Silver Arrows

Auto Union D-Type back on the auction block next month

Auto Union D-Type fq

In the years leading up to WWII, Adolf Hitler was bent on world conquest — not just on the battlefield, but on the race track as well. Motor racing became a favourite venue for Hitler to exhibit what he viewed as Germany’s superiority, Germany’s top engineers at both Mercedes-Benz and Auto Union were commissioned to develop a generation of advanced racing machines that would later become known as the Silver Arrows. The 1938 Auto Union D-Type was Hitler’s favourite.

The cars reigned victorious through the 1930s, but when the war began, motorsport in Europe was postponed. The following decade Nazi Germany had fallen, Hitler was dead, and the Soviets seized the D-Types from the Auto Union factory in East Germany. With an Iron Curtain closed, motor historians optimistically thought the Silver Arrows cars were safe somewhere in the Soviet Union, but all the while they were being dismantled. Although many of the Mercedes pre-war racers survived, few of the Auto Unions did. Only three of these D-Types are known to still exist.

The example for sale, Chassis 19, was completely restored to original condition, and was set to hit the auction block at Christie’s two years ago until it was withdrawn at the last minute due to suspicion over its heritage. With the questions answered and its pedigree confirmed, Bonhams is now offering this extremely rare vehicle at its upcoming auction this August, where it is expected to fetch in excess of $8 million USD. But some previous estimates have placed it closer to $12 million USD, it stands a real chance of breaking the $12.2 million USD record set by the 1957 Ferrari 250 Testarossa at the RM Auction in Maranello just last month.

Check out the press release below for a full history of this fascinating vehicle.

PRESS RELEASE

Bonhams & Butterfields to Offer Hans Stuck’s Legendary Auto Union Grand Prix Racer at Quail Lodge in August

Bonhams & Butterfields is delighted to offer for sale by auction nothing less than one of the most charismatic Grand Prix racing cars ever built — the 1939 Auto Union ‘D-Type’ with rear-mounted 3-liter twin-stage supercharged V12-cylinder engine. The annual collector’s motorcar car auction is set for August 14, 2009 in Carmel, CA.

This legendary racing car – absolutely confirmed today as chassis number ’19′ – was driven to placing finishes in the 1939 Grand Prix racing season. Handled by Auto Union factory team drivers Rudolf Hasse and Hans Stuck, this pioneering rear-engined Grand Prix projectile finished fifth in the German EifelRennen event on the North Circuit of the Nurburgring, and sixth in the Grand Prix de l’Automobile Club de France around the super fast public road course at Reims-Gueux.

The 1938-39 V12-cylinder Auto Union racing car — retrospectively classified postwar as the Chemnitz company’s ‘D-Type’ model — was developed to meet a new set of international regulations governing Grand Prix racing. They specified a maximum engine capacity of 3-liters and a minimum weight limit of 850-kilograms. The ‘D-Type’ Auto Union was based upon a highly sophisticated and advanced new chassis design, featuring de Dion rear suspension and its fuel load centralized in pannier tanks hung along each side, within the wheelbase. The 3-cam V12-cylinder engine developed some 420bhp in 1938 single-stage supercharged form, rising to some 485bhp at 7,000rpm when two-stage supercharging was adopted for 1939.

That final pre-war season — whose leading cars such as this Auto Union represent the absolute high-tide of ‘Silver Arrows’ period technology – then opened on May 21 with the EifelRennen, at Germany’s Nurburgring, where Nuvolari’s ‘D-Type’ finished second and Rudi Hasse fifth in chassis ’19′ now being offered by Bonhams & Butterfields.

During the 1939 racing season, Auto Union deployed 11 ‘D-Type’ chassis in the six significant Grand Prix Formula events contested. In addition to Nuvolari’s second place in the EifelRennen, Hasse finished second in the Belgian GP, before his team-mates H.P. ‘Happy’ Muller and ‘Schorsch’ Meier brought the team a wonderful 1-2 success in the French race at Reims-Gueux.

It was there that chassis ’19′ raced for the last time, driven by Hans Stuck, the veteran Austrian star. In his hands, this ‘D-Type’ Auto Union completed the works team’s day by finishing sixth.

Today, Auto Union ‘D-Type’ chassis ’19′ is the only proven surviving Grand Prix car of its type with contemporary 1939 racing history. It is one of the classic car world’s most charismatic machines, and is exquisitely well-restored to running order. In a world hungry for genuine intrinsic value, it has much to commend it.

Post-war Myth and Mystery

For nearly half a century the survival in Communist Russia of ex-works German ‘Silver Arrow’ Grand Prix cars from the 1930s seemed little more than unproven myth. The search for any such cars from Mercedes-Benz or — much more so — Auto Union – was regarded as historic motor sport’s quest for the Holy Grail. While several 1930s Mercedes-Benz Grand Prix cars survived at the Stuttgart factory and in private Western hands, the only known Auto Union was a sectioned 1936 V16 model exhibited in the Deutsches Museum in Munich.

It was known that the surviving Auto Union team cars had been expropriated by Soviet forces in the Autumn of 1945. In fact, no fewer than 13 Auto Union cars were transported by train from the company’s devastated factories in Zwickau and Chemnitz, Lower Saxony, in what was to become Communist East Germany.

They were delivered to the Soviet Union’s NAMI motor industry research institute in Moscow, where early in 1946 a working group of engineers was established to investigate these dazzlingly high-tech German designs. Four Auto Unions – one with wheel-enveloping streamlined bodywork — were dismantled and effectively destroyed during the NAMI group’s inspection and analysis.

Two sister cars were delivered to Moscow’s ZIS production car factory for parallel examination and research. One, a V16-cylinder, was subsequently scrapped. The other – which was a hill-climb car comprising a 16-cylinder-type chassis powered by the later V12 engine – escaped destruction, eventually passing into a museum in Riga, Latvia, and subsequently to Audi.

Four other Auto Unions – three 1938-39 V12 Grand Prix cars, plus one streamliner – went to the GAS factory in Gorky (now renamed Nizhniy Novgorod) where some components were cannibalized for use in GAS, Moskvich and ZIL-based competition cars. When one staffer required a trailer, a stripped Grand Prix chassis frame was cut in half to suit…!

Generally, the Soviet technicians were unable to run the cars, with the exception of one V12 ‘D-Type’ at Gorky, whose tanks were found to contain the correct sophisticated German fuel mix. This car was started successfully and tested at high speed, only for driver Leonid Sokolov to find his path obstructed by encroaching roadside crowds. He lost control under braking, and crashed into them, killing as many as 18.

Around 1950, two surviving open-wheel GP Auto Unions and one 16-cylinder streamliner were assigned to engineer Vladimir Nikitin in Kharkov, Ukraine. He cannibalized the streamliner to build his ‘Kharkov’ racing car, powered by a 4-cylinder Podeba street engine. A fellow Ukrainian engineer, Eduard Lorent, also benefited from Auto Union study in building his small- capacity ‘Kharkov L1′ and ‘L2′ racing cars.

One complete open-wheeler chassis, the trailer-frame and their major mechanical components survived surplus to Nikitin and Lorent’s requirements, and after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russian-born American Paul Karassik — a Florida-based antique car enthusiast — spent much time in Russia hunting down the truth of the Auto Union legend. Karassik accumulated an incredible treasure-trove of pre-war Grand Prix car components, including Auto Union serial ’19′s complete, unspoiled chassis and the late-model V12-cylinder engine which powers it today. Mr Karassik entrusted restoration of this car to the renowned British ‘Silver Arrow’ specialists, Crosthwaite & Gardiner in Buxted, England, and they rebuilt it in as-original two-stage supercharged form.

Seventy years later, Auto Union ‘D-Type’ chassis ’19′ will star in the Bonhams & Butterfields sale at Quail Lodge in California on August 14, when it is expected to realize in excess of $8-million. It represents a uniquely attractive investment in cutting-edge history, and will likely provide a new owner with a unique and enduring entry ticket to every one of the classic car world’s most prestigious events.

Mercedes reproduces 1930s race car carrier for Silver Arrows anniversary

Mercedes announced recently that it has reproduced one of its 1930s race car carriers, complete with blue paint job and the Mercedes-Benz Racing Department badge. The Mercedes 1930s race car carrier has been built to mark the 75th anniversary of the Mercedes-Benz Silver Arrows race cars which had their debut at the Eifel race on 3 June 1934.

The Mercedes 1930s race car carrier is based on a model Lo 2750 truck built in 1936 and was powered by a 5.0 litre engine that developed just 70 hp (51 kW).

Check out the full press release below and some historic images in the gallery.

Mercedes Press Release:

The classic “Silver Arrows” by Mercedes-Benz are icons of the 1930s. Racing cars such as the W 25, the W 125, the W 154 and the W 165, but also drivers like Manfred von Brauchitsch, Rudolf Caracciola and Hermann Lang, were right in the forefront of the motor racing world in those days. Other vehicles were rather less prominent, but also had a strong effect on the public image — the racing transporters. Wherever these blue trucks with their “Mercedes-Benz Racing Department” appeared, they emphatically underlined the brand’s will to win. Under the supervision of the Mercedes-Benz Classic Center such a racing transporter from the 1930s has now been built true to its original design.

During the 1930s, the Mercedes-Benz racing transporters certainly did their bit towards the successes of the Silver Arrows by bringing the cars to the Grand Prix racetracks on time, ensuring a reliable supply chain from the plant and acting as mobile workshops. Sometimes they were also used for ceremonial purposes: after major victories, with their tarpaulins lowered, Mercedes reproduces 1930s race car carrier Gallery: Mercedes reproduces 1930s race car carrier
they would display the winning Silver Arrows to the adoring public. There was quite a fleet of them on the roads — and yet none have survived.

To mark the 75th anniversary of the Mercedes-Benz Silver Arrows which had their racing debut at the Eifel race on 3 June 1934, the Mercedes-Benz Classic Center has resurrected a racing transporter according to the old pattern within a period of only six months. It is based on a model Lo 2750 truck built in 1936 with a petrol engine developing 70 hp (51 kW) from a displacement of just under five liters. By virtue of their low-floor construction, this model and the models Lo 2000, Lo 2500 and Lo 3750 likewise used during the 1930s were the perfect choice for racing transporters. The racing transporter is as impressive as the original — just as if it were about to take a classic Silver Arrow to a Grand Prix racetrack for next weekend’s race.


Hitler’s Motor Racing Battles: The Silver Arrows Under the Swastika – 212

Hitler Motor Racing_2

Many books have been written about the Auto Union and Mercedes-Benz Silver Arrows, but few have dealt with their direct involvement with the Nazi regime. Reuss gathers together a huge mass of information — culled from careful research into federal, state and factory archives — and quite effectively blows apart many of the myths surrounding the cars, the drivers and the teams.

Reuss describes in considerable detail the level of support given to the two racing teams by Hitler and other top Nazis, including Göring and Himmler — casting light into areas that have previously been hidden in the shadows.

Hitler Motor RacingPerhaps one of the most fascinating sections involves Hans Stuck and the manner in which he exploited his connections with top Nazi officials to protect his half-Jewish wife.

Along the way, Reuss also explodes the oft-quoted legend of the Mercedes team stripping paint off the cars to get them down the 750kg before their first race by revealing that the cars were always silver — and reveals how many of the German drivers were awarded with increasingly high military ranks after their numerous victories — for example, Auto Union ace Bernd Rosemeyer rose to the rank of SS Haupsturmführer before his tragic death. At the end of the war, many of the drivers claimed they had been non-political — a number of them having to face lengthy de-nazification hearings — but, unwittingly or not, all of them contributed to the Third Reich’s propaganda machine.

It’s a fascinating story and extremely readable — once you’re into the book it holds your attention like a top-notch thriller. However, if you’re a little protective of some of the motoring legends under discussion, be prepared to be shocked by some of Reuss’ revelations.

Hitler’s Motor Racing Battles: The Silver Arrows Under the Swastika  by Eberhard Reuss
Review book supplied by Techbooks
Review by Allan Walton