The elite of motorsport is fast – and safe. Mercedes-Benz has been contributing to this safety for two decades. Since 1996, the brand from Stuttgart has been continuously providing the Official F1™ Safety Car as well as the Official F1™ Medical Car. The new special exhibition at the Mercedes-Benz Museum gives an insight into a unique history. Since the 2000 season, racing driver and Mercedes-Benz brand ambassador Bernd Mayländer has been the appointed Official F1™ Safety Car driver. He is tasked with driving these extraordinary vehicles around the world’s greatest race tracks.
Formula 1 Safety Cars ranging from the Mercedes-Benz CL 55 AMG (C 215), released in 2000, to the Mercedes-Benz SL 63 AMG (R 230) of the 2009 season are in the spotlight of the exhibition. These vehicles are supplemented by DTM Safety Cars (German touring car masters) and Mercedes-Benz Formula 1 Medical Cars. From mid-December, the current Official F1TM Safety Car, the Mercedes-AMG GT S (C 190), which made its Formula 1 début in 2015, will be temporarily stopping off at the Atrium of the museum.
The challenges to Safety Cars in modern motorsport are vast: the vehicle is deployed in critical situations (for instance after accidents or during extremely bad weather conditions), moves to the front of the field and leads it at a safe pace for racing cars. Compared with the race pace, things may slow down during such Safety Car phases, but the average speed still lies at well over 200 km/h. The reason being that racing cars’ tyres and brakes must not cool down excessively while their engines must be prevented from overheating as a result the reduced airflow.
The sporty, top-of-the-line models made by Mercedes-AMG provide the required output to confidently meet these extreme requirements. Apart from additional safety and communication technology, these Mercedes-AMG high-performance sports cars have not undergone significant modifications to prepare them for their role as Safety Cars compared with their series production equivalents.
Safety Cars were only introduced as a regular feature in Formula 1 in the 1990s. Mercedes-Benz has been continuously providing the vehicles since 1996. The same applies to Formula 1 Medical Cars. These vehicles, Mercedes-AMG estates with medical emergency equipment, take emergency doctors and first aid staff to the required location within the shortest possible time. Medical Cars were introduced during the era of the FIA Formula One Safety and Medical Delegate Sid Watkins (until 2004). The neurosurgeon is regarded as the inventor of these vehicles and he has also implemented many other measures to enhance motorsport safety.
Over the past two decades, Mercedes-Benz has been contributing to significant safety improvements in international motorsport thanks to Safety Cars and Medical Cars on the basis of high-performance vehicles featuring top-of-the-range technology that is also installed in series production vehicles. For the first time, this new, special exhibition at the Mercedes-Benz Museum will be providing an overview of their unique history of innovations.