The Raumlenker wasn't the only option. Eight concepts, 77 variants, a custom test rig, and the five-link geometry that came out of it still underpins every C-Class Mercedes built today.
The W201 brief set two conditions that pulled in opposite directions. The car had to be 30 cm shorter and 280 kg lighter than the W123, but it had to match the W123's ride quality and handling composure. Shrinking a car means less suspension travel space, shorter link lengths, and reduced scope for the geometry compromises that larger cars can absorb. The physics of what happens to wheel angles under load become harder to manage.
The conventional rear axle solutions of the 1970s, live axle, semi-trailing arm, or De Dion, each carried specific disadvantages in the W201's constraints. A live axle was too heavy and too crude for a car targeting BMW's 3 Series. A simple semi-trailing arm produced excessive camber change under body roll, acceptable in a larger car, unacceptable in a car that claimed to handle like a proper sports saloon. De Dion was complex and heavy.
The brief, then, was to develop a rear axle that produced small wheel angle changes throughout its travel range, resisted the tendency to toe-out under power and braking, packaged inside a compact bodyshell, and could be manufactured and serviced at W201 cost levels. That brief led to eight concepts and 77 variants tested over two years.
Mercedes's engineers built a modular bodyless test chassis for the evaluation. The rig had a complete W201 floor, suspension pickup points, and drivetrain, but no bodywork. Rear axle configurations could be swapped without building a new prototype vehicle for each variant. This allowed the 77 configurations to be evaluated at a pace that full prototype cycles could not have matched within the programme's timescale.
Each configuration was evaluated across a consistent test matrix: wheel angle change through full bump and rebound travel, camber and toe change under simulated cornering load, resistance to squat under acceleration, resistance to dive under braking, noise transmission through the subframe, and packaging within the W201 floor envelope. The results were documented and compared across all eight concept families.
The five-link geometry emerged as the optimum in every category. Five separate links, each controlling a specific degree of wheel movement, allow the designer to engineer the wheel's path through travel precisely, without the geometric compromises that simpler linkages impose. The Raumlenker's geometry was configured to produce passive rear-wheel steering: as cornering load increases, the outer rear wheel toes in slightly, increasing the car's yaw stability without active intervention. This characteristic is part of what gives the W201 its handling balance, a car that turns in readily but does not oversteer under power.
The packaging advantage over alternatives was also decisive. Five individual links take up less volume than the equivalent rigid axle or the lateral subframe needed by some multi-link alternatives. In the W201's compact floorpan, this mattered.
Controls wheel camber change under body roll. Angled inward at the inner mounting to produce passive rear-wheel steering, the wheel toe-ins under cornering load, increasing stability.
Primary lateral location of the wheel. Works with the upper link to define the camber curve throughout the suspension travel range.
Controls wheel position fore and aft. Absorbs braking and acceleration forces. The angled mounting produces a controlled degree of passive compliance under braking, reducing pitching.
Fine-controls camber and toe simultaneously. The geometry of its mounting point relative to the other links is the defining feature of the Raumlenker's passive steering behaviour.
Directly controls rear wheel toe angle under cornering load. Working with the camber strut, it produces the passive rear-steer effect that gives the W201 its characteristic pointedness on turn-in.
The Raumlenker geometry carried directly into the W202 C-Class when it replaced the W201 in 1993. Subsequent C-Class generations, W203, W204, W205, retained and refined the five-link rear axle concept. The W211 E-Class used a version of the geometry. The R107 SL's successor used a related approach. The fundamental engineering decision taken in 1980, after 77 configurations were evaluated on a bodyless test chassis in Stuttgart, is still in daily production use in Mercedes vehicles built today.
The Raumlenker subframe itself, the cast aluminium carrier that locates the rear axle, is the first component Mercedes engineers point to when they explain what the W201 programme did for the brand's engineering standards. Nothing in its class in 1982 matched its ambition. No equivalent competitor offered an independently sprung rear axle of comparable geometric sophistication at the 190E's price point at launch.