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− | Maybach 57. 2002–12 (prod. 3,000 approx. incl. [[Maybach 62|62]]). 4-door saloon. F/R, 5513, 5980 cm³ (V12 OHC).''' Smaller of the revived range of Maybachs, looking to all the world like a [[Mercedes-Benz S-Klasse (W220)]], on which it was based. Never considered that exclusive, and always outside by comparable [[Rolls-Royce]]s and [[Bentley]]s. S models had more power, but were never enough to lift interest in the brand; Daimler killed both the 57 (so called because of its length at 5,734 mm) and 62 in 2012 after a decade of losses. | + | '''Maybach 57. 2002–12 (prod. 3,000 approx. incl. [[Maybach 62|62]]). 4-door saloon. F/R, 5513, 5980 cm³ (V12 OHC).''' Smaller of the revived range of Maybachs, looking to all the world like a [[Mercedes-Benz S-Klasse (W220)]], on which it was based. Never considered that exclusive, and always outside by comparable [[Rolls-Royce]]s and [[Bentley]]s. S models had more power, but were never enough to lift interest in the brand; Daimler killed both the 57 (so called because of its length at 5,734 mm) and 62 in 2012 after a decade of losses. |
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Revision as of 10:42, 31 August 2012
Maybach 57. 2002–12 (prod. 3,000 approx. incl. 62). 4-door saloon. F/R, 5513, 5980 cm³ (V12 OHC). Smaller of the revived range of Maybachs, looking to all the world like a Mercedes-Benz S-Klasse (W220), on which it was based. Never considered that exclusive, and always outside by comparable Rolls-Royces and Bentleys. S models had more power, but were never enough to lift interest in the brand; Daimler killed both the 57 (so called because of its length at 5,734 mm) and 62 in 2012 after a decade of losses.
Manufacturing location: Stuttgart, Germany
Marque: Maybach