Category | Grand Prix |
---|---|
Constructor | Mercedes-Benz |
Designer(s) | Hans Nibel Max Sailer Albert Heess Max Wagner |
Successor | Mercedes-Benz W125 |
Technical specifications | |
Chassis | U-Section Pressed Steel Frame |
Suspension (front) | Double Wishbones w/Coil Springs & Friction Dampers |
Suspension (rear) | Swing Axle w/Transverse Quarter Elliptic Springs, Friction Dampers |
Engine | M25 3,360 cc (205.0 cu in) later 4,300 cc (262.4 cu in) I8 supercharged front-engine, longitudinally mounted |
Transmission | Mercedes-Benz 5-speed |
Power | 280–494 horsepower (209–368 kW) |
Competition history | |
Notable entrants | Daimler-Benz AG |
Notable drivers | Rudolf Caracciola Luigi Fagioli Manfred von Brauchitsch |
Debut | 1934 Avusrennen |
Drivers' Championships | 1 (1935, Rudolf Caracciola)[1] |
The Mercedes-Benz W25 was a Grand Prix racing car designed by Daimler-Benz AG for the 1934 Grand Prix season, in which new rules were introduced, and no championship was held. In 1935,[2] the European Championship was resumed, and it was won by Rudolf Caracciola in a W25. In modified form, the W25 remained in use until 1937, when it was succeeded by the Mercedes-Benz W125.