Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG
Price: £70,000 approx.
Engine: hand-built 6.2 litre V8, 525 horsepower, 630 newton metres of
torque
Transmission: seven-speed wet-clutch automatic
Top speed: 155mph (artificially limited)
Acceleration: 0-100km/h (62mph) in 4.5 seconds
Fuel consumption: 22.4mpg (combined cycle)
CO2 emissions: 295g/km
Rivals: BMW M5, Jaguar XF-R, Porsche Panamera
This is a great time to be a Mercedes fan. After a decade of mis-steps and
stumbles chasing niches with all sorts of pointless crossovers, SUVs and
people carriers, the company has its eye firmly back on the ball; the
current versions of the core saloon models - the C-Class, E-Class and
S-Class - are all once more among the best products in their respective
markets. Above all, these cars look and feel like proper Mercs again too.
These days, Mercedes' new model introductions are once more events to be
greeted with eager anticipation rather than trepidation; in the case of the
the E63, designed by the company's in-house performance operation, AMG, that
eager anticipation was more than justified.
It is easy to suppose that combining the excellent new E-Class with AMG's
thrilling high-revving hand-built 6.2 litre V8 engine, and a series of other
performance modifications, was always bound to produce an outstanding car,
but this is very far from being the case. The standard E- Class is both
sweet and sharp to drive but offers extremely high levels of comfort as
well. AMG's great achievement has been to produce an uncompromising
competitor for BMW's M5, Jaguar's XF-R and Porsche's new Panamera without
ruining those qualities. Fitting a bigger engine, wider tyres, sportier
suspension and aerodynamic aids to this car could so easily have turned it
into a tiring, noisy, chavved up, hard-riding, bone-shaking, tram-lining
mess – but it didn't, a fact that points to the exceptional quality of AMG's
development work.
That work by AMG, incidentally, now starts at an earlier stage in the
development of the base car than it ever did before – that means today's
standard E-Class is probably better than it otherwise would have been
without AMG's involvement, and also better able to accommodate the
AMG-specific modifications for the E63.
In order to understand what makes the E63 AMG so impressive, it's probably
worth homing in on a few technical highlights. The first of these is the 6.2
litre engine – the precise capacity is 6208cc, by the way, so the 6.3 litre
badge on the car's flanks represents a small, but forgivable piece of
exaggeration. A few years back, AMG dropped its supercharged 5.5 litre V8
engine, in favour of this larger, high-revving naturally aspirated type,
which delivers more power but a bit less torque. In making this shift, AMG
was very much swimming against the tide; several manufacturers, including
Mercedes itself where its mainstream cars are concerned, have been adopting
smaller supercharged or turbocharged petrol and diesel engines in pursuit of
fuel economy.
No matter. The results are what count; in the E63 this engine is wonderfully
free-revving, whipping the car up to its artificially limited top speed of
155mph with enormous ease. And it's likely to withstand a lifetime of such
treatment without too much trouble. Each one is assembled by a single named
mechanic in a very clean factory at AMG's headquarters in Affalterbach near
Stuttgart. I've seen this for myself and I'm sure there are dirtier
operating theatres – and not just in failing NHS hospitals. Nearby,
development engines run on test-beds for days on end at full throttle, their
exhaust systems glowing red and orange from end to end; failures,
apparently, are rare.
This engine is paired with a seven-speed multi-clutch automatic transmission;
the multi-clutch set up replaces the torque converter on a normal automatic
and is supposed to reduce weight and power losses, as well as ensuring
zingier gear changes. Broadly speaking, it works, although like Mercedes'
conventional seven-speed automatic, it can occasionally produce the odd jolt
when it tries to push through a series of rapid downchanges.
Finally, there is the E63 AMG's unusual mixed suspension set-up, which
consists of steel springs at the front but air suspension, incorporating
self-levelling, at the back. Unusual it may be, but again, it works. I can
think of only one other car which employed a similar mixed system – the
four-wheel drive version of Peugeot's 405, which had steel springs at the
front and Citroen-style oleo-pneumatic suspension with self-levelling at the
rear. Perhaps it is just a coincidence but that car had great ride comfort
and on-road behaviour as well.
Anyway all of these systems can be fiddled with and adjusted by the driver.
The suspension, for example, can be switched between 'Comfort', 'Sport' and
'Sport plus' modes, while the transmission has 'C', 'S', 'S+' and 'M'
settings. 'C' provides a softer throttle response than the others which
involve more aggressive shift patterns ('M' is for manual). Given that the
car is terrifically fast but acceptably smooth in all of the transmission
modes. and rides well in 'Sport Plus' while remaining wieldy in 'Comfort',
I'm not sure all of this choice is terribly valuable.
Finally, the car's appearance. The E63 AMG looks considerably more purposeful
than the standard car, but you'd be hard pushed to point to the specific
bodywork alterations that have been made in order to achieve that effect;
that's because the sometimes significant changes involved – the front wings
are wider than those of the standard E-Class for example, in order to
accommodate the AMG's wider front track – are so well integrated.
Overall, the E63 AMG succeeds – not least because, although it's a fiery
autobahn mile-muncher, it's still an E-Class.
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