Mercedes-Benz W128

The Mercedes-Benz W128 is a 6-cylinder luxury car produced by Mercedes-Benz from 1958 to 1960 and marketed as the Mercedes-Benz 220 SE. It was available in sedan, coupé, or cabriolet body styles, and it was the last of the "Ponton" range which had design and styling roots beginning in 1953 with the Mercedes-Benz 180 sedan (W120 chassis). It was largely identical to its 220 S predecessor, except for having petrol injection, einspritz in German, reflected in the additional E in its 220 SE designation.

   Mercedes-Benz W128
Mercedes-Benz 220 SE Sedan (W128)
Overview
ManufacturerMercedes-Benz
Production1958–1960
3,916 built[1]
AssemblyWest Germany
Port Melbourne, Australia [2]
Body and chassis
ClassLuxury car / Executive car
Body style4-door sedan
2-door coupe
2-door cabriolet
RelatedMercedes-Benz W105219
Mercedes-Benz W180220a, 220S
Powertrain
Engine2.2 L M127 I6
Dimensions
Wheelbase282 cm (111 in) — sedan
270 cm (106 in) — coupé or cabriolet
Chronology
PredecessorMercedes-Benz W180
SuccessorMercedes-Benz W111

The 220 SE featured a unitized body/frame construction and fully independent suspension. All models were fitted with Mercedes' M127 2.2 L (2195 cc) straight 6 gasoline engine with aluminum head, overhead camshaft, and Bosch mechanical fuel injection. This was done by intermittent inlet manifold injection (like the 300 d) and meant that the 2.2-liter engine now produced 115 HP. An automatic clutch was available with the column-mounted 4-speed manual transmission.

At the time, the cabriolet was priced similar to Cadillac's top-end Eldorado Biarritz (DM 23,400/$8,091[3]). Nearly every interior surface of the coupé and cabriolet was covered in wood or leather, and matching leather luggage was available. However, power steering, windows, air conditioning, and an automatic transmission were not available. The W128 was succeeded by the "Fintail" series starting with the W111 line.

Production

The W128 sedan was produced from October 1958 to August 1959 and the Coupé and Cabriolet from July 1958 to November 1960.[4]

BodyUnits
Sedan1,974
Coupé830
Cabriolet1,112

Later models

The 220 SE model designation lived on for a few more years with the 1959 220 SEb "fin-body" sedans and the 1961 220 SEb coupé and cabriolet (chassis W111).

gollark: Or is it namedtuple? Something like that.
gollark: 🇨 🇱 🇦 🇸 🇸 🇪 🇸 🇪 🇳 🇹 🇮 🇷 🇪 🇱 🇾 🇫 🇴 🇷 🇩 🇦 🇹 🇦 🇦 🇷 🇪 🇸 🇹 🇺 🇵 🇮 🇩
gollark: ```pythonclass ThisIsUseless: def __init__(self, why): print("Honestly, you should just use collections.named_tuple instead")```
gollark: "Xylostephones" is more accurate
gollark: Nope, not keywords.

References

  1. Werner Oswald: Deutsche Autos 1945-1990, vol. 4. Motorbuch Verlag, Stuttgart 2001, ISBN 3-613-02131-5, p. 31-38.
  2. An Australian Mercedes-Benz? - www.mbspares.com.au Retrieved on 1 November 2012
  3. Mike Covello: Standard Catalog of Imported Cars 1946-2002. Krause Publication, Iola 2002, p. 531; price for 220SEb.
  4. www.mbzponton.org Retrieved 22 September 2016
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.