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The CLK GTR is a reminder that regulations sometimes drive the most interesting innovations. Without that homologation rule, Mercedes would never have created a road-legal car like this.
When boomers worship the halcyon days of homologated hypercars racing at Le Mans, they’re worshipping the Mercedes-Benz CLK GTR. It wasn’t the only example of this phenomenon in the late ...
This CLK GTR tribute, discovered outside a Dollar Tree in Miami and shared to Twitter over the weekend by user @s2kmarc, is a testament to the strength of the human spirit.
RM Sotheby's will auction this CLK GTR next month in Monterey, and it expects it to sell for between $4,250,000 and $5,250,000. A lot of money, but, a fraction of the price of the McLaren F1.
Who's up for a weekend trip to the Ozarks? RM Sotheby's estimates this 2002 Mercedes-Benz CLK GTR Roadster will bring somewhere between $10M and $13M when all is said and done.
It’s for this reason that the auction of two CLK GTR road cars immediately caught our attention. Both will be offered at RM Auction’s Automobiles of London sale on October 28.
The ultra-rare CLK GTR Roadster is among the most special of all Merc's homologation specials, and it's up for auction in Vegas this weekend.
You don’t have to be one of the 25 extremely lucky people in the whole world with the keys to a Mercedes CLK GTR to find out the ins and outs of one of the most extreme vehicles that ever graced ...
On Tuesday we told you about a news conference scheduled for yesterday in which the lemon lawyers at Fulbright & Jaworksi were unveiling a $1.7 million lawsuit against an unnamed car manufacturer ...
Such was the case for a Mercedes-Benz CLK GTR Roadster that crossed the auction block at an RM Sotheby's sale in Las Vegas last week. The final price paid including the buyer's fee was $10,235,000.
Unlike the 911 GT1, the CLK GTR was sold with functional race car-style air jacks. Watch the full video to see them in action, and to learn more details about this marvelous Mercedes.
The CLK GTR is a reminder that regulations sometimes drive the most interesting innovations. Without that homologation rule, Mercedes would never have created a road-legal car like this.