C14600 - Mercedes-benz
5:22 AM. Descent into Aosta. The hydrogen slurry is at 42% remaining. Too efficient. I deliberately increase cabin heating to burn more. The consortium asked for 1,000 km. I’ll give them 1,200.
No brochure mentions it. No museum exhibits it. Yet, to a small, obsessive circle of automotive historians and former factory engineers, the C14600 is the Holy Grail—the "Ghost of the Silver Line." This is its story. The year was 1986. Mercedes-Benz was riding high on the success of the W124 "E-Class" and the R107 SL. But beneath the polished surface, a quiet panic was brewing. Dr. Werner Breitschwerdt, then head of research and development, received a visit from a man who gave no name, only a black leather briefcase handcuffed to his wrist. He represented a consortium of Middle Eastern investors—wealth beyond measure, but with a singular, bizarre request. mercedes-benz c14600
9:15 AM. The Italian autostrada. A blue Fiat Uno pulls alongside. The driver, a young woman with sunglasses, stares directly at me. Can she see something? No. The C14600 absorbs 99.8% of visible light. But her eyes follow me for three full seconds. I accelerate. She disappears. 5:22 AM
Minimalist to the point of hostility. Two seats of woven carbon fiber. No dashboard—just a single holographic projection that hovered above a block of polished obsidian (later revealed to be a super-dense data storage unit). The steering wheel was a yoke that retracted into the firewall. The windows were not glass but a transparent ceramic that could, at the press of a button, turn opaque and display any external camera view. The "sound system" was a white-noise generator that could cancel tire hum. Too efficient
Second, the second prototype—named "Gretel"—was found one morning with its engine running in a locked, windowless garage. The doors were bolted from the inside. The carbon-fiber seats were empty, but the driver’s harness was buckled. A single phrase was etched into the obsidian data block, apparently by laser from inside the sealed unit: "C14600 lives."
First, test driver number two—a man named Erich Voss—reported that during a night run on the A81 near Stuttgart, the holographic display flickered and showed a series of numbers counting down from 1,460 to 0. When it reached zero, the car accelerated on its own, reaching 210 km/h before Voss managed to trigger the emergency brake. The engineers found no software anomaly.