I was cruising through Portland, Ore. today on the way to work and I saw a Mercedes Cab-Over ala European style pulling what looked like a trailer for Yellow on I-5 headed southbound. Granted Portland is Daimler Trucks North American Headquarters (for the time being at least), but I don't recall seeing very many, if any, European style cab-overs here in the US.
Can anyone tell me if a Mercedes cab-over is part of any major trucking company's fleet? Are they common, and I'm just not paying attention? Anyone with experience driving one, how does it compare to American trucks?
Just curious.
Mercedes Trucks
Discussion in 'Trucks [ Eighteen Wheelers ]' started by zfei, May 20, 2010.
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That's it!!! I saw that very one, except the trailer it was pulling was for Yellow. Thanks.
Judging from that thread, some are guessing that it is part of some kind of demonstration unit related to Daimler here in Portland.
Does anyone around here know what is going to become of this test? More Euro cabovers in the US?
I can imagine the discussion that will become of this from drivers if any fleets ever actually adopt one of these "lorries".
Thanks. -
This is not the latest Mercedes truck ( this is mp2 -late 2002-2008)
now Mercedes produces Actros mp3
some of my opinions thinking : Mercedes plans to introduce in the 2011-2011 Detroit Diesel dd13 dd15.....
that actually developed for the entire daimler group...
possible that this is a test model or something like this
anyway if is inside mercedes engine it is v8 or v8 from 320-598 hp
v6 12L (320 360 410 440 460 480)
v8 16L (500,510,540,550,580,600)
this is mega space cab which have flat floor throughout all cab
standing interior height about 800L of storage space (210 gallons)
31.5inch wide upper bed ,23.2-2.75inch wide lower bed (narrow behind the driver's seat)
but this truck has a different problem than the small cab for the americas transport - it is heavy it has heavy v6 -v8 engine 12 or 16 speed syncro gearbox strong chassis at least 57000lbs rear axles with hub reduction it is weight empty around 20-21k lbs with 150 gallons of fuel
http://www.mercedes-benz.de/content...me/home/trucks/actros/cabs/features.0001.html
http://www.mercedes-benz.de/content...me/home/trucks/actros/cabs/features.0002.html
http://www.mercedes-benz.de/content...e/home/trucks/actros/cabs/megaspace.0003.html (360 view ) -and you will find some
known parts used by freightlinner and Western Star
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Wow. So it is quite possible to run European model trucks here in the US (and maybe even vice-versa). From the picture however, it does not appear that unit had a sleeper on it (besides, Yellow is an LTL carrier that I think only runs daycabs anyway).
Seems like the weight would put it at a disadvantage however. Fuel economy will be an important consideration as well.
What I think may be most controversial among American drivers is the COE design, which is almost extinct nowadays in the US. Maybe there have been advances in the suspension and ride on these. Still, a COE may have an advantage in tight spots. -
There is a sleeper there, just not the size we are used to.
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Most likely a test truck for the dd13/15/16 engines as Mercedes has a 1 engine world wide plan. You can import euro truck at a 25% tariff which make them uneconomical.
Your best bet is a Volvo FH cabover as the VN uses most of the same parts.zfei and The Challenger Thank this. -
Interesting to know about the whole tariff scheme. I guess I'm right in saying that these Euro "lorries" are pretty rare animals here in the US.
Still, I wonder what the Daimler folks have in mind with this test truck. -
Last edited: May 22, 2010
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