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THE STAR - 190SL | 190 SL

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Re-creating<br />

The<br />

<strong><strong>190</strong><strong>SL</strong></strong><br />

Exhibition Car<br />

32<br />

<strong>THE</strong> <strong>STAR</strong>®<br />

November-December 2010<br />

Herb Shriner was a 1950s TV personality and wellknown<br />

“Car Guy” in a day and age when that<br />

term had yet to be coined. Each year he promoted<br />

the International Motor Sports Auto Show in New<br />

York as a way of expanding the exposure of foreign<br />

sports cars while simultaneously enjoying his passion.<br />

His third annual event, held February 6-14, 1954, is,<br />

without a doubt, the most famous of his shows.<br />

It was at this show that Max Hoffman and the Daimler-Benz<br />

Corporation displayed a revolutionary pair of<br />

new sports cars – the <strong><strong>190</strong><strong>SL</strong></strong> and the street version of<br />

the racing 300<strong>SL</strong> – that changed the landscape of sport<br />

driving in America, and the rest of the world, forever.<br />

The show’s long-lost exhibition version of the <strong><strong>190</strong><strong>SL</strong></strong><br />

has been re-created so that enthusiasts can understand<br />

how it captured the imagination of the audience.


ARTICLE BY JIM LUIKENS<br />

PHOTOGRAPHY BY FRANK PIERCE<br />

A SOU<strong>THE</strong>RN STUDIO<br />

PRIDE<br />

Above: The re-creation of the <strong><strong>190</strong><strong>SL</strong></strong> exhibition car built by Bruce<br />

Adams for Dr. Larry Pappo and unveiled in September. Unlike<br />

the original, the car is totally operational but was built with the<br />

racing windshield and cut-down doors that were an alternative<br />

configuration for the exhibition car. Right: An official<br />

photograph of the Mercedes-Benz stand at Herb Shriner’s<br />

Third Annual International Motor Sports Show in New York City<br />

in 1954. Note that the <strong><strong>190</strong><strong>SL</strong></strong> exhibition car, sitting beside<br />

the 300<strong>SL</strong> that was the centerpiece of the stand, was configured<br />

with standard windshield and doors by the time the photograph was taken.<br />

<strong>THE</strong> <strong>STAR</strong> ®<br />

November-December 2010<br />

33


Above and inset: Two of the original publicity<br />

photograhs that were used to replicate the details<br />

of the exhibition car. Left and left below: The<br />

detail of the re-creation is stunning. Note the fuel<br />

filler cap on the right rear fender, the taillights<br />

and reflectors, and the chrome wheel covers.<br />

34<br />

<strong>THE</strong> <strong>STAR</strong>®<br />

November-December 2010


Right from top: A comparison of photographs<br />

of the original car and the re-creation shows<br />

the variety of interesting and unusual details<br />

of the exhibition car, including hood scoop<br />

and rectangular parking lights. The brochure<br />

from the New York show displayed the regular<br />

windscreen and wind-up side windows.<br />

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<strong>THE</strong> <strong>STAR</strong> ®<br />

November-December 2010<br />

35


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<strong>THE</strong> <strong>STAR</strong>®<br />

November-December 2010


Left: The engine presented its own challenges,<br />

since the show engine was nonoperational,<br />

but the re-creation had to be a real engine,<br />

though duplicating all the visual details of the<br />

exhibition car. Right: Similarly, gauges had to<br />

work and duplicate the non-standard markings<br />

that could be seen under magnification in the<br />

original publicity shots. Another challenge was<br />

to re-create the original interior, including the<br />

unusual seats, which didn’t carry over into the<br />

production car designed 15 months later. Note<br />

that neither the original car in race trim, nor<br />

the re-creation, has side windows. Even the<br />

smallest details, such as the trunk button and<br />

lock, reproduce the original car’s details but<br />

are fully operational.<br />

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How difficult<br />

could it be, Larry Pappo<br />

wondered, to pay homage by re-creating<br />

this long-lost piece of Mercedes-Benz history<br />

Eight years later, he knows the answer.<br />

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<strong>THE</strong> <strong>STAR</strong> ®<br />

November-December 2010<br />

37

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