Do you think this Benz will still be able to pass the strict German technical inspection (that is required every two years)? Our colleagues at DW REV tried to find out --> th-cam.com/video/gMUH0NUJu10/w-d-xo.html
It has an "H" numberplate for "historische Fahrzeuge", historic verhicles, that means the car must not meet all modern regulations but has some liberties.
Even more funny that it's for the opposite reason. Back then, it was the most advanced thing they had ever seen. Now, it's as if you could build it with junk.
@@landonarchuleta2495 what Iam dumb? informing other people that didnt understand the main comment is dumb? Of course iam not that dumb People are dumb when they say others were dumb
well its actually still stick shift, it has 2 gears (and one of them is neutral). But you have to be German to understand that, since the translator didnt translate everything.
Actually, the speeding ticket was not for going 29 km/h. There were no speed limits back then and there were no handy means to measure or enforce speeds. However, the local police officer found that the manner in which the first owner was going through town violated the traditional Sunday Peace in Germany. The police officer wrote literally this: "You are herewith inflicted with a penalty of 3 Reichsmark because on yesterday's Sunday you drove through the town of Denzlingen in your Benz motor-horse at such a speed that the window curtains of a pub were fluttering."
That's a new one for me. Oh Lord. Oh Lordy. Oh God . Oh my God. Oh my gosh. Oh my word. Those I know. That you just spoken is a southern socket to me. Guess I haven't been in the south long enough. 🤔
@@Alexandros.Mograine The m/h is probably part of the joke. The car can only go up to 30 meters per hour and the buyer is still unconvinced about its safety.
It does translate like that. But in germany, the first letters are an abbreviaton of the citys name. Then you can chose between 1-2 additional letters and 1-4 numbers. In this case the "EIN" is the city of "Einbeck" and the "PS" the name of the museum
Thats exactly how the first ones were designed. Then cars for the next 50 years, all the way up to station wagons, retained some aspects of that design.
@@HAL.9000 This car might do 1000km in it's entire life, modern cars are expected to do an average of something like 200,000. You could built a car to last 100 years but it would be crazy over engineered, expensive and pretty much obsolete 20-30 years into it's life because of how technology moves.
My Grandma was kid's from the 1900's, but don't even remember that there were cars on that time, lol. So, even people who were literally kids at the 1,890's will most likely not know anything about that motorise carriage, unless people tell them the history.
its obvious he would take it to museum, because this is where te car usually is (when hes not driving) he put it in a museum, but because its still his car he can go for a ride if he wants
I'm assuming free maintenance (or at least labor) for allowing the museum to display it. Cool. Too cool for me though, I get more enjoyment just watching the video than the headache of ownership.
watch Murdoch mysteries. it's a Canadian tv show and they have a car similar to this in it. the boys actually go on an outing in the car and it is hilarious.
@@kallejodelbauer2955 Yes, but the originial commenter is making a joke on how people must've felt like a boss in this car back when it was created since it was new luxurious technology, and that riding it today makes you feel like a boss cause of how vintage it is and the history it carries.
@@hegecroissant3407 Some People feel like a Boss, even in a Nutshell.Thats are only feelings and not facts.If you want to make a Joke,you must know the Difference to the reality. Or, they laugh on you.By the Way thats only a Replica from 1986,when 100 years Automobiles was in TV the hole Year.Did you notice that???
Jan Engel Benz merged 1926 with Daimler to the Daimler Benz AG , and the brand name Mercedes was used until then only for cars from Gottlieb Daimler's company. This one was built long before they merged, so it's not a Mercedes, also not a Mercedes Benz, it's only a Benz.
@@Amai-Kurvi-Tasch Nonsense with Daimler.... in 1896 it was Carl Benz .... maybe Motorwagen AG Daimler was another company in Stuttgart. Carl Benz and Gottlieb Daimler never met in person. Mercedes was the daughter of a Daimler sales guy and is until today a spanish first name.
Planned obsolescence is the way the modern economy works today. Things are NOT built to last as long as they theoretically could, to force you to keep getting new ones.
4:30 "petroleum ether, which these days you can only get in pharmacies." The funny thing is that in the very beginning, when Karl Benz started building his cars, that was also the case. So I guess we've really come full circle.
In the U.S. an old car like this (we don't have stuff like this really, but 1910's-1920's old Fords), are simply "Grandfathered" in. The cars existed before the laws were ever made, so in regards to things like no seat belts, no turn signals, etc. don't apply to the car.
It's something it is but odds are it was abandoned for a very long time (not in use) or it's had significant work done to it just hidden. They are extremely basic like most of the old older vehicles. Folks didn't drive around much in those days (commonly used for special events) and even folks who had like the old Model T's from 1907? Averaged about 3-5k miles before worn out which was significant for it's time. Even if it was in use the whole time it averages out to less than a mile per month which would also mean it's at the end of life. Old vehicles like these are special but there is no way this remained functional that whole time. This was most likely a legendary barn find by one of the previous family owners children/great grand children. Not trying or wanting to downplay the significance but it's most likely one of those vehicles which was made from 20-30 separate vehicles for repairs just like the 1920's vehicles folks build buying it one part of a time.
Actually there is still an old drug store in Mannheim, Germany, that proudly displays on it store front, the words "World's first gas station". It is apparently the place from where Karl Benz was buying fuel for his cars.
This just makes me confused if they engineered it leftward it would have helped the astronomer not go space-wise and therefore would have gained more traction probably sold more units and also would have phased out that radioactive being located inside the jiggle box
"Es wird uns mitgeteilt, daß Sie bei dem Betrieb Ihres Motorwagens die vorgeschriebene Geschwindigkeit nicht einhalten, sondern namentlich durch die Dörfer und Städte viel zu rasch fahren. Wir machen Sie deshalb wiederholt auf Ziffer 3 der Normativ-Bestimmungen Gr. Ministeriums des Innern vom 30. November 1893 aufmerksam, wonach die Fahrgeschwindigkeit innerhalb der Orte 6 klm. pro Zeitstunde nicht übersteigen darf. Bei ferneren Zuwiderhandlungen gegen diese Bestimmung wären wir genötigt, strafend gegen Sie einzuschreiten. (...) Gr. Bezirksamt gez. Henzgen, Oberamtm."
@@리주민 Actually, the term comes from stagecoaches. They used to have a lightly-framed, leather-covered compartment for luggage at the rear. Because it was leather, and vaguely shaped like a boot in profile, the nickname stuck and was later applied to motorcars.
The "dash board" is from the days of horse carriages, there was usually a board that protected the riders from the dirt kicked up by the dashing horses and the name stuck long after the horses were gone
When I was a kid my 95year old great-grand-father told me a story he experienced when he was a little boy: A woman with 2 childrem drove uphill though a little village called Söllingen east of the city of Karlsruhe in a carriage without horses. She stopped to get fuel at a pharmacy then continued eastwards towards Stuttgart. Only 30 years later did I realize that my great grandfather told me about Beta Benz`s first journey from Mannheim to Stuttgart to prove that her husband´s Invention works fine. Incredible but true!!!!
@@FlippDurchA "horsepower" is a unit which is the equivalent of about 735 Watts. Nobody is arguing that one horsepower is the maximum power a horse can produce for a short time, so I am not sure what your argument has to do with anything. (For the record: In fact, the definition of the hp unit relates directly to how much work a horse can do on a day - you may want to look up the "history" section at the Wiki entry of "horsepower".)
This is great!!! Love the spoked wheels. He is an expert in driving that car. Definitely not an easy car to drive compared to the cars of today. Great video!
@@gameplaykanal____6899 bro the reason I say that is because in Germany (so the native country of Mercedes-Benz), "highway" is called "Autobahn", where some parts have no speed limits... Like if this vehicule could go over speed limits... see ?
This car is being regularly looked after by a mechanic though. This is a case of the Ship of Theseus. Technically, with the right maintenance, any car can last as long as that one. But the expenses required to keep it working are great after the car has passed its prime, especially for old cars. In fact, that's makes some old cars like this one noteworthy, that's why there aren't that many cars from 1960s and older still around; cars do only last around 10 years usually. In more dry climates, cars last much longer usually, but they all eventually break down without mechanic's attentive care. Big respect to those men keeping the past alive!
@@doigt6590 as a mechanical engineering student I do have to add the more modern consept of calculated redundancy. Basically, in a lot of applications, it is not necessary to make them run for a long time. It is simply cheaper to make a part that will only last about the expected lifetime of the mechanism. This is not exeption for cars. Ironically enough, engineers are only able to be fairly accurate with this in modern times, using computer programs to simulate failing conditions and production methods. This means that in olden times, mechanisms where often over engineered for their function. This is also why older stuff seems more rigid and though. Because it is. But why make it rigid and though, when it will generaly only be used for a certain time, or a different part in the mechanism will fail long before the other parts? It's simply unnecessary. Now combine this with other facts like older mechanisms being generaly bulkier and simpler, and you get very though machines. Edit: oh and in the past people more often used to fix their own stuf (because it was simpler) but modern mechanisms from cars to coffee machines have become too complicated for the average consumer to fix. Hence instead of fixing something, modern consumers more often just buy a new product.
@never again lol, you actually think that factory owners were morally upright and honest 100+ years ago? How about calling a private police company to come and break up a worker's strike because they wanted safer working conditions and better pay? Or how about the coal company towns that basically enslaved generations of workers by only paying people in company script that could only be used at the company run store? Or how about the railroad company that set up a shell company to charge the US government twice to build 5 miles of railroad on a 2 mile stretch? People can be shitty no matter what generation they were born in
@never again as an engineer I take offense at that little jab. We do our job and we doo it well. Only thing is, we don't make out the specs, we simply adhere to them. We even get paid shit for all the work we put in, as opposed to the "big wigs" that do fuck all.
4:27 when the pharmacist has a special bottle of gas just for you. And the whole fucken town comes out to see you fill up your car. Just like the 1890s, I guess.
People must have seen this car in the 1890's and thought to themselves: "This gimmick will never take off, a horse and carriage is far more efficient!"
The movie "Good ol' Boys" , there's a line in it where Tommy Lee Jones says "Soon as the last one runs off in the ditch, you won't hear anymore about those".
@@rogerwilco2 nope. The only reason people bought these is because they were rich and lazy. It was a nifty idea but impractical. It isn't as quick as a horse dude.
that's why I always get up early I hate when people are rushing to work cutting in people's way then they get upset like is our fault if only people were disciplined enough.
I wouldn't mind for something like that, besides if it's in Germany, your boss would understand A Benz? That's our history there, you'll be spared for late
Me at the club: "hey babe want to come take a ride in my benz?" Her: "OMG you drive a benz?!? Yes!: Me: "Awesome. I'll meet you outside in 5 minutes. I need to go adust the engine to the humidity, Then we need to swing by the pharmacy to get some petroleum ether. Bring goggles if you have them" Her: "....uh..."
@@SchwanziniDeKarotta It is pretty obvious that he's making a joke. He's stating something that is easily deniable. The fact that it's a pun wasn't realized by you either I guess. He's just making a joke about the common phrase of saying something is "old school". How do you know that he's not joking? Why are you allowed to judge him by saying he doesn't know how schools work? Oh the double standards ma dude.. that's the actual fun thing
@@rockyblacksmith You need to call west wing of the Mercedes-Benz Roadside Assistance but only in German just to be sure you are getting the Benz side.
It's good to see veterans still running and preserved not just exclusively on display. All antique vintage and classic car's should be used occasionally
@@jonde3 Cars were made to be driven, and not driving them can cause problems. Perhaps these vintage cars should not be taken out onto major roads, but they absolutely should be driven on a private track or something periodically in order to keep them functional.
That's pure museum history right there, and it predates the legendary Ford Model T. Yeah, it's very slow, but still better than riding horse buggies at that primitive time.
"I believe in the horse. The automobile is a temporary phenomenon" - Wilhelm II. (Original: "Ich glaube an das Pferd. Das Automobil ist eine vorübergehende Erscheinung")
I still believe in horses. They are just sidelined for few centuries. Wait until this machine era ends. Few centuries in the history of mankind is nothing
It shows how clueless he was,and imagine this idiot was head of semi constitutional monarchy ,paternal conservativism baby,the sad thing is there are still people in modern era supporting strong man type politician like Wilhelm
In the end horses will win... They are self-reproductive. They live of water, grass and hay. Their dung and urine fertilises the land, on wich the grass grows. And in the end you can eat it, use its milk, hide, hairs and bones to make other things....
it's actually pretty easy and telatively cheap to register historic cars. everything older than 30 years and left in either original or at least period correct condition can be registered as an historic car. i think annual vehicle tax is something around 100€ and insurance depends on what you want to have insured, but they start from around 160€ per year.
@@TheWolvesCurse tax is 191 € a year. And vehicles with the "h-registration" are excempt from all urban polution reduction regulations, so you can drive them in every city without needing to care abouth things like this.
You, Albert Einstein should know better, you discovered relativity, right ? Because of the car speed, the 1894 drivers are only a week older now in 2021.
Considering in how many countries motorcars even existed in 1894, there is real chance that this vehicle is indeed the oldest street legal care in the entire world. As far as I could gather, the first motorcar in the US was sold in 1896, etc., so the only country that could even think of competing would be France, and I know of no French car of that era that might be street legal.
@@beepboopbeeppyou mean the steam car? Well, it’s a steam car, if you include them you even might find older ones - it’s the same with bicycles and draisines. Those steam-vehicles are barely cars in a modern sense. This one might he the oldest „car“ with all the essential „car“ stuff.
This vehicle is a true beauty, I'm kinda surprised that it managed to survive over 100 years and two world wars! You don't see vehicles like this anymore.
would be violently german to appear in the future and before even asking what year it is, making sure you have your vehicle registered and road legal. Its germany rules are rules
People do that. I just bought a piece of land that was the last part of an estate established way back in the 17th century, from the descendant of original owners. They kept it through 350 years and some very hard times and that guy just sold it all and went on to live in Spain on the money )
This is truly amazing.. to see this 19 th century horseless carriage on modern roads iand this antique vehicle is street legal. Also after reading some other post here from non car enthusiast this vehicle deserves far more respect than it's getting it's it's a priceless piece of engineering and a irreplaceable historical masterpiece.
Seeing how everyone wants to take a video/picture of this man and his beloved treasure... And the fact that both the car and the elderly man is still A-Ok... Make me feel somewhat wholesome...
Life goes full circle. This is the way petrol was first sold and was the reason it was believed that cars would never supplant the horse. Can you imagine trying to drill for, transport, refine and distribute petrol if everyone had a car? The exact same argument being used today against electric vehicles!
At the rate we're going around here... we'll be back to getting speeding tickets for driving 29kph. Car safety technology has increased tremendously in the past half century, and injuries and fatalities are both down massively, but speed limits haven't changed, except where cities manage to lower them even further.
Well, you could actually get a speeding ticket for going 29 in so-called traffic-calmed areas, where you are required not to exceed pedestrian speed (max. 7 kph). In case of repeated infringement even revoking the driver's licence may be possible. That means, that under conditions similar to those in cities at the end of the 19. century (pedestrians, playing children, bicyclists, and other traffic not in separated parts of the street) , very similar rules exist today as for traffic safety and its violation.
“Best I can do is 20 bucks. I’m taking a huge risk here and the damn thing’s going to be sitting on the shelf for years. Storing it isn’t going to be cheap either. We got a deal? - Rick Harrison
HELLO!!! I want to spend time with celebrities. Just kidding. GAGAGAGAGA! I only want to spend time with my two girlfriends and record TH-cam videos for with the 3 of us. OH YEAH. Don't hate me for living the best life, dear jaba
This is NOT a "mercedes benz" - this is a Benz motor car "Victoria". Do you know the german princess "Victoria" from Haus Braunschweig-Hannover how married prince "George" far in the country named 'United Kingdom'? The go together of Benz Motorwagen and Daimler AG was later ...
@@AE-mu1jc It may last forever but the money pit part is correct Jay Leno bought a couple brake drums for his 56 gullwing from Mercedes and they set him back 5 grand for the pair.
@@michaelwilkening8542 That's because it's an incredibly rare car, over 60 years old and even back in the day was ludicrously expensive. So of course it'll be expensive. In fact, old Mercedes are probably easier to live with than other vintage car, because if you can't find a spare or need your car to be restored, you can actually call up Mercedes and have them take care of it using original parts. Of course this'll be quite expensive, but it means that you can get OEM quality parts for a century old car.
The least expencive car ownership I had for 10 years was a 1991 Mercedes 190E 2.0i (that was already 10 years old when I bought it). Car parts cheep when not baying original and all cost of service much less at Mercedes brand repair shop then the brand new 1993 Opel Astra I had before for 7 years...
Do you think this Benz will still be able to pass the strict German technical inspection (that is required every two years)? Our colleagues at DW REV tried to find out --> th-cam.com/video/gMUH0NUJu10/w-d-xo.html
*yawn*
Türkçe altyazı seçeneği ekleme şansınız var mı?
in my area, to save money, they did away with vehicle inspections (except emissions inspections).
Please subtitle Indonesian
It has an "H" numberplate for "historische Fahrzeuge", historic verhicles, that means the car must not meet all modern regulations but has some liberties.
- "Do you drive automatic or manual?"
- "It's complicated..."
Definitely a manual.
It is more manual that a manual ever will
Extra manual
Manual of manual
Not only a manual but full;)
him: "i drive a benz from '94"
me: "oh neat, i have a 90s benz t-"
him: "-1894."
This made my day😂😂
@Tommy Nguyen well u gave the 2nd comment and I gave the 3rd
@@safalparajuli I give the 4th.
@@safalparajuli replace the word comment with the word "child"
I'm 6 th
1890s kids nostalgia
But sadly nooone is alive
VP ROY 2255 you play too much 🤣
@@jesusismyjoy7102 what
You didn’t take the pills don’t you
yep, i from 1890, said HELLO
Funny how people stare at this car in awe and curiosity the same way people did when it first was around during the horse and buggy days of the 1800s.
Even more funny that it's for the opposite reason. Back then, it was the most advanced thing they had ever seen. Now, it's as if you could build it with junk.
One a lot better than a horse ! Two a hundred years from now they may be laughing at our cars !
great point
Except today they stare at it through their smartphone camera 😎
@Colton actually I think it's one of the most amazing things ever made and I'm in awe that it still works and is even around to drive anymore
90's cars are so cool.
The guy aint wrong tho
This car was produced at 1890s
It's also 90s
Hariz's channel u dumb
Only nineties kids will remember! 😀
@@landonarchuleta2495 what Iam dumb?
informing other people that didnt understand the main comment is dumb?
Of course iam not that dumb
People are dumb when they say others were dumb
Stick shift people gansta until the old man brings out the steering arm.
well its actually still stick shift, it has 2 gears (and one of them is neutral). But you have to be German to understand that, since the translator didnt translate everything.
Lol right
And no reverse so no driving into a parking space. The ultimate antitheft factor for cars.
Michelle Byrom im pretty sure the reverse is probably leaving it in neutral and actually pulling the car backwards yourself
“My (insert old car here) is so old.”
“Is it over 120 years old?”
This old beauty turned heads in the 1800’s and it’s still turning heads in the 2000’s
You'll still turn your head when a caveman touches your face and whispers something deep with emotion:
"Uga uga..."
@@darnit1944 bruh
It doesn’t turn my head, I could care less about it to be honest.
@@darnit1944 BRUH
It turns heads b cause it looks weird
Actually, the speeding ticket was not for going 29 km/h. There were no speed limits back then and there were no handy means to measure or enforce speeds. However, the local police officer found that the manner in which the first owner was going through town violated the traditional Sunday Peace in Germany. The police officer wrote literally this:
"You are herewith inflicted with a penalty of 3 Reichsmark because on yesterday's Sunday you drove through the town of Denzlingen in your Benz motor-horse at such a speed that the window curtains of a pub were fluttering."
Right.
@@rogerwilco2Left.
They make it seem like some drag race cheerleader's skirt was fluttering with Vin Diesel at the wheel....
@@notoriousfly9260 Center.
@@Harsh-tf9heTop
Car salesman in 1894: “She can go about 30m/h on a dirt road”
Buyer: “Son of a baptist preacher, is that even safe?”
That's a new one for me. Oh Lord. Oh Lordy. Oh God . Oh my God. Oh my gosh. Oh my word. Those I know. That you just spoken is a southern socket to me. Guess I haven't been in the south long enough. 🤔
@@Alexandros.Mograine The m/h is probably part of the joke. The car can only go up to 30 meters per hour and the buyer is still unconvinced about its safety.
@@Alexandros.Mograine Hey first electric car broke 100km/h in 1899.
@@jakubmike5657 link sources pls. otherwise i call bs
😂😂
*everybody gangsta until the carriage starts moving without a horse*
Lmao bruh
@King Eazy its a joke you wanksta
r/woooooooh
@King Eazy r/wooosh
😂 whew chile
His license plate says „EIN PS“ which translates to „one horsepower“. Awesome sense of humor! 😂
,😂😂😂👍
Oder Einbeck PS Speicher
Am i wrong or the 2920cm3 engine was made from 1898 to 1900 and has 6hp at 700rpm ?
It’s also an anagram for penis just throwing that out there
It does translate like that. But in germany, the first letters are an abbreviaton of the citys name. Then you can chose between 1-2 additional letters and 1-4 numbers. In this case the "EIN" is the city of "Einbeck" and the "PS" the name of the museum
Imagine crashing this vehicle and calling your insurance
"YOU CRASHED A WHAT"
Hahaha 🤣
Horror!
worth = infinite :D
@@denzzlinga debt = infinite
@@Pactastic042 why would you get debt?
I like the fact that it's basically a sofa with four wheels and an engine
a stagecoach on wheels
The car would make for an interesting Uber.
TheCimbrianBull I’ll pay premium just for the ride
@@TheCimbrianBull don't you see how bumpy it is; doesn't look comfortable. The sofa is to compensation for it.
@@maaz322
It doesn't matter, though. I will arrive in style! 😀
I love how its like a carriage without the horses.
And thus the term "horseless carriage" was born
Even the first railway carriages looked like horse drawn carriages.
Thats exactly how the first ones were designed.
Then cars for the next 50 years, all the way up to station wagons, retained some aspects of that design.
IT IS a 'Car'riage!
Many English speakers dont know that "car" is short for carriage.
Imagine buying a car that will last 130+ years..
maybe my 1994 camry might haha
100th like
Technically it’s possible if it wasn’t for planned obsolescence.
@@HAL.9000 This car might do 1000km in it's entire life, modern cars are expected to do an average of something like 200,000. You could built a car to last 100 years but it would be crazy over engineered, expensive and pretty much obsolete 20-30 years into it's life because of how technology moves.
If it’s Toyota, Honda or Subaru, I have no doubt they will last that long too.
Only 1890's kids will remember this.
Baby cannot remember see.
@@fallout1953 nothin.
My Grandma was kid's from the 1900's, but don't even remember that there were cars on that time, lol. So, even people who were literally kids at the 1,890's will most likely not know anything about that motorise carriage, unless people tell them the history.
@@johndavidson3424 True.
*ded*
Imagine all the other cars seeing this and thinking to themselves: Wow, Great great grandad is still alive!
Great-Great....it was our elder alright!" Mercedes-Benz
@@nurlindafsihotang49 That car is older than Mercedez Benz, even though it is a Benz.
They're thinking "Get out of my way" - unfortunately.
something like what matter would say in cars
Lol
He can’t even take it to a mechanic. He has to take it to a museum.
That says a lot.
its obvious he would take it to museum, because this is where te car usually is (when hes not driving)
he put it in a museum, but because its still his car he can go for a ride if he wants
@Gabriel Henschen we live in a society
He owns a whole museum of cars like that
I'm assuming free maintenance (or at least labor) for allowing the museum to display it. Cool. Too cool for me though, I get more enjoyment just watching the video than the headache of ownership.
imagine picking up the boys on a friday night in 1894 with this bad boy
Lol
watch Murdoch mysteries. it's a Canadian tv show and they have a car similar to this in it. the boys actually go on an outing in the car and it is hilarious.
@@suzz1776 are you on commission?
@@Fisher2291 uh? I just really love that show.
"Quite classy chaps"
1800s : Oh Man, I feel like a boss while driving this.
2000s : Oh Man, I really feel like a boss while driving this.
It is from the 1890s
@@elias7748 That's what he said.
@@shreyasshankar4109
No ,we live in the 21 Century.
@@kallejodelbauer2955 Yes, but the originial commenter is making a joke on how people must've felt like a boss in this car back when it was created since it was new luxurious technology, and that riding it today makes you feel like a boss cause of how vintage it is and the history it carries.
@@hegecroissant3407
Some People feel like a Boss, even in a Nutshell.Thats are only feelings and not facts.If you want to make a Joke,you must know the Difference to the reality.
Or, they laugh on you.By the Way thats only a Replica from 1986,when 100 years Automobiles was in TV the hole Year.Did you notice that???
his license plate says "EIN PS" which is german for 1 horse power. What a legend
That's neat!
Fun fact: If you rearrange the words on his license plate, it has a different definitio
@@JoeMama-jb9kj can you spell it out for us? :)
@@malayrojak pines! :D
Needs Remapping
"Yo, you got a Mercedes?"
"No, I got a Benz!"
That's the same thing
Jan Engel It was called Daimler Benz instead of Mercedes Benz
Jan Engel Benz merged 1926 with Daimler to the Daimler Benz AG , and the brand name Mercedes was used until then only for cars from Gottlieb Daimler's company. This one was built long before they merged, so it's not a Mercedes, also not a Mercedes Benz, it's only a Benz.
It's a Benz "Viktoria".
@@Amai-Kurvi-Tasch Nonsense with Daimler.... in 1896 it was Carl Benz .... maybe Motorwagen AG Daimler was another company in Stuttgart. Carl Benz and Gottlieb Daimler never met in person. Mercedes was the daughter of a Daimler sales guy and is until today a spanish first name.
Car from 1894 - still going strong
Peugeot from 2019 - Imma just gonna break down 🙃
@@V_For_Vigilante cheap car expensive replacement parts
Oh so you think it's working without any maintenance or renovation or anything
German engineering my friend.
Deutsche Qualität
Planned obsolescence is the way the modern economy works today. Things are NOT built to last as long as they theoretically could, to force you to keep getting new ones.
4:30 "petroleum ether, which these days you can only get in pharmacies."
The funny thing is that in the very beginning, when Karl Benz started building his cars, that was also the case. So I guess we've really come full circle.
well, the worlds first gas station was a pharmacy (Wiesloch, Baden-Württemberg)
@@xrecix Yeah.
Saw it in the benz documentary made by Mercedes Benz.
@@xrecix wiesloch 168
What's the medical use for petroleum ether?
@@cebruthius It is used as a solvent.
This baby survived two world wars, multiple regimes, a partitioning, a cold war, and the year 2020! That's pretty good.
That shit should nor be allowed on streets.
This was 2019
The video was uploaded in 2019 so I guess saying 2020 is a bit of a stretch. Altho we could assume nothing happened to it during 2020
I dont think 2020 should be on the same list as 2 world wars.... not even comparable
2020, lol.
Every German know the biggest flex is that it's allowed on German road
True xD
Why
@@arwandrasheed1223 the laws.. lots of laws
@@arwandrasheed1223 many many laws with long names
In the U.S. an old car like this (we don't have stuff like this really, but 1910's-1920's old Fords), are simply "Grandfathered" in. The cars existed before the laws were ever made, so in regards to things like no seat belts, no turn signals, etc. don't apply to the car.
-I drive an old car
-Well, how old?
-Oh, it’s from the 90s
-That's not old!
-The 1990's?! Wow that is old!
-No, the 1890s... 👌
RUNNING IN THE 90s!
@@kabob0077 woooosh
@@gabrieliuskacinskas6874 How can you miss my joke so bad?
Man, there's just something special when you see his wife helping with the signaling. What a team!
This car survived 2 World Wars and many generations..
It's something it is but odds are it was abandoned for a very long time (not in use) or it's had significant work done to it just hidden.
They are extremely basic like most of the old older vehicles. Folks didn't drive around much in those days (commonly used for special events) and even folks who had like the old Model T's from 1907? Averaged about 3-5k miles before worn out which was significant for it's time.
Even if it was in use the whole time it averages out to less than a mile per month which would also mean it's at the end of life. Old vehicles like these are special but there is no way this remained functional that whole time. This was most likely a legendary barn find by one of the previous family owners children/great grand children.
Not trying or wanting to downplay the significance but it's most likely one of those vehicles which was made from 20-30 separate vehicles for repairs just like the 1920's vehicles folks build buying it one part of a time.
German ingenuity 🤚🙋🏿♂️
Many cars were confiscated for war puropse in WW2, but this was probably too old even back then
These old cars are literally just sofas with an engine and wheels
I seriously hope this car doesn't get into an accident...
Fernando Lomas Same.
@@fernandolomas6635 same
@@fernandolomas6635 same
@@fernandolomas6635 same
Only 90s kids can remember when cars looked like this
I think 1860s kids
TheSoulEater121 duh
90s kids were too busy drifting lol
Nah more like 1890s kids
1890’s and 1900’s kids
Is there an AMG version for this model?
😅
the later models had 6 instead of 3hp, so yes
Benz Viktoria 6.3 AMG
Imagine how it would look with a bodykit.
The standard version had 3hp, the amg racing spec had 6 hp
"What kinda car do you drive?"
"'94 Benz, 3.0L, manual"
Cool, how long did it take you to get the clutch timing right
It's complicated
underrated comment.
“Benzin oder diesel?”
“Nein.”
@@Activated_Complex underrated xDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD
@@ILOVENUKES1000 it wasn't *that* funny
Next late excuse:
"I was stuck behind a hundred year old car which drove about 25 km an hour."
Lol 😂
Yahhhhhh! Sure?
Fix your grammar and stop with the miles .
@@randomdude9269 stop with the miles? Ok should i post in millimeters next time?
126 years old now lol
2219 somone is still driving my Civic
ok igor
In africa, with every part 5 times replaced
@@nichderjeniche together we can stop this
Bet
666 likes
A one-cylinder, 4-wheel, 126-year-old car traveling successfully at 29kph? Yes, that is impressive. From U.S.
Wife: Honey we're almost out of gas.
Gentleman: Ok we'll go to the drug store for refueling.
3litre alcohol guzzler
Door-to-Door Hentai Salesman Nice try, people like you don't go to drug stores!
Actually there is still an old drug store in Mannheim, Germany, that proudly displays on it store front, the words "World's first gas station". It is apparently the place from where Karl Benz was buying fuel for his cars.
And buy some cocaine too (yes, cocaine was legal back then and was even used in coca cola)
Sauce on ur profile pic my guy
Plot twist: He is time Traveller from the 19 century. He just wanted to skip the 2 world wars.
I can't blame him.
dextor0000 he wouldn’t live long enough to see the second one
FightClub he could
And the cold war
Who knows?
“It’s not about reaching your destination per se, but enjoying the ride itself”
This car has been 100 years on the road and it still hasn't reached it's destination.
This just makes me confused if they engineered it leftward it would have helped the astronomer not go space-wise and therefore would have gained more traction probably sold more units and also would have phased out that radioactive being located inside the jiggle box
@@mynamemylastname7179 Actually it has already been on the road for 125 years.
@@FTStratLP must be lost needs a GPS, google maps.
This is what I told my boss when I was late for work and now I’m unemployed
"It's about embracing the slowness and enjoying the ride."
I need that in my life...
Yes
It's all about taking the scenic route
"Es wird uns mitgeteilt, daß Sie bei dem Betrieb Ihres Motorwagens die vorgeschriebene Geschwindigkeit nicht einhalten, sondern namentlich durch die Dörfer und Städte viel zu rasch fahren. Wir machen Sie deshalb wiederholt auf Ziffer 3 der Normativ-Bestimmungen Gr. Ministeriums des Innern vom 30. November 1893 aufmerksam, wonach die Fahrgeschwindigkeit innerhalb der Orte 6 klm. pro Zeitstunde nicht übersteigen darf. Bei ferneren Zuwiderhandlungen gegen diese Bestimmung wären wir genötigt, strafend gegen Sie einzuschreiten.
(...)
Gr. Bezirksamt
gez. Henzgen,
Oberamtm."
Jedes mal mit der SIME XD
Bruh
@TiberentenTV what
@@kieraareik.266 german
Oh this is German?
ah the era when a "car trunk" was literally an actual trunk attached to the front or back of your car
and yet the british call it a boot.
@@cactusman1771 Yeah we do, and?
@@cactusman1771
That's because that's where they put the muddy boots so they wouldn't get the floor of the car dirty 😲
@@리주민 Actually, the term comes from stagecoaches. They used to have a lightly-framed, leather-covered compartment for luggage at the rear. Because it was leather, and vaguely shaped like a boot in profile, the nickname stuck and was later applied to motorcars.
The "dash board" is from the days of horse carriages, there was usually a board that protected the riders from the dirt kicked up by the dashing horses and the name stuck long after the horses were gone
When I was a kid my 95year old great-grand-father told me a story he experienced when he was a little boy: A woman with 2 childrem drove uphill though a little village called Söllingen east of the city of Karlsruhe in a carriage without horses. She stopped to get fuel at a pharmacy then continued eastwards towards Stuttgart. Only 30 years later did I realize that my great grandfather told me about Beta Benz`s first journey from Mannheim to Stuttgart to prove that her husband´s Invention works fine. Incredible but true!!!!
That's incredible!
_jeff _ Not at all
That really is interesting. I love to hear about history being made. Thank you for sharing.
@@mscott3918 Welcome :)
O saw a similar comment in another video years ago. Are you the same guy or one of the copypasta guys?
Fantastic video. Absolutely love how happy this old car makes this old man. Pure joy in his face when driving it :)
Americans in 1890: can I have the finest horse drawn carriage
Karl benz: laughs in German technology
Well nobody really had cars until the model t was made so suck it.and also by german engineering you mean unreliable
@@blurzzmelo9547 w0t?
Blurzz Melo Our cars were better and more affordable than american cars at that time
"German science is the greatest in the world!"
Blurzz Melo what? Learn your history not propaganda. Benz V- 1892, model T - 1908.
and you didn't mention the obvious joke with the license plate? EIN PS = ONE HP
I didnt get it. Please explain.
Edit: Oh, 1 Horse Power, right?
@@quiteunknown3050 Right.
Of corse, in reality, this engine can prodouce amost FOUR horsepower...
@@arthur_p_dent a horse can produce 20 hp. Just not the whole day.
@@FlippDurchA "horsepower" is a unit which is the equivalent of about 735 Watts. Nobody is arguing that one horsepower is the maximum power a horse can produce for a short time, so I am not sure what your argument has to do with anything.
(For the record: In fact, the definition of the hp unit relates directly to how much work a horse can do on a day - you may want to look up the "history" section at the Wiki entry of "horsepower".)
"Needless to say, the vintage Benz Victoria, has its Quirks"
Doug Demuro: heavy breathing intensifies
Let's give this 1894 Benz Victoria a Doug Score!
Donk score
-10 Doug points, it has no cup holders.
@@ontariomotorsport7038 "but first we'll get to it's quirks and features, starting with the......."
He would do it wearing shorts and sneakers, essentially the "dad" outfit
This is great!!! Love the spoked wheels. He is an expert in driving that car. Definitely not an easy car to drive compared to the cars of today. Great video!
Thank you 👍
And listen to his voice near the end of the video. This is a properly bumpy ride!
everybody gangsta until he overtakes you on the autobahn
Highway my friend and not Autobahn :)
@@gameplaykanal____6899 bro the reason I say that is because in Germany (so the native country of Mercedes-Benz), "highway" is called "Autobahn", where some parts have no speed limits... Like if this vehicule could go over speed limits... see ?
@@jrmc.8324 Yeah got it :D
@@jrmc.8324 That is not allowed in the autobahn lol
In germany we say: Linke Spur und Kickdown
that speeding ticket should be framed and put on the wall
Depending on the ink, it might fade away from the light though
My dad has a speeding ticket for 340+ kmh.
@@Emppu_T. what car
@@teddyzr a fast one
Emppu T. Lies
That car: **Is still going after 126 years**
Modern cars: "Aight so 7 years has passed, time to break down"
This car is being regularly looked after by a mechanic though. This is a case of the Ship of Theseus. Technically, with the right maintenance, any car can last as long as that one. But the expenses required to keep it working are great after the car has passed its prime, especially for old cars. In fact, that's makes some old cars like this one noteworthy, that's why there aren't that many cars from 1960s and older still around; cars do only last around 10 years usually. In more dry climates, cars last much longer usually, but they all eventually break down without mechanic's attentive care. Big respect to those men keeping the past alive!
@@doigt6590 as a mechanical engineering student I do have to add the more modern consept of calculated redundancy. Basically, in a lot of applications, it is not necessary to make them run for a long time. It is simply cheaper to make a part that will only last about the expected lifetime of the mechanism. This is not exeption for cars. Ironically enough, engineers are only able to be fairly accurate with this in modern times, using computer programs to simulate failing conditions and production methods. This means that in olden times, mechanisms where often over engineered for their function. This is also why older stuff seems more rigid and though. Because it is. But why make it rigid and though, when it will generaly only be used for a certain time, or a different part in the mechanism will fail long before the other parts? It's simply unnecessary. Now combine this with other facts like older mechanisms being generaly bulkier and simpler, and you get very though machines.
Edit: oh and in the past people more often used to fix their own stuf (because it was simpler) but modern mechanisms from cars to coffee machines have become too complicated for the average consumer to fix. Hence instead of fixing something, modern consumers more often just buy a new product.
@never again lol, you actually think that factory owners were morally upright and honest 100+ years ago? How about calling a private police company to come and break up a worker's strike because they wanted safer working conditions and better pay? Or how about the coal company towns that basically enslaved generations of workers by only paying people in company script that could only be used at the company run store? Or how about the railroad company that set up a shell company to charge the US government twice to build 5 miles of railroad on a 2 mile stretch? People can be shitty no matter what generation they were born in
@never again as an engineer I take offense at that little jab. We do our job and we doo it well. Only thing is, we don't make out the specs, we simply adhere to them. We even get paid shit for all the work we put in, as opposed to the "big wigs" that do fuck all.
You’ll find it a lot easier to maintain and fix modern cars with parts availability than 100 years old cars where all parts are custom made.
This man's the definition of old school cool
Received the first speeding ticket for an “Eye-watering speed of 29km/h”
29km/h? That's almost 30 mi/hr!
@@samuelnakai1804more like 18 but okay
@@FBIAGENT725 consider speed limit in my neck of the woods is 30 mph (residential). 18 mph in 1890 is definitely a break neck speed.
@@FBIAGENT725 the funny thing is I said that as a joke but I guess it didn't get enterpretted as such.
By the vast majority of people.
@@samuelnakai1804 well I can't see a tone of voice in a comment
4:27 when the pharmacist has a special bottle of gas just for you. And the whole fucken town comes out to see you fill up your car. Just like the 1890s, I guess.
I'm sure it was. Just imagine everyone in their horse and carriage looking at this dude adding ether to his horseless carriage.
He could probably make the fuel himself... But if he did he'd probably get in trouble for running moonshine! lol!
@@johnw2026 lol! I believe in the day, the fuel would've been ligroin, something akin to mineral spirits or naphtha.
Genius
@@johnw2026 I think small quantities for personal use are allowed
“You have a Lamborghini? That’s cute.”
Well i have a horse
I have a brain cell
@@ZachlyGaming I have cells
I have a chien
@@orangejacket4551 I have soda
For those that don't know kilometers the speeding ticket he got for going 29kph converts to just a little over 700 miles per hour.
Don’t confuse them! LOL!
😑
Thats’s over 5.7 million smoots per fortnight!
@@HughesEnterprises I haven’t seen smoots used in some time!
130 years of inflation add up.
Teacher: what did u learn?
Me : Life isn't about reaching your destination it's about the ride itself
Deep
Im sure one piece is gonna be about it as well
Buddha?
Or Nietzsche?
Sounds a bit like Laotse.
Teacher: You've been riding that car again
I've always been a slow learner!!!!
i read this right when the video said it
People must have seen this car in the 1890's and thought to themselves: "This gimmick will never take off, a horse and carriage is far more efficient!"
I actually think it is surprisingly quick for its vintage.
Even back then, this must have been an asset that people understood quite quickly.
@@Stefan-st well "the same people" i dont think so..
Thats exactly what kaiser wilhelm actually said back then
The movie "Good ol' Boys" , there's a line in it where Tommy Lee Jones says "Soon as the last one runs off in the ditch, you won't hear anymore about those".
@@rogerwilco2 nope. The only reason people bought these is because they were rich and lazy. It was a nifty idea but impractical. It isn't as quick as a horse dude.
Bruh imagine how many miles that thing has and it’s still running like a champ
@@ricoricardo4850 for 100 years I sure it a lot even with kilometers
Ryan Lathrop It most likely doesn’t have many miles at all...
ALL DAY No. It doesn’t have a lot of either miles or kilometers.
Fizzco for over 100 years and the car can still run fine surely he been travel with that thing every let alone 100 years
@@fizzco3373 Even if it was only used a bit each year, over 126 years even little bits build up.
This may bring some confusion when calling for a tow truck.
- You said it's an 94 modell?
- Yes 1894!
can you imagine being behind him, late for work
that's why I always get up early I hate when people are rushing to work cutting in people's way then they get upset like is our fault if only people were disciplined enough.
I wouldn't mind for something like that, besides if it's in Germany, your boss would understand
A Benz? That's our history there, you'll be spared for late
Yeah, you could actually say I was stuck behind a slow moving driver, and have that be true.
Lmao
I'd be late from staring at it
The camera man was actually running next to the car.
Ooh yes... he did!🤫
A brisk walk.
more like tip toeing
😂
"actually"
Me at the club:
"hey babe want to come take a ride in my benz?"
Her:
"OMG you drive a benz?!? Yes!:
Me: "Awesome. I'll meet you outside in 5 minutes. I need to go adust the engine to the humidity, Then we need to swing by the pharmacy to get some petroleum ether. Bring goggles if you have them"
Her:
"....uh..."
This is more expensive than c class
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣👍
lolll
@@mynameisciko4885 How much is the value of this car ?
@@georges8534 this car maybe cost a million on auction
"here's the piston, it's a big one"
That's what she said
Wtf boooooooooooooom
So old school that the school wasn’t even built yet.
@@SchwanziniDeKarotta he's making a joke
@@SchwanziniDeKarotta 🤦♂️
@@SchwanziniDeKarotta r/woooooosh
@@SchwanziniDeKarotta It is pretty obvious that he's making a joke. He's stating something that is easily deniable. The fact that it's a pun wasn't realized by you either I guess. He's just making a joke about the common phrase of saying something is "old school". How do you know that he's not joking? Why are you allowed to judge him by saying he doesn't know how schools work? Oh the double standards ma dude.. that's the actual fun thing
@@SchwanziniDeKarotta Dude... It's clearly a joke. Stop trying to dodge a r/wooosh. Accept it and move on.
“Its not about reaching the destination but enjoying the ride itself.” A great thought process.
Not very original. . . but an old man with an old saying makes sense lol
wrong translation tho, as far as i could understand he said something like "the goal is to drive" basically the development is important
@@AdolphZiggler-fc2ot that makes sense, wouldn't expect an old man to have a very hippie outlook on life lol
There is the German saying "the way is the goal", he kinda put it into a different sentence structure and replaced "way" with "driving" ;)
@@i.i.iiii.i.i Ich bin mir ziemlich sicher dass er die Entwicklung der Autoindustrie meinte und nicht irgendeine Redewendung.
Oh man imagine all the steampunk chicks you can pick up in this ride
right? :D and then show them off to the city at a wapping 25 km/h
hey baby, wanna hold my signaling disk
The ones will class will shun it for not running on steam. 😄
@@flaetsbnort Wanna see the *boiling* liquid?
bIG TIDDY STEAMPUNK GF
*"Its not about reaching your destination per se, but enjoying the ride itself"*
*Where I live: "Im the first one on the new road" -Cars 2006.*
Imagine calling Mercedes-Benz Roadside Assistance when it breaks down
Problem: It's not a Mercedes Benz, just a Benz. Who do you call for that nowadays?
@@rockyblacksmith You need to call west wing of the Mercedes-Benz Roadside Assistance but only in German just to be sure you are getting the Benz side.
@@rockyblacksmith museum
knowing Mercedes and their PR-department they would most likely send someone
@@ukaros_ateon I recommend watching the Porsche 111 advertisement
It's good to see veterans still running and preserved not just exclusively on display.
All antique vintage and classic car's should be used occasionally
You mean the old man?
While I strongly disagree on that last point, it is pretty cool to watch.
@@jonde3 Cars were made to be driven, and not driving them can cause problems. Perhaps these vintage cars should not be taken out onto major roads, but they absolutely should be driven on a private track or something periodically in order to keep them functional.
And the veteran drives a car which is in period! 😉👍
Not about the car, it's about the owner who has pride in his way of living. Being confident and enjoying the journey of life.
True true I want one in The US I'll take it down the Vegas strip and cause a traffic jam
That's pure museum history right there, and it predates the legendary Ford Model T. Yeah, it's very slow, but still better than riding horse buggies at that primitive time.
As a german I'm really confused about what language I should listen to when he is translating.
the one you feel more comfortable in
Lol
As a non-German, I am as well. They should have used subtitles.
That always happen to me too when I watch something in my language but with an English voiceover.
english is louder, I know german and dubbing over just sucks.
"I believe in the horse. The automobile is a temporary phenomenon" - Wilhelm II.
(Original: "Ich glaube an das Pferd. Das Automobil ist eine vorübergehende Erscheinung")
I still believe in horses. They are just sidelined for few centuries. Wait until this machine era ends. Few centuries in the history of mankind is nothing
@@avgGamer662 Tha t s actually quite deep damn
It shows how clueless he was,and imagine this idiot was head of semi constitutional monarchy ,paternal conservativism baby,the sad thing is there are still people in modern era supporting strong man type politician like Wilhelm
In the end horses will win...
They are self-reproductive.
They live of water, grass and hay.
Their dung and urine fertilises the land, on wich the grass grows.
And in the end you can eat it, use its milk, hide, hairs and bones to make other things....
@@utej.k.bemsel4777 Ah yes. horsemilk
I love how Germany’s dmv actually cares enough for this
They do if you have enough money
it's actually pretty easy and telatively cheap to register historic cars. everything older than 30 years and left in either original or at least period correct condition can be registered as an historic car. i think annual vehicle tax is something around 100€ and insurance depends on what you want to have insured, but they start from around 160€ per year.
@@TheWolvesCurse tax is 191 € a year. And vehicles with the "h-registration" are excempt from all urban polution reduction regulations, so you can drive them in every city without needing to care abouth things like this.
@@TheWolvesCurse uk historical vehicle no tax no mot insurance company may ask for a mot just saying
@@Juri187xx You’re not going to have this if you don’t have money. A broke college student won’t own a 19th century car. This is a pointless argument
I absolutely love the fact that he still drives it .
People in 1894: In the year 2021 we will have flying cars!
People in 2021:
= Germanwings.
there are flying cars btw
@Karl Marx that's because flying cars are a fundamentally dumb idea.
@@DrewLSsix why?
You, Albert Einstein should know better, you discovered relativity, right ?
Because of the car speed, the 1894 drivers are only a week older now in 2021.
Imagine calling an Uber and then 10 minutes later you see this pull up to your house
@Jakub Klimczak oof
I'd pay extra if this showed up at my door.
@@CallicoJackracham lol I'd give a straight five stars
5 star rating just for showing up..
@ThatsLudacross yes
The Amish: "Nah, this is too advanced for us, it has too much technology".
That must be the oldest "street legal" car in the world! I hope everyone who saw it in person appreciates the significance of the occasion.
Considering in how many countries motorcars even existed in 1894, there is real chance that this vehicle is indeed the oldest street legal care in the entire world. As far as I could gather, the first motorcar in the US was sold in 1896, etc., so the only country that could even think of competing would be France, and I know of no French car of that era that might be street legal.
Cars were invented in germany, so it would make sense😄
That record actually goes to a 1884 car called De Dion Bouton et Trépardoux
@@beepboopbeeppyou mean the steam car? Well, it’s a steam car, if you include them you even might find older ones - it’s the same with bicycles and draisines. Those steam-vehicles are barely cars in a modern sense. This one might he the oldest „car“ with all the essential „car“ stuff.
This vehicle is a true beauty, I'm kinda surprised that it managed to survive over 100 years and two world wars! You don't see vehicles like this anymore.
It was vintage by the first war, an antique by the second, the family that owned it likely kept it very well hidden
@@Serveck And there was a chance it would be destroyed for scrap materials if it were in East Germany.
@@markhenley3097 since it most likely were owned by someone near its production place, it was never really near east Germany. 😊👍
You still can build it, but its expensive
Well it’s not like it’s Jewish it has a pretty high survival rate
Imagine him acting really surprised, and amazed, so everyone would think he was a time traveler
SHOULD HAD ASKED DATE FROM A RANDOM PERSON,, AND THEN SHOUTING "YESS IT WORKED"
would be violently german to appear in the future and before even asking what year it is, making sure you have your vehicle registered and road legal. Its germany rules are rules
They laugh until you pull up with a Benz Victoria
It's very fortunate that this car survived WW2. Very lucky indeed
"And the car doesn't have blinkers"
BMW drivers: What are blinkers?
This and the first reply are VERY VERY underrated comments
emergency siignals
"Blinker" hab ich noch nie gehört....Ist das nicht ein "turn signal", genauso wie "Oldtimer" ganz am Anfang, das ist doch denglisch, oder nicht?
whoooohahahaha! awesome! :))
Indicators complicated fool 🤦♂️
The fact that the license plate starts with "ein ps" which translates into "one hp" (one horsepower) made me smile...
The engine is the same as the one on my old cultivator I dind't have a glow plug so we to use start spray which is molstley benzine
imagine passing this to generations to generations and just seeing your spoiled granddaughter sell it to pawnstars for 500$
After being talked down from lord knows what, "I don't know if there's a market for vintage cars, let me call my fake car expert and have him stop by"
@@WinslowLeach1974 lol
If it got passed down to me I wouldn’t even think of something like that lol,
HaHa
People do that. I just bought a piece of land that was the last part of an estate established way back in the 17th century, from the descendant of original owners. They kept it through 350 years and some very hard times and that guy just sold it all and went on to live in Spain on the money )
“This thing gets 10 miles”
“On a gallon?”
“Ever”
*car disintegrates*
This guy should take it to the Mercedes dealership. They would be so confused.
They would say it needs catalytic converter replacement.
They would try to plug their diagnosis computer to it and would be desperate to find the socket
@@simonm1447 I could totally imagine that.
still warranty ?
spareparts still available??
girl: what do you drive ?
me: a benz
Oh! I also drive Mercedes!
... No, you misunderstand
G wagon
bb boi 84 Monte Carlo still faster than your newer car
What girl?
'94 benz lol
This is truly amazing.. to see this 19 th century horseless carriage on modern roads iand this antique vehicle is street legal. Also after reading some other post here from non car enthusiast this vehicle deserves far more respect than it's getting it's it's a priceless piece of engineering and a irreplaceable historical masterpiece.
Seeing how everyone wants to take a video/picture of this man and his beloved treasure...
And the fact that both the car and the elderly man is still A-Ok...
Make me feel somewhat wholesome...
Stops at a pharmacy for "Petroleum Ether", as you do.
Den kann man doch sicher auch für Super bedüsen...
Life goes full circle. This is the way petrol was first sold and was the reason it was believed that cars would never supplant the horse. Can you imagine trying to drill for, transport, refine and distribute petrol if everyone had a car? The exact same argument being used today against electric vehicles!
Well... they had no gas-stations AT ALL that time....
2020 : Imagine getting a speeding ticket for driving at 29km/h
2120 : imagine getting a ticket for driving 110km/h
Germans driving with 250 km/h:
I don't have such weakness
@@Peter_Schluss-Mit-Lustig But not in cities.
At the rate we're going around here... we'll be back to getting speeding tickets for driving 29kph. Car safety technology has increased tremendously in the past half century, and injuries and fatalities are both down massively, but speed limits haven't changed, except where cities manage to lower them even further.
3020: imagine getting a ticket for traveling a light speed
Well, you could actually get a speeding ticket for going 29 in so-called traffic-calmed areas, where you are required not to exceed pedestrian speed (max. 7 kph).
In case of repeated infringement even revoking the driver's licence may be possible.
That means, that under conditions similar to those in cities at the end of the 19. century (pedestrians, playing children, bicyclists, and other traffic not in separated parts of the street) , very similar rules exist today as for traffic safety and its violation.
Rick from Pawn Stars: Best I can do is $100. “not a penny more” Storing this thing will cost a ton!!!!
I'm taken a risk here....Rick
Do you mind if I call a buddy up to come look at it
That’s the thing. How often is someone going to come into my store looking for this. Rick from pawn stars lol
“Best I can do is 20 bucks. I’m taking a huge risk here and the damn thing’s going to be sitting on the shelf for years. Storing it isn’t going to be cheap either. We got a deal?
- Rick Harrison
Pawn shop rules: Always offer 1/3 of actual price. At least that’s what I’ve noticed.
Wow!, what a beauty.
Makes my 1997 Wrangler 4-cylinder 5 speed manual soft top with no A.C., sold with no radio seem like luxury.
"The vintage Benz Victoria has its QUIRKS"
someone call Doug DeMuro
6 hours later: and now we'll take the Mercedes-Benz Victoria for a drive
Omg doug so needs to do a car of this vintage lmao thank you for the visual
@@isakjohansson7134 This car was built decades before there was Mercedes
@@dendrobatus814 oh yes, correct, i dont know what i was thinking
NOW IT'S TIME TO GIVE THE BENZ VICTORIA...
A DOUG SCORE
My favourite part: 2:19 „alles nicht soO äÄh staAaAbil“
Aähh the road..
Hahah
HELLO!!! I want to spend time with celebrities. Just kidding. GAGAGAGAGA! I only want to spend time with my two girlfriends and record TH-cam videos for with the 3 of us. OH YEAH. Don't hate me for living the best life, dear jaba
Come here in Russia
@@РамисОбарахов Russia Roads? Pffff Latin america Roads jajajajaja
Scotty Kilmer: Don't buy a Mercedes Benz its a "endless money pit and doesnt last forever"
This video:
This is NOT a "mercedes benz" - this is a Benz motor car "Victoria".
Do you know the german princess "Victoria" from Haus Braunschweig-Hannover how married prince "George" far in the country named 'United Kingdom'?
The go together of Benz Motorwagen and Daimler AG was later ...
@@AE-mu1jc It may last forever but the money pit part is correct Jay Leno bought a couple brake drums for his 56 gullwing from Mercedes and they set him back 5 grand for the pair.
@@michaelwilkening8542
That's because it's an incredibly rare car, over 60 years old and even back in the day was ludicrously expensive. So of course it'll be expensive.
In fact, old Mercedes are probably easier to live with than other vintage car, because if you can't find a spare or need your car to be restored, you can actually call up Mercedes and have them take care of it using original parts. Of course this'll be quite expensive, but it means that you can get OEM quality parts for a century old car.
The least expencive car ownership I had for 10 years was a 1991 Mercedes 190E 2.0i (that was already 10 years old when I bought it). Car parts cheep when not baying original and all cost of service much less at Mercedes brand repair shop then the brand new 1993 Opel Astra I had before for 7 years...
Scotty Kilmer dislikes all car brands, except for Toyota. Anyone who has at least basic knowledge about cars cringes while watching his videos.