Wow, I never realized how rare these early ones are. I guess I just lumped them in with the common later ones. Love the profile--the juxtaposition of the curvy c(?) pillar with the squared off rear end is interesting.
The follow-up model was the first Mercedes that had a wagon in the regular model range. This must have been something specific back in the days, maybe a hearse or an ambulance.
I don't think its a hearse or an ambulance. Could've been a specially ordered station wagon using that platform. Cadillac did the same thing with its Superior platform. These were called Broadmoore or Celebrity. Not too many people bought them due to the stigma they carried with them. Wouldn't mind owning one.
As somebody said in the 2010 post, this estate was build probably by BINZ in Germany or, less probably, by I.M.A. in Belgium BINZ: http://img2.auto-motor-und-sport.de/1210-Binz-Mercedes-E-Klasse-T-Modell-langer-Radstand-Historie-fotoshowBigImage-a60d9a8d-441405.jpg I.M.A.: http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/I.M.A._Malines) Check that the I.M.A.'s rear door is different than the one catched by Tony: https://www.flickr.com/photos/zappadong/4724323045/in/photostream/
Now THAT is cool! ...and different! Never seen an early Benz wagon before! They're so much nicer than the later production ones! Wouldn't mind driving that at all. With the raised roof, I'd really think it was for some sort of commercial use. (Love the Duster in the new banner, too!)
My Ex's grandfather had a 200d Fintail Binz built wagon from new. Poor thing sat in the driveway for years until the mid 90's when they city made them get rid of it. Wish I had married and divorced her a little sooner : )
@captaingizmondo: First I was going to disagree with you as it very much looks like the ambulances we had here in North, but height doesn't match and rear side window is totally different from those (small series production) ambulances and/or hearses.
Very interesting find as it doesn't match to anything I can find with google images.
It looks more like a home-made version as the rear side window really doesn't match to the rest of the car, professionals usually won't leave it looking like that.
9 comments:
Wow, I never realized how rare these early ones are. I guess I just lumped them in with the common later ones. Love the profile--the juxtaposition of the curvy c(?) pillar with the squared off rear end is interesting.
Wow, I've never seen one! We're these imported into the US or is this a gray market?
The follow-up model was the first Mercedes that had a wagon in the regular model range. This must have been something specific back in the days, maybe a hearse or an ambulance.
I don't think its a hearse or an ambulance. Could've been a specially ordered station wagon
using that platform. Cadillac did the same thing with its Superior platform. These were called
Broadmoore or Celebrity. Not too many people bought them due to the stigma they carried
with them. Wouldn't mind owning one.
As somebody said in the 2010 post, this estate was build probably by BINZ in Germany or, less probably, by I.M.A. in Belgium
BINZ: http://img2.auto-motor-und-sport.de/1210-Binz-Mercedes-E-Klasse-T-Modell-langer-Radstand-Historie-fotoshowBigImage-a60d9a8d-441405.jpg
I.M.A.: http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/I.M.A._Malines)
Check that the I.M.A.'s rear door is different than the one catched by Tony: https://www.flickr.com/photos/zappadong/4724323045/in/photostream/
Now THAT is cool! ...and different! Never seen an early Benz wagon before! They're so much nicer than the later production ones! Wouldn't mind driving that at all. With the raised roof, I'd really think it was for some sort of commercial use. (Love the Duster in the new banner, too!)
It's almost a Vista-Cruiser!
My Ex's grandfather had a 200d Fintail Binz built wagon from new. Poor thing sat in the driveway for years until the mid 90's when they city made them get rid of it. Wish I had married and divorced her a little sooner : )
@captaingizmondo:
First I was going to disagree with you as it very much looks like the ambulances we had here in North, but height doesn't match and rear side window is totally different from those (small series production) ambulances and/or hearses.
Very interesting find as it doesn't match to anything I can find with google images.
It looks more like a home-made version as the rear side window really doesn't match to the rest of the car, professionals usually won't leave it looking like that.
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