Mercedes-Benz C112
The Mercedes-Benz C112 was an experimental mid-engined sportscar created in 1991 by Mercedes-Benz as a test bed, similar to the later versions of the Mercedes-Benz C111. Despite using the same number, it was not related to the 1960s Mercedes-Benz W112 series of limousines and coupes of the 1960s. The C112 also was a road-legal counterpart for the Sauber-built Mercedes-Benz C11 Group C prototype race car for the 1990 World Sportscar Championship.
The C112, which also featured gullwing doors, was equipped with the new 6.0-litre V12 engine, with the standard 300 kW (408 hp) and peak torque of 580 Nm. The major systems tested on this vehicle were:
- Active Body Control
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/ed/Mercedes-Benz_C112_1991_frontleft_2010-04-08_A.jpg/220px-Mercedes-Benz_C112_1991_frontleft_2010-04-08_A.jpg)
- Other systems
- Active Aerodynamics
Even though Mercedes-Benz received 700 orders for the car it never went into production
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