Article and Photography by Axel Catton
Home for Christmas Geländewagen in Germany on Its 30th Anniversary
W
hen I heard the local Mercedes-Benz dealer near my home in northern Germany had one of the newly introduced Geländewagens on its lot, I had to investigate. Sure enough, I discovered a G-Class parked on the dealership’s tiny front lot. Its color (which the brochure later identified as green) didn’t do much to make the car stand out and it was locked, but I peeked inside. None of the sales staff bothered to come out and greet me. Perhaps it had to do with the fact that I arrived on my bike rather than in a suitable trade-in. Or perhaps it was because I was only 15, this being nearly 31 years ago.
Early Days The Mercedes-Benz Geländewagen (all-terrain vehicle) is one of the longest-running automobiles ever built that never had its sheet metal changed. Don’t get me wrong,
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The Star ®
March-April 2011
the VW Beetle, the Citroën 2CV and the original BMC Mini beat that by decades, but if you look closely, all had some changes to their bodies over the years. Not so the G. Conceived as a military vehicle in the early 1970s, an alternative to the aging VW 181 (later marketed in the U.S. as “The Thing”) and DKW Mungas, Mercedes-Benz set out to create the best all-terrain vehicle in the world. Development began in 1972 with a cooperation agreement between Daimler-Benz and Steyr-DaimlerPuch in Graz, Austria. The decision was made in 1975 to commence series
production and construct new production facilities in Graz, where more than 200,000 G-Classes have been assembled, primarily by hand. The G-Wagen I saw that hot summer day in 1980 was an entrylevel 240GD three-door (or did they have to call it a four-door as the rear opening in those days consisted of two doors?) with the normally aspirated 4-cylinder diesel engine, offering all of 72 horsepower. Wow! It was a manual, too, as our local