Browse over 9,000 car reviews

Mercedes Benz turns fishy

Mercedes-Benz Mercedes-Benz News Holden Holden News Holden Commodore Holden Commodore News Holden Commodore 2008 Honda Honda News Honda Insight Honda Insight News Honda Insight 2010 Toyota Toyota News Toyota Prius Toyota Prius News Toyota Prius 2008 Ford Ford News Ford Falcon Ford Falcon News Ford Falcon 2008 Hatchback Best Hatchback Cars Mercedes-Benz Hatchback Range Holden Hatchback Range Honda Hatchback Range Toyota Hatchback Range Ford Hatchback Range Sedan Best Sedan Cars Mercedes-Benz Sedan Range Holden Sedan Range Honda Sedan Range Toyota Sedan Range Ford Sedan Range Green Cars Car News
...
Mark Hinchliffe
Contributing Journalist
5 Mar 2008
2 min read

It is not the first time cars have been treated as art.

BMW trailblazed with its art cars painted by famous painters such as Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein and even Australian Pro Hart.

Now the Mercedes-Benz Bionic Car concept is featured in the “Design and the Elastic Mind” exhibition, which highlights the rapid pace of development in mobility and communications.

Engineers, designers and biologists at Benz based the car on a tropical fish called Ostracion cubicus or boxfish.

The fish is aerodynamic, moves using minimal energy, can withstand high pressures and, thanks to an outer skin consisting of hexagonal bone plates, can survive unscathed after collisions with coral or other sea dwellers.

While the boxfish has an aerodynamic drag coefficient rating of just 0.06, the two-door bionic car comes in at 0.19, which compares favourably with the petrol-electric hybrid Honda Insight at 0.25 and Toyota Prius at 0.26. The Holden Commodore and Ford Falcon have a drag coefficient of 0.31.

Benz used bionics experts to model the car's panels on the fish's bone-plate skeleton to identify areas of low stress where they could use thinner materials to keep the weight down.

An example is the honeycomb design of the doors which increases stiffness by up to 40 per cent, while reducing weight about 30 per cent.

It is powered by a 104kW diesel engine, which Benz claims consumes fuel at 4.3 litres per 100km and was the first test car fitted with the Selective Catalytic Reduction technology. Now called Bluetec, the technology is available on some production models.

The bionic car was first unveiled in June 2005 at the Innovation Symposium organised by Daimler AG in Washington DC.

It is only a matter of time before some of its other technologies flow through to production vehicles.

Mark Hinchliffe
Contributing Journalist
Mark Hinchliffe is a former CarsGuide contributor and News Limited journalist, where he used his automotive expertise to specialise in motorcycle news and reviews.
About Author

Comments