Mercedes-Benz T80: One Of The Most Ambitious Automotive Projects In History But it never really got a chance to fulfill its potential, despite its cutting-edge design and incredible power.”
Origins of the T80
German race car driver Hans Stuck was the visionary behind the T80. Desperate for it, he burrowed Mercedes-Benz to create it. The legendary engineer Ferdinand Porsche was hired to design it, with initial expectations of top speeds of 550 km/h (342 mph). But when the competition cranked up the heat, the target was adjusted to an unimaginable 750 km/h (466 mph).
The Power And Engineering Like No Other
The power plant, an inverted V12 Daimler-Benz DB 603 aircraft engine, shared with the much half-baked Messerschmitt Bf 109 fighter, became the T80Y’s crowning glory. The specifications for the engine were enormous:
Displacement: 44.5 liters
Power to the ground: 3,452 horsepower
Fuel makeup: A proprietary mixture of methyl alcohol, benzene, ethanol, acetone, nitrobenzene, avgas, and ether
Cooling system — methanol-water injection to avoid detonation at ultra-high speeds.
Design and aerodynamics
The T80 wasn’t all about raw power: its design was ahead of its time. The car featured:
Length: 8 meters (26 feet)
Weight: Over 2.7 metric tons
Axles: 3, 2 driven for better traction
Aerodynamics: Designed by Josef Mickl with a measly drag coefficient of 0.18—impressive for a vehicle of this size
Stability features: Mini wings for high-speed lift-off prevention
The Speed Run That Never Took Place
The attempt for the record would take place in January of 1940, over a specially prepped 10 kilometer (6 mile) stretch of the Reichsautobahn Berlin–Halle/Leipzig, dubbed the Dessauer Rennstrecke. Every aspect was planned down to the last detail and the T80 was ready to begin its historic run.
The European project of post-war reconstruction was designed and planned, but world war broke out on 1 September 1939, ad all non-military projects were put in the cupboard. The T80 never finished being built to run that record, however, as the attempt was ultimately called off.
Was the T80 Ever Tested?
It was a fully constructed vehicle, but it was never run on its own power.
The record attempt would have been Germany’s first absolute land speed record wish.
The war outbreak shifted all engineering priorities and indefinitely halted the project.
However, The T80 never ran, but it is forever a testament to ambitious engineering and the potential of one of automotive history’s great missed opportunities.
Where is it now? Said T80 survived intact from World War II and now resides on display at the Mercedes-Benz Museum in Stuttgart.
Shows: Its on display in the ‘Silver Arrows – Races & Records’ area.
Estimated worth: About $4 million
The Greatest ‘What If’ in All of Motorsport History
With aerospace engineering, high-speed science, and cutting-edge automotive design, the T80 was a machine built ahead of its time. Had it tried for a record, it might have set a standard challenged by few for decades. It remains an extraordinary monument today to an audacious dream that never came to pass.