130 MPH Top Speed
Of course I was also driving hands free.
As great as these cars are, there is no race seat, body harness, arm restrains, roll cage, fire suppression, fuel cell.....the list goes on. An S class can hug the road in style but off the road at speed you are likely history.
Not a lecture, friends. Just know your odds when you up the throttle.




A regular S550/S560 is build for 155-160mph and can drive 150mph all day long without any risk whatsoever. You have more frequent trips to the gas station and have to check oil more often but this is what these cars are build for. Recognize that even the non-AMG versions can go faster as they are restricted to that speed. The S63 will go at least 186mph until it hits the limiter, which again is just a restriction, not the max speed of the car.
None of this is dangerous or risky if the streets are designed for it and the traffic laws allow it. Which means the Autobahn in Germany.
All restrictions to top speed limits are self-imposed by the manufacturer and not set by any agencies or laws. Sports car or niche manufacturers don't bother because it fits into their reputation or selling model. US manufacturers don't care because their cars are not ending up in those situations and it helps with bragging rights.
The restrictions in the US for the S-Class are selected arbitrarily and simply offer the widest choice of tires, keep service costs in check and should likely never be exceeded because there is no street environment in the US where this should matter due to low speed limits.
Last edited by Wolfman; Mar 21, 2021 at 03:49 PM.




A regular S550/S560 is build for 155-160mph and can drive 150mph all day long without any risk whatsoever. You have more frequent trips to the gas station and have to check oil more often but this is what these cars are build for. Recognize that even the non-AMG versions can go faster as they are restricted to that speed. The S63 will go at least 186mph until it hits the limiter, which again is just a restriction, not the max speed of the car.
None of this is dangerous or risky if the streets are designed for it and the traffic laws allow it. Which means the Autobahn in Germany.
All restrictions to top speed limits are self-imposed by the manufacturer and not set by any agencies or laws. Sports car or niche manufacturers don't bother because it fits into their reputation or selling model. US manufacturers don't care because their cars are not ending up in those situations and it helps with bragging rights.
The restrictions in the US for the S-Class are selected arbitrarily and simply offer the widest choice of tires, keep service costs in check and should likely never be exceeded because there is no street environment in the US where this should matter due to low speed limits.
the cars seem to be in their element at speed.. after the exhaust note of acceleration, is no longer needed... it is a smooth and serene ....and actually seems more quiet in the cabin... just my opinion as someone that has done albeit on very rare occasions




the cars seem to be in their element at speed.. after the exhaust note of acceleration, is no longer needed... it is a smooth and serene ....and actually seems more quiet in the cabin... just my opinion as someone that has done albeit on very rare occasions
We have driven well over 100,000 miles on the Autobahn, mostly for business travel, and driving 130 mph isn't particularly fast. Times have changed in Germany as well; traffic is denser and people are less disciplined than they used to and there are large sections of the autobahn with speed limits. But then there are also plenty of stretches that are wicked fun and one can go top speed until you get bored.

I recently saw a video on youtube which shows a guy driving his S-Class on the Autobahn. While some of the chatter/comments are questionable it shows of how easy the car navigates at speed in normal traffic....
Last edited by Wolfman; Mar 22, 2021 at 01:04 PM.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG




The amount of stupid I see on the internet is pretty astounding.




The amount of stupid I see on the internet is pretty astounding.




The amount of stupid I see on the internet is pretty astounding.
The streets are also certified to more than 200mph (banking of curves, etc) and accident rates are lower in Germany than in the US as are the fatality rates. Lowest rates are on the Autobahn, btw. Driver education is also not comparable to the US.
No need to judge just because it's unfamiliar territory to you and your driving habits...
Last edited by Wolfman; Mar 22, 2021 at 04:10 PM.
The streets are also certified to more than 200mph (banking of curves, etc) and accident rates are lower in Germany than in the US as are the fatality rates. Lowest rates are on the Autobahn, btw. Driver education is also not comparable to the US.
No need to judge just because it's unfamiliar territory to you and your driving habits...




Also, I don't recall saying that people drive 200mph, just that the streets are certified for the streets.
Here is a review of the new W223 S500 (in the rain)
Last edited by Wolfman; Mar 22, 2021 at 11:39 PM.




Now on my AMG GTC it pulls hard to 143 and that was IT for me. I do not know if they put a limiter on that car.
At 130 in the Maybach you really dont know your going fast. In the GTc you do but then the convertible roof probably lets in the noise a lot at that speed.
These runs were done in the presence of no other drivers in remote areas and for BRIEF moments in time. I am not a speed demon crazy girl.




below are statistics easily found online, i have no way of confirming their accuracy.
SPEED "LIMIT?" STATS FROM 2017 (wiki)
A 2017 report by the Federal Road Research Institute reported that in 2015 70.4% of the autobahn network had only the advisory speed limit, 6.2% had temporary speed limits due to weather or traffic conditions, and 23.4% had permanent speed limits.[2] Measurements from the German State of Brandenburg in 2006 showed average speeds of 142 km/h (88 mph) on a 6-lane section of autobahn in free-flowing conditions
MY COMMENT: advisory speed limits are not enforceable but instead are used as follows (wiki): Being involved in an accident driving at higher speeds can lead to the driver being deemed at least partially responsible due to "increased operating danger" ... this is the primary use of the "advisory speed"
ACCIDENT PROBABILITY (wiki)
For example, a person yearly traversing 15,000 kilometres (9,300 mi) on regular roads and 10,000 kilometres (6,200 mi) on motorways has an approximately 1 in 11,000 chance of dying in a car accident on a German road in any particular year (1 in 57,000 on an autobahn), compared to 1 in 3,800 in Czech Republic, 1 in 17,000 in Denmark, or 1 in 7,200 in the United States.
MY COMMENT: 1 IN 57,000 chance of dying on the autobahn at "mommy i'm so scared speeds" VS a 1 IN 7200 chance just motoring to the grocery store in the US
ACCIDENT STATISTICS (wiki)
In 2014, autobahns carried 31% of motorized road traffic while accounting for 11% of Germany's traffic deaths. The autobahn fatality rate of 1.6 deaths per billion travel-kilometres compared favorably with the 4.6 rate on urban streets and 6.5 rate on rural roads.
Between 1970 and 2010, overall German road fatalities decreased by almost 80% from 19,193 to 3,648; over the same time period, autobahn deaths halved from 945 to 430 deaths. Statistics for 2013 show total German traffic deaths had declined to the lowest count ever recorded: 3,340 (428 on autobahns);
Germany accident stat table. BEST chance of living is on the "mommy in so scared Autobahn"
i dont condone high speed driving, but I personally did not by a 600HP car to drive it at 1mph to 70mph for its entire life. I also think I would do more harm in 0-60 in 4 seconds scants than I do by attaining a higher than advised speed once every year or two for 10 seconds. so i NEVER nail it...but may briskly merge into traffic...
remember...... some are better advised to stay out of the kitchen...
Last edited by kafklatsch; Mar 23, 2021 at 09:42 AM. Reason: typo




this equals 1.18 per 160,934,400 kilometers (1mile = 1.609344 km)
the conversion multiple vs Germany stats is 1,000,000,000km / 160,934,400km or 6.2137 multiple
so the USA equivalent for 1,000,000,000 km is 1.18 X 6.2137 ( = 7.33... wow)
comparison
7.33 deaths per 1,000,000,000 km USA
versus
1.6 deaths per 1,000,000,000 km GERMANY
i personally do not believe this, but the stats are online...and math is math... i believe the US is higher, but 5x higher is questionable... my math maybe?
according to stats and math, the autobahn is significantly safer.. also the stats for the autobahn do include ALL of the autobahn, urban and rural just as the US stats would
morbidity is uncool topic.... done
Last edited by kafklatsch; Mar 23, 2021 at 11:12 AM. Reason: typo
this equal 1.18 per 160,934,400 kilometers (1mile = 1.609344 km)
the conversion multiple vs Germany stats is 1,000,000,000km / 160934400km or 6.2137 multiple
so the USA equivalent for 1,000,000,000 km is 1.18 X 6.2137 ( = 7.33... wow)
comparison
7.33 deaths per 1,000,000,000 km USA
versus
1.6 deaths per 1,000,000,000 km GERMANY
i personally do not believe this, but the stats are online...and math is math... i believe the US is higher, but 5x higher is questionable... my math maybe?
according to stats and math, the autobahn is significantly safer.. also the stats for the autobahn do include ALL of the autobahn, urban and rural just as the US stats would
morbidity is uncool topic.... done













