Bodies Many buyers purchased the car in bare chassis form and acquired bodywork separately from an independent coach builder. Early adopters of the Mercedes 24/100/140 PS included the then-octogenarian
Reichspräsident Paul von Hindenburg, whose 1929 presidential Type 630 featured a Pullman-Landaulet body by coachbuilders
Jos.Neuss of
Berlin. Among the manufacturer's listed body types were a four or (from 1925) six seater
Torpedo bodied “Tourenwagen”, a six-seater ”Pullman-Limousine”, a six-seater “Landaulet”, a six-seater “Coupe-Limousine” and a 4-door four seater Cabriolet.
The engine The six cylinder in-line 6240 cc engine featured an
overhead camshaft which at the time was an unusual feature, with “
bevel linkage”. However, it was the switchable
supercharger (”Kompressor”), adopted from the company's racing cars, that attracted most of the attention. With the device switched off maximum claimed output was of at 3,100 rpm: with the supercharger operating, maximum output rose to . The top speed listed was 115 km/h (71 mph) or 120 km/h (75 mph) depending on which of the two offered final drive ratios was fitted.
Chassis and running gear Power was transmitted to the rear wheels via a multi-plate dry disc clutch (“Mehrscheibentrockenkupplung”) and a four speed manual transmission. The gear lever was initially to the driver's right, directly outside the door, but at some stage it was repositioned to what has subsequently become a more conventional location in the middle of the floor to the driver's left. (At this time it was still normal in western Europe for the steering wheel and therefore also the driver to be placed on the right side of the car.) The suspension configuration followed the conventions of the time, using rigid beam axles and semi-elliptic leaf springs. Braking operated on all four wheels using a cable linkage. ==Evolution==