The Mercedes CLS has been a success so Stuttgart is pushing ahead with a replacement, due in late 2010. We've snapped the first engineering mule, testing with Brembo engineers, but the big news will be 4Matic transmissions, a hybrid option, new turbo engines and even more striking looks. The mule we've caught uses the current CLS body, but with flared wheelarches to accomodate the wider tracks of the next-gen car. So Mercedes is replacing the CLS? Yes. Five years ago, the term 'four-door coupe' was a big unknown. But in 2004, Mercedes introduced the CLS and it didn't take long for it to become the brand´s new shooting-star. Other marques followed, like Jaguar with the XF and VW with the Passat CC, while in 2010 Audi will unleash the A7 and BMW will launch the four-door CS coupe. But while the competition is still learning the tricks of the four-door coupe trade, Mercedes is already laying the finishing touches on the second-generation CLS. Codename |
12/22/08
New Gen Mercedes CLS (2010)
2009 Euro Wagon Shootout: BMW 535xi Wagon, Mercedes E350 Wagon, Volvo XC70 T6, Volkswagen Passat 2.0T Wagon
2008 Mercedes-Benz C180K Review
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2006 Mercedes AMG S65 Review
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2008 Mercedes-Benz C63 AMG Review
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2008 Mercedes-Benz GL 320 CDI Review
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2009 Mercedes-Benz AMG SL63 Review
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Mercedes C350 Sport Review
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Mercedes CLK 63 AMG Black Series Review
Mercedes-Benz B 200 Review
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Mercedes C300 Review
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CL63 AMG Review
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Mercedes C280 4MATIC Review
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Mercedes E320 BlueTec Review
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Mercedes E63 AMG Review
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Mercedes ML63 AMG Review
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Mercedes CL550 Review
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Mercedes SL550 Review
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Mercedes CL65 AMG Review
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Mercedes CLK 63 AMG Cabriolet Review
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Mercedes CLS550 Review
Mercedes E550 Review
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Design Study: Mercedes-Benz S-Class
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Mercedes-Benz GL450 Review
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Mercedes-Benz S550 Review
Again, let's get this straight: the Mercedes S550 is the best riding and handling four-door sedan money can buy. At the front: a four-link air suspension with antilift control, gas shock absorbers, stabilizer and anti-dive system. At the rear: multilink independent air suspension and antisquat system. On the road: the German luxobarge smothers road imperfections with extreme prejudice, out-Jaguaring Jaguar by a wide margin. Even better, hurling Mercedes' 4376-pound behemoth into a corner is like riding a Maglev train; the S550 leans slightly and then glides through all but the tightest turns. The car's dynamics are virtually indefatigable. |
ML500 Review
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Mercedes E350 4Matic Review
The E350 is a polite request on wheels. While Mercedes' product developers have been busy performing bizarre genetic experiments in pursuit of The Next Big Thing-- carbon fiber supercars, mutant crossovers, four-door chop tops, re-imagined Nazi staff cars-- their mid-sized model remains reassuringly bland-- I mean, conservative. On the downside, the E still suffers from the swoopy dorkiness of its oval headlights, which make the grill look small, which denies the E350 get-out-my-way gravitas. And it continues to share far too many family traits with the lower-priced C-Class to please the legions of status conscious Mercedes buyers. |
Mercedes E55 AMG Wagon Review
Mercedes CLS500 Review
Quite how this show stopper infiltrated Mercedes' lineup is anybody's guess. Did Chrysler parachute 300C designer Ralph Gilles into the main corporate HQ? Did Mercedes boss Dr. Eckhard Cordes fall in love with the reveal on 'Pimp My Mini-Maybach'? In any case, the CLS accomplishes at a single stroke what BMW's Bangle failed to do with an entire model range: transform a German carmaker's image from stodgy establishment lackey to cutting-edge automotive artist. It's that wild. |
Mercedes C320 Sport Review
The truth of the matter proved elusive. As soon as I found something to hate about the car, I'd discover something I liked. For example, the C320 Sport looks about as aggressive as a Dodge Caravan. The C's tiny mesh grill, petite rear spoiler and single chrome exhaust pipe are a pathetic attempt to inject sporting intent into a thoroughly banal shape. But the sedan is perfectly sized for spirited driving: low, small and relatively narrow. |
C55 AMG Review
Needless to say, that was not an example of driving in the traditional Mercedes manner. One wafts in one's Merc. But let's face facts: the C-Class appeals to a younger, thrustier demographic. Turning a plain Jane C into a demented German hot rod can't piss away the model's air of emotionally reserved exclusivity-- it never had any in the first place. So it's damn the brand, full speed ahead! |
Mercedes S55 AMG Review
I guess that's what happens when the Württemberg Wirbelwinds stuff 493 horses and 516ft.-lbs. of torque under the hood of an S-Class sedan. Even in these horsepower mad times, when a stock pickup truck can out-drag a 60's Ferrari, that's a lot of grunt. It's enough shove to put Mercedes' 5.5-liter V8-powered leviathan on a par with a Porsche 911. (Both sprint from 0 to 60 in 4.6 seconds.) No wonder the technician who builds the S55's supercharged powerplant signs his name on the engine; Guido Nordheim wants you to know who owns your adrenal glands. |