![]() |
| A PRIZE INSIDE Mercedes has thoroughly revised its M-Class for 2012, though upgrades to the interior are perhaps the most notable |
It certainly took Mercedes a while to find its calling in this lucrative all-wheel-drive market: the original M-Class, an Alabama-built cracker barrel with the soul of a minivan, did not portend a bright future when it arrived in 1998. Five years later, Mercedes began officially importing its G-Class, né Geländewagen. Conceived in 1979, this $75,000 Austrian off-roader had built a tiny following strictly on the gray market, with truck-loving Yankees paying well over $100,000 for used specimens.
Such action-figure S.U.V.’s won many battles, but eventually lost the war: As the rough riders fell back, overrun by car-based crossovers, the market essentially fell into Mercedes’s lap.
What Americans want from today’s S.U.V.’s is exactly what Mercedes is genetically programmed to provide: not armor plating and off-road prowess, just space for the family to relax in peace, along with comfort and safety. If those buyers rise to the luxury ranks, said S.U.V. must add a sprinkling of techno-treats and a leather-scented wrapper that suggests a desirable ZIP code.
With this third-generation M-Class, Mercedes’s confidence that its S.U.V. values are the right ones has never been clearer. This is a subtle but enormously skilled contender in the midsize luxury class. That is, if you can forgive a price that soars with every rich schmear of options. In looks, performance and, now, luxury, ML buyers will feel as though they’re driving a mildly downsized version of the sumptuous GL, the three-row S.U.V. that’s arguably the best of the big luxury barges.
If the two-row ML dovetails with your tastes, your family size and your credit score, the only question is how to fill ’er up: gasoline or diesel?
In this corner, the ML350 4Matic will be America’s popular choice, with its 302-horsepower 3.5-liter V-6, upgraded with direct fuel injection. But after weeklong workouts with both models, I lean toward the challenger: the ML350 Bluetec 4Matic with a 240-horsepower 3-liter turbodiesel V-6.
Math majors may ask why a 240-horse diesel is preferable to a 302-horse gas engine; especially when the diesel’s base price of $51,365 is $1,500 higher. So consider another number, 455, which describes not the engine of a vintage Pontiac GTO, but the incredible torque of the Mercedes diesel. That 455 pound-feet is 55 more than last year’s ML Bluetec (horsepower has increased by 30), and it dwarfs the 273 pound-feet of the gasoline version.
The diesel’s estimated economy rating of 20 miles per gallon in town and 27 on the highway also tops the 17/22 m.p.g. estimate of the premium-unleaded ML. Both models deliver power through a seamless 7-speed automatic transmission.
The ingot-solid chassis is shared in part with the Jeep Grand Cherokee, a vestige of Daimler’s former ownership of Chrysler. The body, roughly an inch shorter and lower than before, adopts some of the stacked-Lego look of the E-Class sedan. The grille is upright and simplified, braced by an angular metal chin and an enlarged three-pointed star. Large, scooped-out air inlets, striped with LED lighting, have replaced demure fog lamps.
The cargo area is usefully box-shaped, bigger than you may expect, with a wide floor and little intrusion from the wheel wells.
Like its big brother, the GL, the M-Class looks classy and satisfied, a sport-ute with nothing to prove. It also retains its forward-slashing C-pillars, a look that some people can’t abide — a “Russian Tonka truck,” one colleague sniffed. If it’s all a little on the conservative side, so are the suburbs the M-Class will call home.
The cabin receives the more visible sprucing up, with Benz-worthy wood and leather, firm but comfortable seats and an S-Class’s worth of gizmos. Most of this costs extra, including the wood-and-leather steering wheel ($590) and soft ambient lighting ($155).
A well-designed self-parking unit uses radar to scan for available spots at up to 20 m.p.h., then neatly parallel-parks the vehicle, requiring the driver only to marvel and to brake. That feature adds $970. Do you detect a pattern? hehe.
Taken From: (nytimes.com)







