Mercedes-Benz L 319 (1 G.) `1955 - LCV (Германия) | |
HW100 - 45000
UAW55 - 105000 RRW100 - 175000 PKRR - 7500 |
Mercedes-Benz L 319
Mercedes-Benz L319
Overview
Manufacturer - Daimler-Benz AG
Production - 1955-1968
Assembly - Sindelfingen, load carriers until 1961 / Mannheim, minibuses until
1961 / Düsseldorf, after 1961 / Tehran, Iran (Iran National), 1967-68
Body and chassis
Class - Light commercial vehicle
Body style - Cargo Van
Crew Van
Pickup (stand. and crew cab)
Cab Chassis
Minibus
Layout - Front engine, rear-wheel drive
Chronology
Successor - Mercedes-Benz T2
The Mercedes-Benz L 319 is a light commercial vehicle built by Mercedes-Benz
between 1955 and 1967. Larger than a standard delivery van, but smaller than a
conventional light truck of the period, it was the manufacturer's first model in
this class. The vehicle was offered with a range of van and truck bodies.
Special application and minibus (O 319) variants were also available.
Background
By 1955 Daimler-Benz was well represented in the passenger car market, and also
offered commercial operators an extensive range of conventional trucks. The
smallest of the trucks, offered in its then current form since 1945, was the
Mercedes-Benz L 3500 range. As regards smaller commercial vehicles, during the
war, Mercedes was compelled by government imposed rationalisation to manufacture
the Opel Blitz truck of its leading competitor, but the company had featured no
commercial vehicle of its own below the 3 tonne level since before the war.
However, during the early 1950s the success of the Volkswagen panel van and
rejuvenated Opel Blitz persuaded Mercedes-Benz that the category was too
important to be ignored.
Launch
The van that premiered at the Frankfurt Motor Show in September 1955 had a gross
weight of 3.6 tonnes and a maximum load capacity of 1.6 or 1.8 tonnes according
to version. A wide range of body permutations included a panel van, a standard
level light truck, a low level light flat-bed truck and various increasingly
diverse and elaborate types of minibus. Fire truck variants are particularly
well represented among the surviving L319 to be seen in motor museums.
Vehicle architecture
Mercedes did not follow the Volkswagen rear-engined configuration, but the van
nevertheless featured a modern "cab over cabin", without the sort of protruding
front bonnet/hood characteristic of the Opel Blitz and larger Mercedes
commercial vehicles of the time. Placing the driver at the front of the vehicle
ensured a good view out and gave the vehicle a contemporary look as well as
maximising load space. But the retention of the forward mounted engine left the
driver sharing his cabin with the engine which occupied the floor space between
the driver and his passenger, and the body designers also had to take account of
a drive-shaft which connected to the rear wheels. The vehicle has a turning
radius of 11.5 Meters.
Running gear
Leaf springing and rigid axles had the merit of simplicity and development costs
were also kept down by using engines directly from the company's passenger car
range. The original L319s shared the 43 hp engine of the Mercedes-Benz 180D.
Subsequently, slightly more powerful diesel alternatives were offered along with
petrol engined variants.
Assembly
Initially the vans were assembled at the company's Sindelfingen plant, not far
from the Mercedes head office at Untertürkheim. However, in 1958 the company
acquired Auto Union in a package of assets that included the Düsseldorf plant
where that company had built cars following the loss of its original Zwickau
plant to the Soviet occupation zone of Germany in 1945. Mercedes progressively
transferred Auto Union car production to a new plant at Ingolstadt and the
Düsseldorf facility became (and remains) a plant for Mercedes-Benz commercial
vehicle production. Production of the L319 transferred to Düsseldorf in 1961.
The van was also assembled at Vitoria in Spain and in Port Melbourne Australia
from CKD kits.
And the minibus version was assembled in Iran by Iran National Company.
Name changes
In 1963 the L 319 designation was abandoned. The vehicles were now branded as
the L 405 (diesel powered) and L 407 (petrol / gasoline powered). There was also
an L 406 and L 408. This was part of a wider relabelling of the company's
commercial vehicle range intended, for the initiated, to identify "weight and
output data" in model names.
Replacement
For the 1968 model year the L319 was replaced by the Mercedes-Benz T2. By this
time between 120,000 and 140,000 had been produced.
Mercedes-Benz L 319 platform with tarpaulin
Mercedes-Benz O 319 Minibus with panoramic windows and hubcaps
Mercedes-Benz L 319 Fire truck LF 8
wikipedia.org (en)