonhams and handling the sale of the Mercedes-Benz, comments, "My motoring auction career spans five decades and I have been privileged to have handled some of the world's most desirable and important motor cars. To handle the sale of this legendary W196 Grand Prix Car – the only one out of captivity– could well be the pinnacle. Our Goodwood Festival of Speed auction is shaping up to even eclipse the record breaking Sale of last year."

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