The car was offered in bare chassis form for customers wishing to purchase a car body from an independent coach builder. Standard bodies from the manufacturer started with a
Torpedo-bodied “Tourenwagen” and included 2 or 4-door
”Limousine” (sedan/saloon) bodies. There was also a choice from (initially) three different Mercedes-Benz
cabriolet bodies, carrying according to the number of seats and of side windows, and listed respectively as the “Cabriolet A,” the “Cabriolet C” and the “Cabriolet D." In 1933 the manufacturer also produced a Mercedes-Benz W11L with its
wheelbase lengthened by to . Intended to accommodate longer six-seater Pullman-bodied cars. There is no record of Mercedes-Benz having offered from their own
Sindelfingen coachworks a Pullman body for this vehicle, so customers would have needed to follow the old tradition of arranging bodywork separately with an independent coachbuilder. Only 50 of the long-wheelbase cars were produced but the development provided a useful precedent for the long-wheelbase version of the newer
Mercedes-Benz W21 which proved a winner with taxi operators and of which more than 6,000 examples would be produced between 1934 and 1936. The side-valve six-cylinder 2,581 cc engine delivered a maximum output of at 3,400 rpm which translated into a top speed of 90 km/h (56 mph). Power was transmitted to the rear wheels via a four-speed
manual transmission, the fourth speed being effectively an overdrive ratio of 1 : 0.76 while the more conventional “top” 1 : 1 ratio was achieved by selecting third gear. The wheels were fixed to a rigid axle suspended from semi-elliptic leaf springs. The braking applied to all four wheels, mechanically controlled using rod linkages. == L 1000 Express (W 37) ==