RE: HWA Evo: 'Please don't call it a restomod'

RE: HWA Evo: 'Please don't call it a restomod'

Thursday 20th June

HWA Evo: 'Please don't call it a restomod'

With the £725,000 190E recreation close to sold out already, PH headed to Germany to meet the team behind it


The biggest surprise about HWA’s first self-branded car is that it isn’t based on a Mercedes E-Class. HWA is the eponymous company established by Hans Werner Aufrecht when he sold AMG to Mercedes in 1998. And when most of us think about pre-acquisition road-going AMGs we’re likely to summon memories of the monstrous ‘Hammer’ versions of the W124 E-Class. So would that not have been a more obvious place to start? 

“No, because the Hammer never raced,” explains HWA CEO Martin Marx when PH was invited to an exclusive preview of the new car in Affalterbach earlier this week. “We wanted a car from our motorsport history, from our racing DNA, and the 190E Evo is still one of the most successful touring cars of all time.”

Hence HWA’s very obvious homage to the 190E Evo II which served as the basis for the most successful DTM versions of the baby Benz. The Evo II’s place in the pantheon of Merc’s most special models is already assured with values to match. Last year a barely-used 3,300-mile example sold for an astonishing $544,000 at auction in the States. Which, given that only 502 Evo IIs were made among more than 1.9m 190Es, gives obvious impetus for HWA’s new version. There is no shortage of potential donor cars - apparently more than 50,000 are still in use in Germany. But the giddy heights of Evo II prices mean HWA is confident it will find buyers willing to pay €714,000 before tax for its car - which translates to £725,000 including VAT at current exchange rates. That’s a price that puts even Prodrive’s P25 Imprezo-mod into the shade.

Yet, with all due respect to the Scooby, the HWA Evo is a much more serious bit of re-engineering. Yes, it looks like an Evo II, and shares bits of its body with the 190E, but almost every part has been substantially changed. That point was made by the chance to see HWA’s ‘concept demonstrator’ parked next to its inspiration at the company’s Affalterbach HQ. The new Evo is both substantially wider - a 300mm increase in body width at the back - but also sits on a visibly longer wheelbase, the front axle having been moved 50mm further forward and the rear back by 30mm. Up close the bodywork gives the game away, with no join between bodykit and panel as there was on the original Mercedes. The HWA’s exterior is pretty much all-new and almost entirely made out of carbon fibre. The only original metalwork visible from outside the car are the C-pillars and side roof rails. Bumpers, wings, bonnet, tailgate and the double deck rear wing are all made from carbon. 

Even more radical changes have been made beneath the surface. An original 190E shell will sit at the heart of every HWA Evo, but only the centre section is being used. The entire front end ahead of the bulkhead is replaced with a newly built steel and aluminum structure, one constructed using the same materials and techniques that HWA uses for the AMG GT race cars it also builds. The rear gets a similarly serious reworking with another all-new section, this needing to accommodate what will be a rear-mounted six-speed transaxle gearbox with the shifted location enabling a perfect 50:50 weight distribution. Double wishbone suspension at each corner replaces the original combination of front struts and a multi-link at the back, but with billet-milled wheel carriers and bearings that are apparently the same as the ones used in Merc’s hugely heavy factory-armoured cars.

Doing all the structural work to both ends of the car would be pointless without also upgrading the original centre section, with this being done with welded reinforcement. “We want to have more structural strength, but we don’t want to have an exposed roll cage in the car,” explains HWA’s Chief Technology Officer, Gordian Von Schöning, “because that would be too intrusive.” The bonded carbon fibre panels will also help to increase torsional stiffness, as will a fully bonded rear screen (one that requires HWA to commission bespoke glasswork.) Other mechanical changes include hydraulically assisted rack and pinion steering (the original 190E had a recirculating ball), it powered by a hydraulic pump within the rear transaxle. Brakes will use six-pot Brembo calipers at the front, four-pots at the rear, with steel discs standard and carbon-ceramics an option. Buyers will also be able to upgrade from passive to active dampers. 

Design is the work of Edgar Chu, a veteran of Mercedes and Nissan who has already led the styling of numerous race cars for HWA. Keeping the character of the original Evo II while accommodating the sizeable stretch in dimensions and the need for enhanced cooling was a tough challenge, but one he seems to have pulled off with the car’s basic form; he’s rightly proud of the integration of the vents for front and rear wheelarches which look functional rather than just show-offish. HWA put an original Evo II in a wind tunnel and were impressed to discover the rear wing and front splitter do produce downforce in road guise - the parts were only there for homologation reasons. But the new Evo has been given the benefit of computer-honed aerodynamics to deliver high-speed stability. Von Schöning says that numbers aren’t finalised, but the target is to make around 80kg of net aerodynamic downforce at 125mph.

Details are where the assessment of any car like the HWA Evo will get more subjective. I liked the concept’s wheels, 19-inch at the front, 20-inch at the rear, which look like upsized and dished versions of the original car’s 17-inch alloys. But I’m not a fan of the new LED headlights or taillights, nor the show concept’s black double bar radiator grille. But as the owner of a 190E 2.5-16 - yep, it’s still in the garage - I’m far from being an impartial observer. Von Schöning confirms that a chrome grille surround will be offered as an option, and although HWA won’t sell the car wearing a Mercedes star buyers may also choose to add an original style ‘gunsight’ star to the front of the bonnet. 

The concept doesn’t have a finished interior at the moment - hence the tinted windows - but Chu says the plan is to keep the basic architecture of the original car rather than try a radical ahistorical transformation. HWA says there will be Recaro seats and a digital instrument pack, although with the plan being for this to offer the option of a rendered version of the original Evo II’s stylish analogue clocks. It will also feature standard air conditioning, but with the carbon roof panel meaning it won’t have a sunroof. Unlike the original Evo II, which was available exclusively in blue-black, buyers will have effectively free choice of colour, with HWA planning to offer the chance for some schemes inspired by famous 190E rally cars.

Which brings us to the biggest anachronistic change of all, the arrival of V6 power in the form of the 3.0-litre M276 biturbo engine as used in the previous generation AMG E43. On the surface, this is the biggest chin-scratcher of all given both that the original Evo II’s rev-happy Cosworth-designed 16-valve four-cylinder was always one of its defining features, but also because Mercedes only started to use V6 power well after the 190E had gone out of production.

“This is a really cool engine, a really great engine,” Von Schöning says, “we had performance targets which meant we could not use another four-cylinder, and the V6 is short enough to mean we have this in a front-mid configuration ahead of the axle. The 60-degree angle means it is also low, which benefits the centre of gravity. Of course, we thought about using a V8, but that would have been really heavy on the front axle - we would have maybe had the same power but more weight.”

The other appeal of the M276 for HWA is the untapped potential of the base engines, which are delivered brand new and then disassembled with components rebalanced before it is rebuilt and bench tested. The engine gets dry sump lubrication, a new induction system and a bespoke HWA ECU. Sadly the rev limiter doesn’t rise as far as the 7,700rpm of the original Evo II - just over 7,000rpm is apparently the target - but it does mean that it will make a peak of 443hp in its standard guise and 493hp with the optional Affalterbach Pack. “But I will be honest, those numbers are very conservative,” says Von Schöning. There will also be two different final drive ratios offered, these giving targeted top speeds of either 168mph or 186mph. Stability and traction control will also be standard, with drive reaching the rear wheels through a plate-type limited-slip differential. 

The point HWA was keenest to emphasise during my time in Affalterbach is the scale of the effort invested in this new direction. “Please don’t call it a restomod,” asks CEO Martin Marx, “this is not an old car that we have modified, it is essentially an all-new car. I can promise you that we have treated this project as seriously as everything else we do here.” This in a facility packed with race cars, race engines and many, many trophies from numerous race victories.

HWA sees road cars as being an increasing part of its future - the company’s smallness allowing it to operate in places that bigger and less wieldy operations like AMG no longer can. Alongside its motorsport activities, HWA is already working on road car projects for other manufacturers, including engineering and production of the forthcoming De Tomaso P72 hypercar. It also does custom work and one-offs for wealthy clients, several having already asked to have original Evo IIs restored alongside orders placed for new cars. 

But there will also be more limited-run projects like this one, both Marx and Von Schöning hinting the next is likely to be Hammer-inspired. Despite the seriousness of its price tag, the Evo already looks to be a success, with three-quarters of the limited-to-100 production run now having names against them. If you’ve got three-quarters of a million spare and a love of classic ‘90s DTM don’t wait too long before reaching out.


Author
Discussion

Motormouth88

Original Poster:

279 posts

63 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
Nice restomod

GreatScott2016

1,271 posts

91 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
Makes the P25 sound like a bargain smile

Arsecati

2,377 posts

120 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
Ahhhh, well at least that FINALLY answers all the questions as to what it is and what was sacrificed to make it......... put me down for two!

(Seriously though - that is fuggin' epic!).

Roger Irrelevant

3,015 posts

116 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
article said:
...the front axle having been moved 50mm further forward...
Yeah...as soon as I saw that second picture I thought that aspect wasn't quite right. Maybe with smaller wheels the effect wouldn't be so pronounced, but when the original's proportions were so right it will look wrong if you change it. So call me a choosy bugger but my £725k is staying in my pocket.

wistec1

336 posts

44 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
It's a Restomod and at £725K it's a very expensive one at that.

p4cks

6,960 posts

202 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
I can't find any photos of the interior (here, or on the official website) which I find a little suspicious

Regbuser

3,857 posts

38 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
Article states they haven't resolved the interior yet

Dombilano

1,201 posts

58 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
Assuming the only reason at all to retain the token centre section 190E is to retain its chassis number for registration?
Hell of a thing though.

peteA

2,688 posts

237 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
What a car, respect to HWA, amazing company and car! Whether you think it’s worth the asking price is purely personal?

Reading this article + watching the top gear YouTube article this is not the normal restomod. It’s more a new car that has been made to look like an old car?

It’s a thumbs up from me 👍

Sandpit Steve

10,696 posts

77 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
Loving all these restomods.

Yes they’re all madly expensive, with thousands of hours of labour going into each one, and thousands more going into design and tooling - but the new supercar market is now filled with big things that all look the same, with automatic gearboxes, hybrid systems, loads of electronics, all coming in several hundred kg overweight.

I’d probably still go for the Singer 911 though, when those lucky numbers come in.

DonkeyApple

56,525 posts

172 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
As restomods go, this is a really nice example of a restomod. And what's nice is HWA have gone about creating their restomod in the classic restomod way of sourcing a base model original as the heart of their restomod project.

I'm not sure I quite believe the reasoning for the M276 being chosen for their restomod project. It's a pretty big engine and quite too heavy with all the DOHC gubbins sitting on top of a tall V. Arguably the iconic engine to use for a restomod in order to get a real restomod feel would be the M113 V8 which is tiny, weights the same, the weight sits much lower and it's really not much longer.

I wonder if when creating this rather lovely restomod they didn't have to move the front track forward so as to be able to sink the very tall V6 low enough?

Anyway, great restomod. Well done.

1781cc

581 posts

97 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
look amazing, if you can afford it, why not, its not for everyone, and if I could it would go in that garage with all the other crazy cars I love. Have to say the paint looks amazing, the rear quarter shot shows the quality of it, lovely.

Terminator X

15,336 posts

207 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
As last thread, this is love

TX.

Pereldh

554 posts

115 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
There's no surprise a MB 190 isn't based on an E-klass....
You flute biggrin

Taz73

190 posts

15 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
Absolutely stunning, for the limited few that afforded it, lucky sods.

Rat_Fink_67

2,315 posts

209 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
A great concept, executed in stunning fashion as you'd expect from HWA. Jury's out on the V6 for me too, but I'm sure it won't want for performance. I dare say that not many of them will get enjoyed in anger though sadly!

Maccmike8

1,067 posts

57 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
100% a restomod. Embrace it.

C5_Steve

3,664 posts

106 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
That's a stunner, some serious work's gone into it clearly and given the price of the Prodrive (which IMO looked awful) this doesn't seem steep at all.

Would be high up the lottery win list this.

CLK-GTR

907 posts

248 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
I don't like restomods but as far as they go this is right up there. Helps that it's based on an ultra cool car to begin with.

Now can HWA have a go at recreating that other famous racing car of theirs, the CLK-GTRbiggrin

3795mpower

491 posts

133 months

Thursday 20th June
quotequote all
All of the external light clusters don’t look great and everyone knows
A serious 190 should wear headlamp wipers !