To Be OFFERED AT AUCTION WITHOUT RESERVE at RM Sothebys' Amelia
Island event, 8 - 9 March 2019.
Estimate:
$40,000 - $60,000
- Purchased new by the current owner, a Mercedes-Benz
retailer
- Never used, but routinely maintained and regularly oiled
- One of about 90 built for Mercedes-Benz Classic
Please note that this lot is sold on a Bill of Sale.
The Benz Patent-Motorwagen is widely regarded as the first
internal-combustion automobile. Karl Benz was awarded the German
patent DRP 37435 on 29 January 1886 for the first vehicle to be
propelled by a motor. Although Benz's wife Bertha financed the
development process, she was unable to hold patent rights under
German law. Benz officially unveiled his invention to the public on
3 July 1886 at the Ringstrasse in Mannheim, Germany.
About 25 Patent-Motorwagens were built between 1886 and 1893. The
horizontal single-cylinder, four-stroke 954-cc engine produces .75
hp at 400 rpm. The original vehicle remains extant and was restored
in 1906 and donated to the Deutsches Museum in Munich, Germany.
Ironically, later in 1886, some 60 miles away, Gottlieb Daimler
patented an internal combustion engine beginning construction of a
four-wheeled horseless carriage. Neither Benz or Daimler was aware
of the other's work. The rest, as they say, is history.
The three-wheeler is somewhat similar to a horse-drawn carriage,
most notably a small front wheel and larger rear wheels.
Construction uses a lightweight tubular frame with wire spoke
wheels. Steering is by rack and pinion connected to a tiller.
This exacting replica is one of approximately 90 examples
commissioned by Mercedes-Benz Classic in 2001 and 2002. The
replicas, built by Englishman John Bentley, were to be used for
educational and promotional purposes, as well as for museum and
public exhibit. This example was built in 2002 and was purchased by
the consignor during the time which he was an authorized
Mercedes-Benz retailer. It has been in his possession since new and
has never been operated, though it has been regularly oiled to keep
the mechanical parts moving freely.
One can only image what a stir this "contraption" must have caused
in 1886. It will no doubt do the same today some 132 years later.To
view this car and others currently consigned to this auction,
please visit the RM website at rmsothebys.com/en/auctions/am19.