Mercedes W100 600

W100 600 Featured Image

The Mercedes-Benz 600 was a high-end luxury sedan and limousine produced by Mercedes-Benz from 1963 to 1981. Generally, the short-wheel-base (SWB) models were designed to be owner-driven, the long-wheel-base (LWB), often incorporating a central divider with power window, by chauffeur.

The forerunner of the modern Maybach marque, the 600 "Grosser Mercedes" ("Grand Mercedes") succeeded the Type 300 "Adenauer" as the company's flagship and most expensive model. Positioned well above the 300-series Mercedes-Benz W112, its few competitors included certain models of Rolls-Royce and Bentley, the Cadillac Fleetwood 75, stretched Lincoln Continental Lehmann-Peterson, and the Chrysler Imperial Crown Ghia.

Manufacturer Mercedes-Benz
Also called
  • Pullman
  • Grand Mercedes
  • Großer
Production
  • 1963–1981
  • 2,677 built
  • SWB: 2,190
  • LWB: 428
  • Landaulet: 59
Designer
  • Bruno Sacco
  • Friedrich Geiger
  • Paul Bracq
Body and chassis
Class Full-size luxury car
Body style
  • short 4-door sedan
  • long 4-door sedan
  • 6-door limousine (Pullman)
  • long 4-door landaulet
Layout FR layout
Powertrain
Engine 6.3 L M100 V8
Chronology
Predecessor
  • Mercedes-Benz W112
  • Mercedes-Benz 300 Adenauer
Successor
  • S600
  • Maybach 57 and 62

History

Production began in 1964 and continued through to 1981. During this time, production totalled 2,677 units, comprising 2,190 Saloons, 304 Pullmans, 124 6-door Pullmans and 59 Landaulets.

Models

The 600 came in two main variants:

  • A short wheelbase 4-door sedan, available with a power divider window separating the front seats from the rear bench seat, although most were built without this feature.
  • A long wheelbase 4-door Pullman limousine (with two additional rear-facing seats separated from the driver compartment by a power divider window, of which 304 were built), and a 6-door limousine (with two forward-facing jump-seats at the middle two doors and a rear bench-seat).

A number of the Pullman limousines were made as landaulets, with a convertible top over the rear passenger compartment. These were notably used by the Pope and the German government, as during the 1965 state visit of Queen Elizabeth II. Production of this model ended in 1980.

Mercedes also made two coupés, one as a gift for retiring long-time Mercedes chief designer Dr. Rudolf Uhlenhaut, and the other to one Dr. Fritz Nallinger. These cars had a wheelbase 22 cm (8.6 inches) shorter than the SWB sedan. A third was constructed by 600 experts and restorers Karl Middelhauve & Associates of Wausau, Wisconsin from a SWB sedan.

Karl Middelhauve has also created a pair of matching Chevrolet El Camino-style coupes from 600 SWB sedans. One of them has a Vortech supercharger.

A single example of a SWB 4-door landaulet, combining the handling of a short-wheelbase with the qualities of a landaulet, was built by Mercedes in 1967 for former racing driver Count von Berckheim.

Mechanical

The 600's great size, weight, and numerous hydraulically driven amenities required more power than Mercedes' largest engine at that time, the 3-litre 6-cylinder M189, could produce. A new V8 with more than twice the capacity was developed, the 6.3 L M100. It featured single overhead camshafts (SOHC) and Bosch mechanical fuel injection.

The 600's complex 150-bar (2,176 psi) hydraulic pressure system powered the automobile's windows, seats, sun-roof, boot lid, and automatically closing doors. Adjustable air suspension delivered excellent ride quality and sure handling over any road surface.

In 1967 the M-100 engine and hydraulics were fitted to the much smaller but still substantial 300SEL 6.3, creating the world's fastest four-door sedan. Upon the introduction of the W116 chassis, a larger 6.9 liter version of M-100 was installed in the Mercedes-Benz 450SEL 6.9.

Notable owners

Famous owners of the 600 have included the Pope and prominent celebrities such as Coco Chanel, Hugh Hefner, Elizabeth Taylor, John Lennon, George Harrison, Karen Carpenter, Jay Kay, Kim Jong-un, Aristotle Onassis, Jack Nicholson, Simon Spies, Ronnie Wood, Bob Jane, Frank Packer, Elvis Presley, Rowan Atkinson, Jay Leno, and Jeremy Clarkson. Jay Leno had his 600 (a 1972 SWB) fitted with a supercharger by Karl Middelhauve and Associates, making it the only 600 Kompressor in existence.

Clarkson's 1973 600 was featured in the Top Gear Challenge "Mercedes-Benz 600 vs Rolls-Royce Corniche Coupé challenge", when it was pitted against James May's 1972 Rolls-Royce Corniche, eventually winning the challenge.

Notable heads of state included King Khalid Bin Abdulaziz Al Saud of Saudi Arabia, Park Chung-hee, Josip Broz Tito, Nicolae CeauČ™escu, Pol Pot, Enver Hoxha, Francois (Papa Doc) Duvalier, Jean-Bédel Bokassa, Emperor Hirohito, F. W. de Klerk, Leonid Brezhnev, Idi Amin, Fidel Castro, Robert Mugabe, Jomo Kenyatta, Daniel Moi, Ferdinand Marcos (who owned four, including a Landaulet, a 1981 bulletproof and a six-door version), North Korean leaders Kim Il-sung, Kim Jong-il and Kim Jong-un have also owned a landaulet (both seen in the 65th anniversary parade in Pyongyang on October 10, 2010), and Saddam Hussein, who owned a long roof landaulet that was recovered after the fall of Baghdad today owned by the Petersen Museum in Los Angeles. Iranian Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and the royal court owned multiple 600 models. Chinese revolutionary Mao Zedong, former Chinese Foreign Minister Chen Yi, Deng Xiaoping, wife of the first Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai - Deng Yingchao, and the former King of Cambodia Norodom Sihanouk, all used the 600. The first Senegalese regime (1960–1980) under president Léopold Sédar Senghor had three 600s, a short wheel base, a long wheel base, and a Landaulet, later replaced by the W126-based Carat Limousine.

The first President of Indonesia, Soekarno, also own the 600 SWB. President Anastasio Somoza Debayle of Nicaragua bought a SWB for his wife Hope Portocarrero from the very first production run.

Religious leader Guru Maharaj Ji owned one, as did Colombian drug dealer Pablo Escobar, a LWB six-door 600. destroyed in an attack on Escobar in 1988 in Medellín.

In cinema the Mercedes 600 was featured in the James Bond films, most notably as transport of the villain Ernst Stavro Blofeld in On Her Majesty's Secret Service and Diamonds Are Forever. Kamal Khan is also seen leaving Sotheby's in a 600 in Octopussy. In television, a Mercedes Benz 600 limousine was used by fictional Channing/Gioberti family matriarch Angela Channing in the American television series Falcon Crest. Images of the car driving from San Francisco over the Golden Gate Bridge to the Falcon Crest vineyard were featured in the opening credits of the first four seasons. It was also prominently featured in the television show Friday the 13th.

In popular political context, the 600 has long been associated with totalitarianism, dictatorships and to a lesser extent Communism due to its reputation among dictators, authoritarian, and socialist/Communist leaders in the late 1960s, which itself similar to how its predecessor, the 770 are associated with Axis leaders.

Technical data

Technical data Mercedes-Benz 600 (W100) (Manufacturer's figures except where stated)
Mercedes-Benz 600 600 Pullman
Produced: 1963–1981
Engine: 6.3 L V8, front-mounted
Bore x Stroke: 103 mm x 95 mm
Displacement: 6332 cc
Max. Power @ rpm: 250 PS (180 kW; 250 hp) @ 4000
Max. Torque @ rpm: 500 N·m (370 lb·ft) @ 2800
Compression Ratio: 9.00: 1
Fuel feed: Sequential fuel injection, Bosch injection pump
Fuel tank capacity: 112 L (29.6 US gal; 24.6 imp gal)
Valvetrain: SOHC, duplex chains
Cooling: Water
Gearbox: 4-speed automatic
rear wheel drive, axle ratio 3.23:1
Electrical system: 12 volt
Front suspension: Double wishbones, air suspension, rubber springs, stabilizing bar
Rear suspension:: Low-pivot swing axle, radius arms, self-leveling air suspension, rubber springs, stabilizing bar
Brakes: Disc brakes (Ø 291 mm two-caliper front, 294.5 mm rear), power assisted
Steering: Recirculating ball steering, power assisted
Body structure: Sheet steel, unibody construction
Dry weight: 2,600 kg (5,700 lb) 2,770 kg (6,110 lb)
Loaded weight: 3,050 kg (6,720 lb) 3,340 kg (7,360 lb)
Track front/
rear:
1,587 mm (62.5 in) 1,581 mm (62.2 in)
Wheelbase: 3,200 mm (130 in) 3,900 mm (150 in)
Length: 5,450 mm (215 in) 6,240 mm (246 in)
Width: 1,950 mm (77 in) 1,950 mm (77 in)
Height: 1,500 mm (59 in) 1,510 mm (59 in)
Tyre/Tire sizes: 9.00H15 Supersport (6PR)
Top speed: 204.8 km/h (127.3 mph) 200 km/h (120 mph)
Fuel Consumption (estimates): 24.0 litres per 100 kilometres (11.8 mpg-imp; 9.8 mpg-US) 26.0 litres per 100 kilometres (10.9 mpg-imp; 9.0 mpg-US)
Price Germany
USA:
DM 56,500 (1964)− DM 144,100 (1978)
$22,000 (1965)
DM 63,500 (1964)− DM 165,500 (1978)
$ 24,000 (1965)