Original vintage 1960s Mercedes-Benz ad for their Model 200 through 600 class cars, "Now, there are fifteen Mercedes-Benz models to answer every question from today's drivers. With answers, based on new facts. To questions about higher acceleration, more safety and even better roadholding."
Dimensions: Approx. 20.5 inches wide by 13.5 inches high - this is a two page advert.
The Mercedes-Benz W111 – which included the 220SE here – was a chassis code given to a range of Mercedes vehicles produced between 1959 and 1971, including four-door saloons (1959-1968) and two-door coupés and cabriolets (1961 to 1971). Their bodywork featured distinctive tailfins that gave the models their Heckflosse nickname — German for "fintail".
Introduced with a 2.2-litre inline six cylinder engine, the W111 spawned a pair of variant lines which bracketed it in 1961: downscale entry-level inline four cylinder vehicles sharing the W111 chassis and bodies and a high-end luxury saloon built on the W111 chassis with its body but exclusive features, elaborate appointments, and the Mercedes 300d Adenauer's fuel-injected 3-litre M189 six-cylinder engine – at the time, the company's largest.
Mercedes began production in late 1960, with the coupé making its debut at the 75th anniversary of the opening of Mercedes-Benz Museum in February 1961. The convertible followed a few months later. Unlike the previous generation of two-door ponton series, the 220SE designation was used for both the coupé and convertible; both received the same version of the 2195 cc M127 engine. Options included a sliding sunroof for the coupé, automatic transmission, power steering, and individual rear seats.
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