Iconic Mercedes car driven by five-time F1 champion is sold for a record £42.7MILLION at auction in Stuttgart

Iconic Mercedes car driven by five-time F1 champion is sold for a record £42.7MILLION at auction in Stuttgart
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Iconic Mercedes car driven by five-time F1 champion is sold for a record £42.7MILLION at auction in Stuttgart
Published: Feb, 02 2025 15:01

A Mercedes F1 car from 1955 became the most expensive grand prix car ever after it was sold for a whopping €51.15million (£42.7m) on Saturday. The silver W196 R Stromlinienwage, chassis number 00009/54, was purchased by an unnamed buyer. It is one of only four complete examples in existence and was driven by F1 greats Stirling Moss and Juan Manuel Fangio,. It was sold by RM Sotheby's at the Mercedes-Benz Museum in Stuttgart, Germany, on behalf of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway (IMS).

 [F1 legend Stirling Moss pictured after winning the Italian Grand Prix at Monza with the car]
Image Credit: Mail Online [F1 legend Stirling Moss pictured after winning the Italian Grand Prix at Monza with the car]

The car was donated to the IMS by Mercedes in 1965 and was held for almost 60 years, before now being auctioned to raise funds for the museum's restoration efforts. 'It's a beautiful car, it's a very historic car, it's just a little bit outside our scope window,' said IMS curator Jason Vansickle. The silver W196 R Stromlinienwage was sold for £42.7million at an auction on Saturday. F1 legend Stirling Moss pictured after winning the Italian Grand Prix at Monza with the car.

 [A view of the W196 R Stromlinienwage cockpit, which had a top speed of around 290km/h]
Image Credit: Mail Online [A view of the W196 R Stromlinienwage cockpit, which had a top speed of around 290km/h]

A view of the W196 R Stromlinienwage cockpit, which had a top speed of around 290km/h. 'We've been fortunate to be stewards of this vehicle for nearly 60 years and it has been a great piece in the museum but with this auction and the proceeds raised, it really will allow us … to be better in the future.'. Fangio and Moss piloted the car to five victories out of the seven grands prix in the 1955 season - the Argentine Grand Prix, Belgian Grand Prix, Dutch Grand Prix, British Grand Prix and Italian Grand Prix.

Fangio won four of these, the first being his home race in Buenos Aires on the way to his second championship. Meanwhile Moss notched just one win, also his home grand prix, at Silverstone. The vehicle became the second-most valuable car to ever change hands at auction. That title still belongs to another 1955 Mercedes, but a sportscar rather than an open-wheel racing machine. The 300SLR Uhlenhaut Coupe was sold for €135m (£113m) in May 2022.

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