
1934 ''Silberpfeil-W25''

1937 ''Mercedes-Benz W 125''
'Silver Arrows' (in German 'Silberpfeile') was the name given by the press to Germany's dominant
Mercedes-Benz and
Auto Union Grand Prix motor racing cars between 1934 and 1939, and also later applied to the
Mercedes-Benz Formula One and sports cars in 1954/55.
For decades until the introduction of sponsorship liveries, each country had its
traditional color in automobile racing. Italian race cars are still famous for their
Rosso Corsa red color, British ones are
British Racing Green, French blue, etc.
German cars like the
Blitzen-Benz were white. For example, the big supercharged 200
hp Mercedes-Benz SSK with which
Rudolf Caracciola won the 1931
Mille Miglia was called ''White Elephant''.
The origin of the Silver Arrows was accidental. The international governing body of motor sport prescribed for 1934 onwards a maximum weight limit of 750
kilograms for Grand Prix racing cars, excluding tyres and fuel. When the Mercedes-Benz team placed its new
Mercedes-Benz W25 on the scrutineering scales prior to the first race (the
Eifelrennen at the
Nürburgring) in spring 1934, it recorded 751 kg. Racing manager
Alfred Neubauer and his driver
Manfred von Brauchitsch were at first baffled, before hitting on the idea of scraping all the white paint from the bodywork. The next day, the shining silver aluminium beneath was exposed and the scrutineering was passed. After a successful race of the 320 hp cars, the nickname Silver Arrow was born.
Until 1937, the supercharged engine of a
Mercedes-Benz W125 attained an output of 646 hp (475
kW), a figure not exceeded in Grand Prix Racing until the early 1980s, with the appearance of turbo-charged engines in
Formula One. The Silver Arrows of Mercedes and Auto Union cars reached speeds of well over 300
km/h in 1937, and well over 400 km/h during land speed record runs.
The superiority of these vehicles in international motor racing established the term "Silver Arrow" as a legend, for example by usually winning the first race in which they were entered. The names
Rudolf Caracciola,
Bernd Rosemeyer,
Hermann Lang, and later
Stirling Moss and
Juan Manuel Fangio, will for ever be associated with the eras of these racing cars.
Mercedes-Benz recalled its great past in the 1970s with rallye cars, and in the 1980s with the
Sauber sportscars as well as the
DTM touring cars. In 1995 and 1996, the
McLaren-Mercedes F1 cars were still painted in the red&white colors of
Marlboro but in 1997,
West brought silver and black colors. As his predecessors did, the new ''silver arrow'' won on his first appearance, in
Melbourne with
David Coulthard. The latest incarnation of the McLaren-Mercedes
livery further continues this tradition by being dominated by highly reflective chrome-silver.
Now a traditional colour for road-cars in reference to the
Silver Arrows, most German car companies have a shade of silver in their catalogues conforming to 'Silberpfeil-Grau', or
Silver Arrow Grey.
Other German companies, like
Porsche and
BMW, still favour mainly the
traditional white, while
Audi also uses silver in to carry on the tradition of
Auto Union.
At the 1999
Le Mans 24 Hours, a total of seven Silver Arrows were entered in the
Le Mans Prototype class:
★ three ill-fated
Mercedes-Benz CLR
★ two unreliable British-built LM-GT1
Audi R8C
★ two
Joest Racing LMP
Audi R8R that scored third and fourth.
Further reading
★ Chris Nixon, ''Racing the Silver Arrows: Mercedes-Benz versus Auto Union 1934-1939'' (Osprey, London, 1986) pp. 30-37, 164-168
External link
★
Grand Prix History, Die Silberpfeile