The Mercedes-Benz 130H was a low-production automobile built in Germany in the 1930s.[1]
Conceived by Hans Nibel, chief engineer of Mercedes Benz,[1] the 130H was inspired by Edmund Rumpler's Tropfen-Auto. It followed on the Rumpler-chassis Tropfenwagen racers, which ran between 1923 and 1926.[2]
Created in 1931 by Nibel, it had the 1.3 liter sidevalve[3] four-cylinder engine mounted at the back, hence the "H", from German heck (rear),[1] With the fan between the rear coil springs,[4] it drove a transmission with three forward speeds, plus a semi-automatic overdrive which did not require the use of a clutch.[3] (A similar idea was adopted by Cord for the abortive 810 in 1935.)[5] The backbone chassis owed something to Hans Ledwinka,[3] and suspension was independent at all four corners.[3] Daimler-Benz put the 130H in production in 1934.[1] Due to its suspension,[3] handling proved poor,[1] although perfectly adequate on German roads at the time,[3] while its ride quality was superior to anything in Germany.[3]
Nibel followed the 130H with a more powerful 150H, with chassis designed by Daimler's Max Wagner.[1]