Showing posts with label Nurburgring. Show all posts

AMG Customer Sports in the 24 Hours Nürburgring: Third place for the SLS AMG GT3

After 24 hours and 155 driven laps the AMG customer sports teams crossed the finish line with three of the six entered SLS AMG GT3. The gullwing car with race number 66 of the Hankook Team HEICO Motorsport, which finished the race with the highest position and was driven by Lance David Arnold (GER), Christiaan Frankenhout (NL), Pierre Kaffer (GER) und Andreas Simonsen (S) ended the endurance race in the third overall position after a commanding finish. The sister car with race number 65, which was driven by double starter Lance David Arnold (GER), Kenneth Heyer (GER), Alexandros Margaritis (GER) and Bernd Schneider (GER), had to end the race in the 152nd lap in the third position approximately 15 minutes prior to the end of the race because of an engine cooling circuit failure.

The SLS AMG GT3 of ROWE RACING with race number 21 which was driven by Mark Bullitt (USA), Marko Hartung (GER), Roland Rehfeld (GER) and Michael Zehe (GER) finished tenth. The sister car with race number 22 and Klaus Graf (GER), Thomas Jäger (GER), Alexander Roloff (GER) and Jan Seyffarth (GER) as drivers had to end the race on Sunday morning while being in the front position because of problems with the right wheel suspension at the rear.

The Team Black Falcon came 14th with race number 16, which was driven by Christian Bracke (GER), Andrii Lebed (UA), Hannes Plesse (GER) and Reinhold Renger (GER). The sister car with race number 15, which was driven by Jeroen Bleekemolen (NL), Sean Edwards (GB), Manuel Metzger (GER) and Ralf Schall (GER) started in the third position and had to end the race already towards the end of the fourth lap at Döttinger Höhe because of a tyre failure.


In the commanding race with only slight discrepancies between the leading cars in the GT3 category, numerous changes in the lead took place. The SLS AMG GT3s with race numbers 65 and 66 of the Hankook Team HEICO Motorsport as well as number 22 of ROWE RACING were able to quickly establish themselves among the front runners and all of them took over the lead at different times of the race.


Ola Källenius, chairman of the board, Mercedes-AMG GmbH:
„We are proud of all three of the customer teams which took part in the 24 Hours Nürburgring with the SLS AMG GT3. Congratulations to the entire Hankook Team HEICO Motorsport for finishing third.

Uli Fritz, head of AMG customer sports:
„With the third place for the customer team Hankook Team HEICO Motorsport we finished with respectable results with our AMG customer sports programme compared with numerous teams which are supported by their company. Due to various problems, we were unfortunately not able to cross the finish line with three cars, which had proved competitive in the qualifying as well as the race.

Pierre Kaffer, Hankook Team HEICO Motorsport, race number 66:We are happy that our strategy to put our direct competitor under pressure towards the end of the race was successful, so that it was possible for us to finish among the top three. However, it is a pity that our sister car had to end the race 15 minutes prior to time. I want to thank my team colleagues and the Hankook Team HEICO Motorsport for the perfectly prepared car.“


Norbert Brückner, team manager Hankook Team HEICO Motorsport: „It was a narrow and commanding 24 hours race. We are satisfied with the third place – however, it is clearly very disappointing that our sister car had to end the race only 15 minutes prior to end. I want to thank all members of the Hankook Team HEICO Motorsport.“


Thomas Jäger, ROWE RACING, race number 22:
We are obviously disappointed by the fact that being in the front position, we had to abandon our chances to win prior to the end of the race because of technical difficulties with the rear wheel suspension. Until 10 o'clock today, our SLS AMG GT3 ran without any problems. Especially when it rained on early Sunday morning the gullwing car with the Dunlop rain tyres ran fantastically. My team colleague Klaus Graf drove by far the fastest laps in the field. After the race is before the race and that is why I am already looking forward to the 24 Hours next year. I want to thank the entire team of ROWE RACING. Congratulations to the Hankook Team HEICO Motorsport for the third overall position.

Anniversary edition: Fortieth jubilee of the famous endurance race


For many motorsports fans, the 24 Hours Nürburgring is the annual highlight in the motorsports season. 235,000 spectators came to watch the famous endurance race in the Eifel, which was held for the fortieth time in 2012. The anniversary edition of the race which is 24 hours long was held at the 25 kilometres long combination of the Nürburgring Nordschleife ("north loop") and the Grand Prix track. 169 cars and 650 drivers from 34 nations faced the competition, while 31 cars were entered in start positions in the most efficient and popular GT3 category.


Six Instructors of the AMG Driving Academy employed in the race


The six instructors of the AMG Driving Academy supporting the SLS AMG GT3 customer teams in the 24 Hours Nürburgring were Lance David Arnold, Thomas Jäger, Roland Rehfeld, Reinhold Renger, Bernd Schneider and Jan Seyffarth. Chief instructor Reinhold Renger is responsible for the entire programme and the specific course of instruction. It is part of the AMG Driving Academy's philosophy that the participants profit from the knowhow of the professional drivers – this is perfectly implemented in the MASTERS SLS AMG GT3.


MASTERS SLS AMG GT3: The highest level in the AMG Driving Academy programme deploys the racing version of the gullwing model as a training vehicle. With Bernd Schneider and Thomas Jäger as competent partners, the instructors, which were also responsible for all development and test drives of the SLS AMG GT3, are employed in the race. The AMG Driving Academy participants benefit from the modular design of the MASTERS SLS AMG GT3: four complementary stages guide the aspiring racing drivers to the finishing line – EXPERIENCE, WARM-UP, TRAINING and COMPETITION. Participants can take part in all MASTERS events in their own SLS AMG GT3 vehicles or in corresponding cars provided by AMG.


British GT Championship as framework programme at the Nürburgring


The third and fourth of the British GT Championship took place on May 18th and 19th of 2012 as framework programme of the 24 Hours Nürburgring. Both of the races were 60 minutes long and were held at the Grand Prix track of the Nürburgring. The British AMG customer sports team Preci-Spark with the twins David und Godfrey Jones as drivers of the SLS AMG GT3 with race number 22 finished sixth and tenth.














* Official photos and details courtesy of Mercedes-AMG GmbH *

Copyright © 2012, Mercedes-Benz-Blog. All rights reserved.

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Mercedes-Benz Classic in the “Elefantenrennen” 2012 at the Nürburgring

The history of Mercedes-Benz is rife with vehicles which have captivated and enticed enthusiasts and continue to do so to this day. This is particularly true of the legendary supercharged sports cars of types S, SS (W 06) and SSK (W 06 II) from the late 1920s and the early 1930s. These are amongst the few vehicles which have become legends in the history of the car.

Klaus Ludwig will drive a Mercedes-Benz SSK in the “Elefantenrennen” to take place during the ADAC Eifelrennen at the Nürburgring. Mercedes-Benz Classic is organising the event in particular to commemorate the first victory of a Mercedes-Benz supercharged sports car at the opening race of the Nürburgring on 19 June 1927. It was during that race that Rudolf Caracciola and Adolf Rosenberger won a surprising dual victory in a Mercedes-Benz type S, paving the way for many race wins in the history of supercharged sports cars.

What began in 1927 with a type S – S stood for “Sport” – Mercedes-Benz carried on one year later with the modified type SS – SS for “Super Sport” – of which 257 units were built in total. In late 1928 it was modified once again for hill climb racing, giving rise to the legendary model designation SSK – for “Super Sport Kurz” (Super Sport, Short). The modification consisted primarily of a shortening of a type S chassis to a wheelbase of 2950 millimetres. The short chassis was then paired with a new 7.1-litre engine.


Based on its origins, the SSK should actually have been called “SK”; however, the larger engine emphasises its relationship to the SS, making the name SSK a logical choice. Like the type S, the SSK had a radiator which was 42 millimetres lower, but like the SS, it bore the newer version of the brand logo: a single white, enamelled star inside a laurel wreath against a blue background.


In the years the followed, both models – but particularly the SSK – were not only contenders in most of the Daimler-Benz works team’s motorsport endeavours, they were also driven with great success by many private competitors. Certainly the greatest triumph was that of Rudolf Caracciola in 1931, when, together with Wilhelm Sebastian, he secured the final win of the Mille Miglia behind the wheel of an SSKL.


The engine designer Albert Heeß harnessed the engine’s last reserves for the works team’s motorsport cars. The larger of the two competition superchargers – referred to internally as the “Elefant” (elephant) – registered 310 hp (228 kW) on the test bench. This charger was designed for short-distance use, such as hill climb racing. It could run continuously, whereas the supercharger was otherwise normally activated by fully depressing the accelerator beyond a given pressure point. A compressor of this design could be engaged and disengaged via a linkage which the driver actuated using a locking lever below the steering wheel.


After 80 years, the “Elefantenrennen” celebrated a grand revival at the 2010 ADAC Eifelrennen, which also delighted the spectators in 2011. This year, the legendary Mercedes-Benz SSK supercharged sports car will commemorate the opening race.


Technical data for the Mercedes-Benz SSK 27/170/225 hp


Production period: 1928-1930
Cylinder: 6/in-line
Displacement: 7065 cc
Performance: 170 hp (123 kW), with supercharger 225 hp (166 kW) at 3300 rpm


Driver: Klaus Ludwig
Born in Bonn on 5 October 1949.


Klaus Ludwig started in motorsport by competing in slalom races, orienteering excursions and touring car races from 1970 to 1973. He went on to achieve high rankings in the German Racing Championship and secured victories here in 1979 and 1981, in addition to three wins in the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1979, 1984 and 1985.


In 1988, he won the German Touring Car Championship in a Ford, and then joined the AMG-Mercedes team in 1989, driving to victory 19 times in the five years that followed. The high points of his career were the driver’s title in the championships of 1992 and 1994 as well as a second place finish in 1991. In 1995 and 1996, Klaus Ludwig competed in the German Touring Car Championship for Opel’s Team Rosberg.


In 1997 and 1998, Ludwig was once again driving for Mercedes-Benz, this time in the FIA GT Championship, winning the overall ranking together with Ricardo Zonta in 1998. In the first season of the new German Touring Car Championship, he was the oldest contender to date to win a race, in 2000, and concluded the season in third place overall driving a Mercedes-Benz CLK. When the season was over, he ended his active career as a professional racing driver.




Credits: Daimler AG

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Premiere of new ‘Fintail’ from Mercedes-Benz Classic at the Nürburgring - III


The ‘Fintail’ at the Nürburgring: Mercedes-Benz Classic driver

Klaus Ludwig
born: 5 October 1949

Nicknamed ‘King Ludwig’ by his fans, the German racing driver and three-time DTM champion Klaus Ludwig was born in Bonn in 1949. He began his racing career in the early 1970s, taking part in slalom racing, orienteering and touring car racing. His first major successes included the German Racing Championship (DRM), which he won in 1979 and 1981, and victories at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1979, 1984 and 1985. In 1985 Ludwig moved to the DTM where he initially competed for Ford, winning his first title in 1988. In 1989, he joined the AMG-Mercedes team and went on to achieve a total of 19 race victories in the following years up to 1994 (1992 and 1994, runner-up in 1991). Ludwig raced for Opel Team Rosbert in the DRM in 1995 and 1996, after which he rejoined AMG-Mercedes and, together with Ricardo Zonta, went on to win the driver’s and team trophies in the 1998 International FIA GT Championship. Although he officially ended his motorsport career after this, Ludwig raced again in the new German Touring Car Masters in 2000 where he finished the season - and his racing career - in third place overall in a Mercedes-Benz CLK.


Source: Daimler AG

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Premiere of new ‘Fintail’ from Mercedes-Benz Classic at the Nürburgring - II


Background: success on the track and at rallies in the 1950s and 1960s

Following the withdrawal of the Mercedes-Benz works team from Formula One and the sports car championship at the end of the 1955 season, all eyes were on the rally scene from 1956 onwards. Vehicles bearing the three-pointed star, mainly driven by private teams, competed on rally courses around the world. While racing cars and sports cars had stood out as the top-performing thoroughbreds in previous years, it was now the turn of near-production passenger cars to put their strength and stamina to the test. In the late 1950s and early 1960s it was predominantly the 300 SL sports car and 220 SE and 300 SE six-cylinder saloons that were setting the pace on the world’s roads and gravel tracks.



One of the leading partnerships during this period was that of Walter Schock and Rolf Moll. Racing for the Stuttgart Motor Sports Club, the duo received extensive support from Mercedes-Benz in the form of vehicles and service. Walter Schock took part in the Monte Carlo Rally in a Mercedes-Benz 220 ‘Pontoon’ on 15 January 1956, finishing on 23 January just 1.1 seconds behind the winner. One month later, the Stuttgart duo won the Sestrière Rally in Italy in a Mercedes-Benz 300 SL Gullwing coupé. Up in the mountains, the Silver Arrow simply left the rest of the field standing. Schock reflected on the outstanding performance of the coupé in winter rally conditions, saying: “Very fine snow chains on all four wheels allowed us to reach uphill speeds of up to 180 km/h.” Further triumphs followed, with a victory at the Acropolis Rally (26-29 April 1956) and class victories at the Wiesbaden Rally (21–24 June 1956) and Adriatica Rally (26-30 September 1956). In addition, Schock won in his class at the Eifel race and took second place at the Nürburgring Grand Prix. These results helped him to secure the 1956 European Touring Car crown and the German GT championship for up to 1300cc.

Having replaced Alfred Neubauer as Mercedes-Benz Motorsport Director, Karl Kling also occasionally took a turn at the wheel as a member of the works team. With Rainer Günzler as his co-driver, he secured an extraordinary victory at the 14,000-kilometre Mediterranée – Le Cap Rally from the Mediterranean to South Africa in 1959. The Stuttgart team were driving a diesel-powered Mercedes-Benz 190 D whose reliability secured the event for them. In 1961, Kling was back behind the wheel of a saloon in Africa, driving a Mercedes-Benz 220 SE ‘Fintail’ to victory in the Algiers – Lagos – Algiers rally, once again with Rainer Günzler as co-driver. Kling was also the race manager when Mercedes-Benz factory teams competed in selected major races.

Schock and Moll took the European rally championship title in their 220 SE in 1960 too, crossing the finish line in first place at the legendary Monte Carlo Rally. This first overall German victory at Monte Carlo was actually a triple success for Mercedes-Benz, with the driver teams Eugen Böhringer/Hermann Socher and Eberhard Mahle/Roland Ott taking second and third place. Following this triumph in 1960, the sports press demanded that Mercedes-Benz come back to the racing circuits of the world and compete on a continuous basis with its factory cars. But sports manager Kling made the Mercedes position clear: “This success will encourage us to make further substantial efforts in rallies. But Mercedes has no intention of returning to motor racing.”

In the 1960s, Mercedes-Benz teams took part in the Argentine Road Grand Prix on several occasions. On 26 October 1961, for instance, Walter Schock competed in this very special rally against 207 other drivers. Awaiting the field was a relentless race covering 4600 kilometres and a difference in altitude of more than 3000 metres. This torturous test of endurance ended on 5 November with a double victory for Mercedes-Benz. Walter Schock and Rolf Moll came home first, followed by Hans Herrmann and Rainer Günzler. “That was perhaps the most difficult race I have ever competed in,” said rally champion Schock upon his return from South America. Together with team manager Karl Kling, Juan Manuel Fangio personally accompanied the Mercedes-backed teams. As this competition was very important for the American market, Mercedes-Benz continued to participate in the years that followed: female drivers Ewy Rosqvist and Ursula Wirth notched up a sensational victory in 1962 and Eugen Böhringer won the rally twice in 1963 and 1964, followed home on both occasions by two other Mercedes-Benz vehicles.

Böhringer, who had been driving Mercedes-Benz cars in rallies since 1957, took the European rally champion title in the 1962 season in a Mercedes-Benz 220 SE. With co-drivers Peter Lang and Hermann Eger, Böhringer gained points during the season at races which included the Monte Carlo Rally (2nd place), Tulip Rally (7th), Acropolis Rally (winner), Midnight Sun Rally (5th), Poland Rally (winner), Liège – Sofia – Liège Rally (winner) and German Rally (2nd).

One of the highlights that year was the victory in the legendary Liège – Sofia – Liège road race in a Mercedes-Benz 220 SE. The following year the Stuttgart driver was once again victorious at this marathon race, which took drivers right across Europe but now to Bulgaria instead of Rome, this time in a Mercedes-Benz 230 SL ‘Pagoda’. He was the first driver ever to win this punishing rally in two successive years.

Mercedes-Benz was also enjoying success in North America at this time, and in 1957 it created the Mercedes-Benz 300 SLS specifically for the American sportscar championship. The vehicle was based on the 300 SL production roadster, but the fact that its weight had been reduced to just 900 kg and its output boosted from 215 bhp (158 kW) to 235 bhp (173 kW) made it a highly competitive car. The SLS gave American Paul O’Shea his third consecutive title, following two victories with a 300 SL Gullwing coupé in 1955 and 1956.

The powerful eight-cylinder 300 SEL 6.3 saloon raced as a works vehicle only once – when it won the six-hour touring car race in Macao in 1969 with Erich Waxenberger at the wheel. The oil crisis in the early 1970s put an end to any further race outings for the saloon. Automotive historian Karl Eric Ludvigsen underlined the importance of this break in the motorsport traditions of the Stuttgart-based brand: “The oil crisis was the first externally prompted break in a long-established Daimler-Benz tradition, which had run continuously from the turn of the century, apart from the war years and a short hiatus in 1955. Year after year, there had always been one or more Benz, Mercedes or Mercedes-Benz vehicles competing with direct or indirect works support in at least one major race.”

Even now, however, the Mercedes-Benz racing tradition was continued by private drivers. Their vehicles were increasingly being prepared for competition by AMG, a company established in 1967 by former Daimler-Benz employees Hans-Werner Aufrecht and Erhard Melcher in Burgstall near Stuttgart. One of their standout products in the early years was the refined version of the Mercedes-Benz 300 SEL with a 6.8-litre engine, which secured a class victory and finished second overall at the 24 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps in 1971. With works support from Mercedes-Benz, a number of private drivers achieved great success during that time in rallies and touring car racing.

The vehicles and drivers of this era, including big names like Eugen Böhringer, Dieter Glemser, Hans Herrmann, Eberhard Mahle and Ewy Rosqvist, still delight racing fans today. And this fascination has also been the driving force behind Mercedes-Benz Classic’s increasing involvement as a partner in the FHR race series for GT and touring cars.

















Source: Daimler AG

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Premiere of new ‘Fintail’ from Mercedes-Benz Classic at the Nürburgring - I


A ‘Fintail’ based on the Mercedes-Benz 220 SE model (W 111 series) will compete in the season final of the long-distance cup organised by Fahrergemeinschaft Historischer Rennsport e.V. (FHR) on 22 and 23 October 2011 at the Nürburgring. Its participation in this race reflects the commitment of Mercedes-Benz Classic to upholding the traditions of the brand, which itself has a remarkable history in motor racing, and encouraging private drivers to take part in historical motorsport events. Mercedes-Benz Classic is a partner of the FHR race series. The ‘Fintail’ will be driven by British journalist Andrew Frankel and former touring car driver Klaus Ludwig. The vehicle has been built by the Mercedes-Benz Classic Center in accordance with the regulations laid down in Appendix K of the international sports regulations of the FIA (Féderation Internationale de l’Automobile).


Founded in 1983, the FHR has been promoting historical motor racing for almost 30 years and has made a significant contribution to boosting the popularity of the current race series with historical competition cars. The FHR, which has been under the auspices of ADAC Nordrhein since 2000, currently has around 600 active members.

Events taking place during the 2011 season include the ‘FHR HTGT for the Dunlop Trophy’ held as a series of sprint races for pre-1971 GT and touring cars, and the ‘Dunlop FHR Long Distance Cup’, a series of long-distance races for pre-1971 GT vehicles and touring cars built before 1976. In addition, there will be two series for formula vehicles.

Through its involvement in this fascinating sport, Mercedes-Benz is not only demonstrating its commitment to the active historical motorsport scene, but is also paying tribute to an exciting chapter in its own history. When the era of Mercedes victories in Formula One World Championships and racing cars ended in 1955, Mercedes-Benz enjoyed great success for a number of years in international long-distance races and rallies. This period was characterised in particular in the early 1960s by the ‘‘Fintail’ saloons with six-cylinder engines (220 SE and 300 SE models), which also served as a model for the new Mercedes-Benz 220 SE.

Typically, there was not much difference technically between competition cars and production models in the 1960s. The usual modifications included reinforcement of chassis elements and body components, a bigger fuel tank and adjustment of the engine characteristics to suit the specific purpose.

The principle of designing a powerful competition car that is closely based on stock technology is one that Mercedes-Benz Classic followed closely when building the 220 SE for the FHR Long Distance Cup. The modifications made to the production vehicle by the specialists at the Classic Center included equipping the interior with a safety cage with a safety quick-release lock for side impact protection elements such as cross door bars and protective side moulding (Fix Opening and Closure Security System, or FO-CS for short). In addition, the tail fin has been fitted with a fire extinguishing system and a 100-litre FT3 safety tank. In future, the car will also boast 5.5 x 15 wheels fitted with 6 x 15 tyres. Naturally, the W 111 also features the same classic light grey paint finish (shade DB 140) as used on vehicles between 1961 and 1964.

Mercedes-Benz 220 SE vehicle data

- Engine: six-cylinder (in-line)
- Bore x stroke: 80 x 72.8 mm
- Cubic capacity: 2195 cc
- Output: 120 bhp (88 kW) at 4800 rpm
- Maximum torque: 19.3 mkg (189 Nm) at 3900 rpm
- Front axle: double wishbone, coil springs, anti-roll bar, telescopic shock absorbers
- Power transmission: via propshaft on rear axle
- Rear axle: single-joint swing axle with compensating spring, coil springs, telescopic shock absorbers
- Brakes: hydraulic braking system with brake booster
- Front brakes: disk brakes, diameter: 253 mm
- Rear brakes: Duplex drum brakes with turbo-cooled Alfin drums, diameter: 230 mm
- Transmission: 4-speed manual transmission with floor shift
- Clutch: single-plate dry clutch
- Top speed: approx. 170 km/h






Source: Daimler AG

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SPY: The 2013 Mercedes-Benz GLK-Class Facelift goes out for a test run on the Ring


Launched back in spring 2008, the GLK-Class is destined to undergo a substantial facelift that's intended to keep the car attractive until a replacement generation is premiered sometime after 2015. The latest spy photos showcasing a camouflaged prototype of the SUV come from the Nurburgring.


The GLK is being readied for a mid-cycle revamp. Scheduled for release in the second semester of 2012, the medium-sized SUV from Stuttgart will display a new front fascia featuring slightly revised LED headlamps, differently styled radiator grilles with either two or three chromed slates depending on the version and retouched intakes and bumper. While the side remains solid and boxy, with no visible changes at all, designers will operate several changes to the tail lights, which appear to feature LED technology and consequently a new arrangement for the braking lights, indicators and reverse lamps. The cockpit should not be given any major rehaul, but an increase in the quality of the assembly and materials used as well as new colour combos are expected. Engineers will fit the 2013 GLK with the latest assistance technologies developed by Mercedes-Benz, such as the ATTENTION ASSIST, Blind Spot Assist and PRE-SAFE. Also, the new GLK facelift will be optionally fitted with the COMAND Online infotainment system, which provides in-car internet access to the driver and occupants. Engines will become more powerful and efficient with the aid of the BlueEFFICIENCY package; the high-end variant, the GLK 350, will be powered by the new 3.5-litre direct-injection V6 gasoline unit with up to 306 hp. The basic price list could look the same as for the current model, but versions with richer specifications might increase pretty much the final tag.





Photos: SecretNewCars

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VIDEO: A thrilling symphony of V8s on the Nürburgring


The AMG Driving Academy arrived at the Ring and started "playing" with grumpy automotive masterpieces created in Affalterbach on the mindblowing curves of the German track. The C 63 AMG, the E 63 AMG, the CLS 63 AMG and the SLS AMG were among the big stars. Gijs Muller was there to capture the entire action and, boy, those massive V8 engines sound simply delicious. Hit the play button and experience eight minutes of intense perfection. Also, press the break button and check out another cool video featuring an "army" of no less than eight, powerful and noisy 'modern gullwings' rolling rapidly down the sinuous Nürburgring Nordschleife.

Many thanks for the tip, Gijs! We really appreciate it!




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SPY - The 2013 Mercedes-Benz GL 63 AMG scooped on the Ring


It's been a long period of time since we last saw signs of prototypes of the future 2013 GL 63 AMG on streets, but now the awaiting is over, as new spy shots captured on the Nurburgring circuit surfaced on various car websites over the internet. Like any other model tuned by the Affalterbach-based firm, the beefy SUV is undergoing a series of trials which includes a testing phase on the famous German track, where the engineers can get an accurate read to tweak the car for achieving top-of-the-range driving experience. A prominent grille with the big Mercedes-Benz star in the centre, powerful LED headlamps, an aggresive air intake, wider door sills, large AMG-design alloy wheels and quad exhausts will visually contribute to the overall muscular presence of the car. Outlined to follow right after the new GL-Class bows during the summer of 2012, the first-of-the-series GL 63 AMG is tipped to use the 5500cc twin-turbo V8 powerplant, available in the traditional two output stages: a standard 544 hp choice and boosted 571 hp AMG Performance Package variant. Despite of the outstanding dimensions of the 4x4, the sports-oriented chassis and the additional dynamics solutions installed by AMG should do the right tricks and transform the future GL 63 AMG into one very agile SUV.

Check out further spy shots after the jump!







Source: SecretNewCars

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