CMC Diecast 1:18 Mercedes 300SLR Uhlenhaut Coupe 1955. Of the nine W196s chassis built, one was destroyed in the Le Mans disaster. Of the eight that remained (and prior to the accident) Mercedes motorsport chief Rudolf Uhlenhaut had ordered two to be set aside for modification into a sort of hybrid between the SLR & the SL, featuring a slightly widened version of the SLR's chassis with enclosed bodywork for aerodynamic purposes. Again, the strong, high sill beams of the spaceframe required the fitment of the same famous 'gull-wing' top-hinged doors of the other two types. For testing, & in preparation for a possible Mercedes participation in the 1956 race season, two road-legal SLRs were built. Due to Mercedes' planned withdrawal from competitive motorsport at the end of 1955, the programme was abandoned, leaving Uhlenhaut to use one of the cars as a company car. This prolonged road use required the fitting of an extra suitcase-sized muffler to the near-unsilenced exhaust pipes to avoid arrest for breach of the peace
- CMCM088 comes with the muffler.
This Uhlenhaut Coupé was regarded as the world's fastest car in the 1950s, & it is rumoured that, running late for a meeting, Uhlenhaut exploited the unlimited autobahns to make today's two-&-a-half-hour journey from Munich to Stuttgart in just over an hour.