Showing posts with label Sedan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sedan. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Ford Mondeo 2.0 TDCi

Ford Mondeo 2.0 TDCi

Background

While premium family car ranges from BMW, Audi and Mercedes sell in ever greater numbers, sales of cheaper rivals from Ford and Vauxhall have been finding ever fewer buyers. But that doesn’t stop these brands from having repeated cracks at this shrinking market. The numbers are worth chasing if the investment is spread across multiple models and you can tempt premium buyers by offering well kitted cars developed to the point of offering irresistible value.

That’s the theory, at least. The new Ford Mondeo instantly offers value by providing more metal than your BMW 3-series as well as a level of finish, kit and sophistication that gets closer to what a BMW offers, for thousands less. It’s a combination that Ford hopes will at least allow the Mondeo to maintain its sales momentum, if not build on it.

The original Mondeo replaced Ford’s Sierra, whose Citroën-esque styling initially proved a sales deterrent. The Sierra’s advanced looks hid rear-drive underpinnings that Ford abandoned with the front-drive Mondeo, which was also intended as a world car.

It succeeded in Europe but not the US, despite gathering a fine reputation for handling, sophistication and convenience, if not style. The 2000 version was better looking and still more sophisticated, but never crossed the Atlantic, and neither will this 2007 edition, despite its greater size.

Design

Ford Mondeo 2.0 TDCi This is the third all-new Mondeo iteration since the model’s birth in 1993, and in principle its mechanical make-up is much the same: transverse, front-drive powertrains, MacPherson strut front suspension, something multi-linked at the rear and a level of functional development that enables this Ford to offer more than might be expected in the areas of handling, steering, ride comfort, refinement and convenience.

All of this is underpinned by attention to the economic realities of insurance groups, cost of service and repair, safety, theft-proofing and low fuel consumption that can win or lose the big fleet orders that make or break models like these.

In fact, there are few truly fresh engineering features to be found in this car, which instead rides a contemporary innovation wave largely generated by its suppliers. You can have your Mondeo with adaptive cruise control, a hill-holder and various levels of voice-activated infotainment system, as well as collision mitigation systems, adaptive damping, climate control, trick headlights and so forth.

What gives it a potential edge is the thoroughness with which these systems have been developed and integrated into the car, and the sheer scope of safety and convenience features being offered in a model whose prices start at £15,000.

All this is built into a car that has grown, particularly in terms of its width, which has swollen by almost five inches. This Mondeo is also slightly longer and taller, with the result that it weighs, model for model, up to 175kg more than the outgoing car.

Still, it’s also stiffer; the torsional rigidity of this five-door is improved by 130 per cent. It’s significantly roomier than the old model and safer, too, what with seven airbags, active front head restraints and a steering wheel and pedals that move away from passengers in an impact.

On the Road

Ford Mondeo 2.0 TDCi Solid, quiet power delivery characterises the 138bhp 2.0-litre TDCi engine sampled here; it musters 236lb ft of torque between 1750 and 2240rpm, though up to 251lb ft of overboost is momentarily available. It's soft, civilised, and revs smoothly to the red line.

Our acceleration runs were recorded in damp conditions, explaining the discrepancy between our 10.0sec 0-60mph and Ford’s claimed 0-62mph time of 9.5sec. But this number fails to reveal the thrusting in-gear punch that this engine can deliver.

However, you'll often need to call upon that thrust because the Mondeo's gear ratios are tall, and the engine a little weak before the turbo kicks in; the engine starts to grumble a little if you ask it to amble at 30mph in fourth, for example. That tall gearing almost eliminates engine noise when you’re in sixth on the motorway, though.

It only takes one bend to reveal the excellence of the Mondeo’s chassis. It turns in with swift confidence, and the body comes after it without any of the heave and flop that you might expect. Body composure is impressive, then, but not as striking as the Mondeo’s resistance to understeer, which is emphatic, and your confidence is only heightened by well judged steering that delivers consistent weighting and decent precision.

On the sports suspension and 18in alloys that this test car came with, you’ll have a ride that is just pliant enough to avoid any jostling or jarring, but we’d recommend the standard suspension and wheel size. With this set-up you lose almost nothing in body composure, and gain a ride that often teeters on the exceptional.

ESP is standard, and there’s an optional electronic, adaptive damper set-up called CCD (continuously controlled damping) that functions in league with Interactive Vehicle Dynamics Control (IVDC).

The minor spoiler here is the braking. There are no issues with stopping power, but the pedal feels over-servoed and we found it hard to heel and toe.

Living

Ford Mondeo 2.0 TDCi If you want to see where much of the graft – and money – has gone into this new Mondeo, take a look at the cabin, because its finish has been taken to a new level, as Ford chases after the standards set by industry leader Audi.

The Mondeo can't quite get there, because it costs thousands less than the equivalent A4. But you could hardly call this interior cheap. Pleasing soft-touch plastics skin much of the dashboard and doors. Tasteful aluminium décor features extensively, as do piano-black lacquer inserts.

The instrumentation looks appealing and the seat fabrics, the steering wheel and the design of the subsidiary controls lend the cabin a sophisticated, high-quality aura that makes it a pleasing place to be. There are minor cheap moments, such as the glovebox lid and the extent of the Ghia’s veneer abuse, but on the whole it is an attractive piece of work.

Ford Mondeo 2.0 TDCi At least as important is the spaciousness of this interior. We wouldn’t quite call it limousine-like (as Ford does), but there really is a lot of legroom in the back, besides a well shaped 60/40 split rear seat. The top models even come with B-pillar-mounted air vents, and there are optional seat heaters too.

The boot is huge and well shaped, the rear seats fold to form a flat floor and a protective bulkhead, and there are load hooks and tie-downs.

Ford will also be keeping service and repair costs low, though the use of a cambelt rather than a chain means eventual expense with this engine. The ‘sacrificial panel’ – a body-coloured plastic section of the tailgate that absorbs knocks to save the steel pressing – is an example of its attention to detail.

The 2.0 TDCi’s 156g/km of CO2 is competitive, as is its fuel consumption. Ford has less control over used values and the Mondeo’s (relatively) lowly branding, and its segment are all likely to condemn it average residuals. But that could make it a fine used buy.

Verdict

Ford Mondeo 2.0 TDCi Even in the £21,000 top-of-the-range form we test here, this Mondeo has the qualities to be a more-than-plausible competitor against similarly priced premium offerings. If it were a little more stylish, it might win over more brand obsessives than those already tempted by its impressive roster of qualities.

Not only are the basics right, such as packaging, comfort, convenience and economy of ownership, but the Mondeo also serves up plenty of the sophistication that premium buyers seek. Many premium buyers will ignore all this and remain unable to contemplate a Ford, despite its lower price — but that’s their loss.

Against its direct competitors, many shortly to be replaced, such as the Vauxhall Vectra and Renault Laguna, it is an easy winner. The only real disappointment is styling that’s less exciting than the hardware wrapped within.That apart, this is an excellent car.

More...

Read More...

Monday, July 30, 2007

Maserati Quattroporte Automatica

Maserati Quattroporte Automatica

An auto box in a big luxury saloon? That’s hardly news…

It is for Maserati. To mark the Quattroporte out as a very different, more sporting proposition to its mainly German rivals, it has only been offered with the Duo Select automated manual until now. Although it has an auto mode, it still uses a clutch and will never be as smooth as a proper, torque-converter auto.

This limits the car’s appeal - so now, having established the Quattroporte as the edgy, sporty, driver’s choice, Maserati has bought in ZF’s awesome six-speed auto 'box.

But doesn’t the Quattroporte’s gearbox sit at the back?

Maserati Quattroporte Automatica It does; by having a transaxle gearbox the manual Quattroporte gets a slight rearward weight bias (47/53) that cuts understeer and aids handling. Positioning the auto gearbox at the front hasn’t required major changes to the car’s structure, but it has shifted the weight forward slightly, to a 49/51 split.

The engine that comes with the auto is now wet-sumped and gets blue cam covers; power is the same at 394bhp, but there’s a 7lb ft increase in torque to 339lb ft, delivered 250rpm lower than the dry-sumped red V8 at 4250rpm.

So has the Quattroporte gone all soft?

Maserati Quattroporte Automatica Not really. The 0-60mph time slips slightly to 5.6sec and the top speed is down fractionally from 171mph to 167mph, owing to the auto’s longer sixth gear which also gives a claimed nine percent improvement in extra-urban (i.e. motorway) fuel consumption.

Maserati’s Skyhook adaptive damping system has been recalibrated for ‘improved comfort’ in the auto, so yes, it has been softened slightly.

So it’s either a manual with an auto mode, or an auto with a manual mode?

Maserati Quattroporte Automatica Maserati Quattroporte Automatica Right. Around town the ZF auto gives its usual, seamless performance; automated manuals like the Duo Select have become much smoother in auto mode, but still can’t match a proper torque converter automatic, and particularly one as good as this.

The ZF box is also capable of delivering manual changes which are almost as fast as an automated manual - and almost as smooth as a twin-clutch manual; the Aston Martin DB9 is no less exciting as a sports car for having this gearbox.

But how well does it work in the Quattroporte?

Maserati Quattroporte Automatica Our first drive in the Quattroporte Automatica is the first time we’ve used this gearbox and felt slightly disappointing. When you get outside town and ask a little more of it, the ‘box doesn’t change with its customary speed and smoothness. Both up- and downshifts, whether in auto mode or using the paddle-shifters, were occasionally hesitant and imperfectly synched with the engine.

The answer might lie in the engine; by comparison with the V8s and V12s of its rivals, many of which use the same gearbox, it’s a responsive, high-revving but relatively low-torque unit and suits the DuoSelect automated manual well; it doesn’t feel such a natural fit with the auto.

So which do I choose?

Maserati Quattroporte Automatica The important thing is that you now have the choice, and a lot of buyers who would otherwise have ruled the Maser out will now pick it over a 7-series or an S-class. And that’s a very good thing; it is a colossally cool car, however you define it.

On balance we’d trade occasionally lumpy full-power shifting for seamless changes 95 percent of the time, and choose the auto; its resale value will also be higher. Prices start from £77,000; the most popular Sport GT trim will be £83,200 and gets the paddle-shifters as standard. They’re a £658 option on the base car and on the comfort-oriented, £85,900 Executive GT, each of which accounts for about a quarter of sales.

Maserati Quattroporte Automatica

How much? From £77,000
On sale in UK: 2007
Engine: 4244cc 32V V8, 394bhp@7250rpm, 3391lb ft@4250rpm
Transmission: Six-speed automatic, rear-wheel drive
Performance: 5.6sec 0-62mph, 167mph
Made of? Steel
How big (length/width/height in mm)? 5052/1895/1438mm
Other models in the range: Duo Select manual
Or try a... BMW 760Li,Lexus LS600h,Mercedes-Benz S500

More...

Read More...

Ford Mondeo

Ford Mondeo

A new Mondeo... isn't that supposed to be a snore-worthy non-event?

Definitely not. The very mention of Mondeo might not raise the heartbeat, but this is an important car for Ford. Not only does it sell in huge numbers (easily top 10 fodder in the UK, despite declining sales), but it defines the middle market. If Ford gets the Mondeo right, the Blue Oval is in good shape. It's the bedrock of its range.

The Mondeo has even entered the national lexicon here in the UK. Although apparently misquoted (he was pointing at a Sierra, according to some reports), prime minister Tony Blair coined the phrase Mondeo Man when on the political campaign trail; the Mondeo is the very essence of transport for the masses. It's Everyman's favourite wheels and therefore A Very Important Car.

This new Mondeo looks pretty slick... for a Ford

Ford Mondeo Car companies love a good design label. BMW invented flame surfacing, Lexus came up with the crazily titled L-Finesse and Ford has been guilty of its own grandiose-sounding design catchphrases. New Edge was the brand's 1990s philosophy and heralded landmark models such as the Ka and Focus Mk1. But tastes have changed and Ford now talks of Kinetic Design, ushered in by its latest design overlord Martin Smith.

Out go the bold, geometric shapes of the '90s, replaced by a more sober, classier lines. It works, too. In the metal, the new Mondeo looks slick, sophisticated, quite German even. And who'd have thought we'd ever write that about a humble Mondeo? There's wedge aplenty in the side profile, and the kicked-up rear window line helps provide a sporty stance. It ain't beautiful and it ain't head-turning, but it might be enough to persuade Jo Public out of their Passats and 3-series.

So does the new Mondeo go as well as it looks?

Ford Mondeo The Mondeo's problem has always been a cosmetic one. Even seven years after launch, the outgoing model remains a sharp drive. It's just one you in which you don't want your neighbours to see you arrive. Today's Mondeo is a fun car to point from corner to corner, but its ubiquity and unashamed mass-market DNA makes it as fashionable as a McDonald's restaurant.

Thankfully, new Mondeo has a dash more gloss - and it's lost none of its forebear's athleticism. Ford has carved out a signature chassis feel in the past decade and this latest arrival is just like a bigger Focus. Moments after you set off down the road, you sense that familiar firmness to the ride: the Mondeo feels planted, agile, but just the right side of firm to remain comfortable. Even on our top-spec, Titanium X trim's shallow 235/45 17-inch rubber, the ride is untroubled by bumps, ridges and other corrugations that threaten to upset your extremities.

What are the engines like?

Ford Mondeo We've driven only the most powerful diesel so far. It has the 2.0-litre turbo we've already seen in other Fords including the S-Max, and develops 138bhp (a lesser 128bhp is also available). Performance is brisk and it serves up a dollop of overboost with brief squirts up to 251lb ft for overtaking. The sportiest model will be the 2.5, using the Focus ST's engine. We haven't driven the smaller engines yet, but would recommend the diesels for their extra twist - the Mondeo weighs between 1360kg and a lardy 1690kg, and even the most powerful diesel is noticeably slower than a 320d.

Stirring the six-speed gearbox is easy, although one driver found the cross-gate bias too weak, making it easy to slot the wrong gear. Top-spec models come with a very handy hill-start function making it easy to pull away on steep inclines; it's a great bit of technology that works simply and fuss-free in the background.

It's a Ford. Does it handle?

Ford Mondeo Imagine the change from Focus Mk1 to Mk2 and you'll quickly get the gist of the new Mondeo. It steers accurately, feels agile and is a decent companion on your favourite back road - but it doesn't have quite that raw sportiness that permeated the old model.

Mondeo Mk4 is a bit too mature for that, and the engineers concede that they've tried to make it a tad more pampering than pointy. The steering (fully hydraulic across the range) is slightly less direct, but you'll still enjoy driving it more than any mainstream rival.

Our Titanium X test car was fitted with adaptive dampers, but there's strangely little discernible difference in the three different suspension settings. I can't remember a car with less change between Normal, Sport and Comfort. What's the point in forking out for such a system if you can't even spot the difference?

A Mondeo cabin; I'm imagining cheap plastics, uninspiring design...

Ford Mondeo Well, no actually. Okay, so we drove the top-spec Titanium X model, whose dashboard teemed with switches for gadgets and luxurious soft-touch plastics with a texture most pleasing to prod. Will the boggo, stripped-out 1.6 Edge feel quite as smart at 8.00am on a rainswept M25 motorway? We haven't had the pleasure yet, so can't answer that question.

Ford Mondeo But the new model is light years away from the old Mondeo's rather drab, penny-pinching cabin. You'll be comfy front or back (this is a seriously roomy car) and there's the usual, vast Mondeo boot for family clobber or workmen's wares.

Downsides? Not much, really. We could hear the fuel sloshing around in our test car's tank at city-low speeds, and if you run your hands all over the cabin (do only road testers do this?) you'll notice some cost-cutting the lower down the trim you feel. But in an age of budgets and multinational building, that's the same on every mass-market car. Look past the cheap-feeling sun visor and sunglasses holder, and the quality is generally very impressive where it matters.

Are there any surprise-n-delight features?

Ford Mondeo Glad you asked me that. In an age when every new car packs the regulation airbag count and they all ape Euro chic style, manufacturers race to have stand-out gadgetry. The Mondeo packs one or two features of note, including a new patented fuel filler neck that makes it impossible to fill up at the wrong pump. We tried it at French petrol stations and couldn't fool it. Very clever.

Other stand-out features inside? The colour graphics on the trip computer (again on our top-spec Titanium X) are cool and sophisticated, and Ford can still build powerful stereos with Play School-simple usability like no other. No need for recourse to the manual on a Ford stereo.

Verdict

The Mondeo has grown up, and in all the right ways. The new model is a bit more comfortable, a lot more spacious and a barrel load better built. It's a very modern makeover and Ford's big seller is better placed than ever to persuade buyers back from their (rather common) 3-series and C-classes.

Will that ever happen? Not when Ford is seen as a bland brand and the Mondeo as automotive white goods. That's a shame, because the new car is among the class leaders and a damn good car in its own right. And remember the new range is an average of £300 cheaper than its predecessor. Honestly, Mondeo man has never had it so good.

Need to know: Ford Mondeo

How much: From £14,995 (1.6 petrol Edge) to £24,195 (2.5 petrol estate Titanium X)
On sale in UK: June 2007
Engine: 1997cc, 138bhp @ 4000rpm, 261lb ft @ 1750rpm
Transmission: Six-speed manual, front-wheel drive
Performance: 9.5sec 0-62mph, 130mph, 47.9mpg
How heavy/made of? 1481kg/steel
How big (length/width/height in mm)? 4778/2078/1500
Or try a... BMW 3-series,Peugeot 407,Vauxhall Vectra

More...

Read More...

Vauxhall VXR8

That’s one hell of a Vauxhall you've got there...

Don’t let the badge fool you. It reads Vauxhall but underneath that chunky sheetmetal is Holden’s new Commodore Clubsport R8 with a higher spec GTS interior. Re-badged as the VXR8, and wearing a barely believable £35,105 price tag, this 411bhp monster will terrorise British roads come mid-June. The new Commodore is Holden’s first-ever cleansheet-design, and was developed and engineered in Australia at a cost of over £490m.

And its four-door rear-wheel chassis architecture is set to underpin a range of future GM products. In fact, its Global Rear-Wheel Drive platform will underpin everything from the forthcoming Pontiac G8 to the Chevrolet Camaro. It’s a hugely important model for Holden and marks the first time the manufacturer has developed a Commodore without GM Europe’s input.

It looks brisk enough…

Vauxhall VXR8 The VXR8 is a 417bhp thug of a car, delivering the kind of brutal acceleration that gives your adrenal gland a thorough workout. It will hit 60mph in just under five seconds, the Corvette-sourced engine spitting out an urgent hammering soundtrack as the big Vauxhall rockets its way towards its as-yet-unproven top speed. We reckon it should top out at 170mph. That’s speed with a capital S.

In-gear go is just as vicious, the VXR8 catapulting forward at the slightest hint of throttle. And the brakes – the largest, at 365mm, ever fitted to a production Vauxhall – are well up to the job of matching the engine, delivering instant and reassuringly fade-free deceleration with the lightest brush of the centre pedal. Stand on them hard at 62mph and, claims Vauxhall, you’ll stop in 36 metres – three metres sooner than an M5. (That's not been independently tested by us, we should add.)

So, good in a straight line, but does it handle?

Vauxhall VXR8 During the car’s early development, Holden singled out the E39 BMW 528i as the car to beat, and you can certainly feel the Bimmer’s influence. The VXR8 feels agile and chuckable and it can be flung into and out of corners with an engaging wrist-flick action. And it excels as a drift machine. The steering may lack real hand-on-tarmac feel, but its generous lock makes it easy to catch the back when it steps out. The rear diff lets you melt the big 19-inch rear tyres into the tarmac and create plumes of smoke that a stunt plane would be proud of. Lots of juvenile fun, then.

The VXR8 does have a lower grip threshold than the best from BMW and AMG, but it's exploitable and driver-friendly. You need to be assertive if you up the ante, though. You need big balls and bigger muscles if you want to take this 1831kg bouncer of a car and throw it about. Its controls may be user-friendly light, but it won’t tolerate those limp of wrist and clumsy of foot.

Being a compliant cruiser should make it ideal for our roads, shouldn’t it?

Vauxhall VXR8 The VXR8 feels very Australian – big, comfortable and an effortless high-speed cruiser. Burbling along the national limit in sixth gear with just 2000rpm dialled up, the Vauxhall feels incredibly refined and composed with an inaudible engine note, the barest whisper of wind rustle and only a faint thrum from the 275-section rubber. The VXR’s chassis feels strong and robust, and the suspension is supple enough to sponge away all but the largest thumps and bumps.

But there’s also a surprising level of lean through corners, and although body control is by and large pretty tight, the suspension struggles on long undulations. While the lesser Commodore GTS gets an Audi-style Magnetic Ride Control system, which kicks in to stiffen the dampers during enthusiastic cornering, the Clubsport-based VXR8 doesn’t because it would, according to Vauxhall, nudge the VXR8’s price up to £40,000. Pity.

What’s it like on the inside?

Vauxhall VXR8 The interior lets the side down, frankly. Sure, it looks good as an overall package, and the Commodore GTS-spec seats are more like broad and comfortable armchairs for ache-free cruising. There’s also plenty of room aboard and that cabin with swallow four six-footers with ease, and there's a huge boot to match. But take a good look and some of the plastics look decidedly low-rent and too many of the dials, buttons and stalks lack the precision and machined action of its German rivals'. And don't get us started on the handbrake, which looks more like a second-hand walking stick than anything else.

Vauxhall VXR8 UK buyers will have the choice of either a manual or automatic transmission, both packing six well-chosen ratios. While many shy away from the automatic – a £1400 option – its intuitive reaction to throttle inputs and smooth shifts make it the box to tick. Not that there’s anything wrong with the manual – its throw is light if slightly brittle, and it allows for plenty of heel-and-toe action.

The verdict

Vauxhall VXR8 Bluntly put, the VXR8 is a lesson in badge engineering. Not one single Holden component will filter through to any other model in the current Vauxhall range, but at this price-to-power ratio, you have to ask whether you really give a Castlemain XXXX?

With the exception of Chrysler’s SRT8 - £39,000 and 425bhp – there’s little out there that delivers such a lot for so little. And with only 350 arriving here each year, it’ll be pretty exclusive too. Think everyman’s M5 and you’re on the nose. But the best thing about the VXR8 is that it’s an absolute hoot to punt hard. And it’s been far too long since you could say that of a four-door Vauxhall.

Need to Know : Vauxhall VXR8

How much? £35,105
On sale in the UK: June 2007
Engine: 5967cc V8, 417bhp @ 6000rpm, 405lb ft @ 4400rpm
Transmission: Six-speed manual or automatic, rear-wheel drive
Performance: 0-62mph 4.9sec, 170mph (est), 18.5mpg, 365g/km CO2
How heavy/made of? 1831kg/steel
How big? (length/ width/ height in mm)? 4941/2174/1468
Or try a... Chrysler 300C SRT-8, Mercedes-Benz CLS 500

More...

Read More...

Sunday, July 29, 2007

Mercedes C-class drive

Mercedes C-class drive

Seven years since the last, an all-new C-Class. What are the highlights?

Mercedes has gone back to basics with the new C. Keen to banish memories of the E-class quality/breakdown/recall debacle, it has scrapped some of its old techniques and relied more on a computer-generated virtual C-class (its 2130GB of data might just crash your average PC) to iron out problems at the design stage. And to make sure it doesn't break down on a wet Friday night, it then spent five years and 15 million miles testing real cars...

Has it all worked? Read our eight-page road test to find out... Click 'Next' to read on.

So in what other ways does it break from tradition?

Mercedes C-class drive Well, for one, this is the first Mercedes saloon to be offered without a stick-up three-pointed star atop the grille. Ever. Traditions at Benz aren’t broken lightly, and approval for this came from the top – from Dr Zetsche himself. Merc also wants to give sporting handling as much priority as pampering comfort.

Like hot ice cubes, this is hard to achieve. Unless, they say, you develop two clever forms of suspension – using both electronic dampers and, on standard cars, ‘amplitude dependent hydromechanical’ units (similar to the A/B-Class, but four generations on). Both are adaptive, but it’s the former, standard on even the boggo C180 K SE, that are most ingenious. They cost more than regular units, but this alone is proof of Mercedes’ aspirations with the C.

It certainly looks good, in an S-Class kinda way

Mercedes C-class drive Some things never change. Bruno Sacco instigated the ‘horizontal affinity’ principal of a clear family look, which the new C-class continues. It’s surprising, though, what a difference that grille makes. Only offered on Sport variants, it looks fantastic with a set of AMG alloys, giving Benz a proper rival to S line/M Sport rivals. You can even get it in bling white. Very (P) Diddy.

Lesser SE and Elegance models are more traditional, but both share the flowing side and SLK-hinting rear, which boast more substance than the old car. It’s physically bigger, but looks much more so. It’s clever, too. Aerodynamics are such that side and rear windows don’t get grubby in mucky weather, while the tail lights are ventilated so they stay clear in the wet. Needless to say, it has a slippery Cd of 0.27, while rear axle lift is, ahem, down, too.

Is the mainstream ‘hewn from solid’ Mercedes interior back?

Mercedes C-class drive It is. Simply laid out, the interior lacks character but there’s no doubting the quality. Panels fit precisely, soft-touch materials abound and even thumping an alloy into the deepest pothole elicits barely a grumble from the trim. There’s tactility too, while the floating speedo needle is just plain cool. Trad Mercedes seats are flat but firmly supportive, while the (LHD) driving position and ergonomic set-up is, save for a too-low indicator stalk, without fault.

The optional sat nav is little short of genius. Controlled via COMAND APS (think i-Drive that you can immediately decipher), this includes a 30Gb hard drive and destination input by voice recognition. It leaves 4Gb to store MP3s and, if you still buy CDs, it’ll store these on there too, in logical files laid out like an iPod. Satellite radio will also be offered in the UK. It’s just a shame the bigger exterior hasn’t yielded more space in the back, particularly for feet, though the 475-litre boot is not significantly smaller than the 540-litre E-Class's.

How does this newfound dynamism translate onto the road?

Mercedes C-class drive The C-class is no longer a Manx cat. Liberate the throttle and it’s clear the Mercedes has discovered its tail – ESP reins it in before opposite lock becomes necessary but such newfound dynamism remains (and the ESP is switchable, don't forget). There’s simply a greater feeling of balance, not to mention a clearer connection to the road, aided by light but immeasurably more direct steering that’s both quick and accurate. Gone is the Mercedes mush. Even the throttle response is more immediate.

Don’t worry, traditionalists. The standard car still flows along highways with a beautiful low-frequency gait. The stiff bodyshell means interferences are shrugged off and detailed compliance work means sudden intrusions are discreetly absorbed. It’s in corners where those ‘stiffening’ dampers come alive, turning the front end in with haste and, after a slight discontinuity, doing the same to the rear. It’s surprisingly agile for a car that rides so well, while such alert response and reduced roll angles is proof the clever tech works. And cars with ‘Advanced Agility’ electronic dampers? Even more 'comfortably sportive', as the man from Merc says. We'd have to agree - they work well.

But the engines are more familiar, aren’t they?

Mercedes C-class drive Yes; Mercedes model and engine cycles are always out of sync. They’ve all been updated, but the engines are as before – supercharged petrol and turbocharged diesel four-pots, plus V6 petrol and turbodiesel higher-end units. We drove the exceptional C320 CDI; with a cammy growl, it’s free-revving and vibration-free, happy to sing in its mid-range and provide fearsome mid-range shove. The seven-speed auto is dozy and obsessed with hitting higher ratios (three staccato downchanges are not uncommon), but take control yourself, and revel in that lag-free yet linear throttle explosion. With 39mpg too, it’s hard to make a case for the C350 petrol.

Standard cars will be fairer game. The C180 K has 13bhp more, the C200 CDI gains 14bhp, while the C220 CDI has 20 extra horses and 18 percent more torque. These gains won’t be soaked up by weight, for the new C, in base guise, weighs exactly the same as the old. But no BMW-like brake regeneration and the like. The official line is ‘only if customer demand is sufficient’. Give it about a year, then.

Verdict

If kitchen sinks designed cars, even they would have been thrown into this project. It’s been ferociously analysed but the end result isn’t overkill - this is the most complete entry-level (real) Merc since the ’83 190.

Mercedes UK isn’t revealing any UK data but European cars have an inflation-only price increases, so list price here should be from £23k. For what’s possibly the most complete Merc ever, that’s heartening.

Need to know: Mercedes C-class drive

How much: £33,500 (est for test C320 CDI SE auto)
On sale in UK: June 2007
Engine: 2987cc 24v V6, 221bhp @ 3800rpm, 376lb ft @ 1600-2800rpm
Transmission: Six-speed auto, rear-wheel drive
Performance: 7.7sec 0-62mph, 155mph (limited), 39.2mpg
How heavy/made of? 1700kg/steel
How big (L/W/H)? 4581/1770/1448
Other models in the range: C180 K, C200 K, C230, C280, C350, C200 CDI, C220 CDI
Or try a... BMW 3-Series,Audi A4,Lexus IS

More...

Read More...

Mercedes C220 CDI Sport

Mercedes C220 CDI Sport

It looks like there’s a major change going on here

Certainly is. Gone are the smooth curves of the previous C-class, replaced with something far more edgy and, dare we say it, rather modern. The C-class is bigger all-round and crucially there’s another 45mm in the wheelbase and more shoulder room. That’s hardly a surprise. Passenger space has always been the weakness of compact premium cars in the compact exec segment, and with the cheaper and hugely competent cars like the new Ford Mondeo offering limo levels of comfort, space can’t be ignored.

We've already driven the new C-class on its continental launch; now we've finally driven it on UK roads. Click 'Next' to read our full report.

What’s with the funny grille?

Mercedes C220 CDI Sport For the first time, a Mercedes saloon uses the grille to distinguish between models. The traditional trim levels, SE and Elegance, get the three-pointed start on top of the bonnet, as every Mercedes should.

The Sport, in a slightly worrying nod towards bling, ditches the bonnet emblem for a massive star mounted in the centre of the unique three-louvre grille. The range has been simplified too, with Avantgarde versions dropped in the UK.

Sport models? Has Mercedes has finally woken up to the fact that BMW sells twice as many 3-series?

Mercedes C220 CDI Sport Indeed it has, imbuing a far more sporty character into the latest generation. Key is the Agility Control suspension that has adaptive damping. It’s a pretty simple system, just two stages and hydromechanical rather than electronic, but comes as standard on all models. And it puts C-Class handling on a new level.

There’s tight chassis control and sharp turn-in, and the result is a new level of driver entertainment. The C-Class Sport gets speed-sensitive steering with a welcome degree of extra weight, plus a slightly lower ride height. Being a Mercedes there is, of course, the full suite of active safety installed to try and prevent you make a complete fool of yourself when you breach the boundaries. But they don’t really intrude on the fun.

So it handles, but does it go?

Mercedes C220 CDI Sport All the four-cylinder engines, petrol and diesel, have been uprated. The best seller is likely to be the C220 CDI driven here, with its 168bhp (up from 148bhp in the old car). More significantly, this now pumps out 295lb ft of torque at 2000rpm, endowing performance that seems perfectly matched to the both old-school Mercedes subtlety and the newfound enthusiasm for driving prowess.

That old bugbear, the Mercedes manual gearbox, has been improved in the hope 3-series buyers will take it seriously, and there’s a hill-start system to overcome the problem with the foot-operated parking brake. But this diesel remains best suited to the automatic transmission, where the short rev range can be readily accommodated. You get five rather than seven gears with the four-cylinder engines, but Sport models get a handy paddle shift, too.

Sounds too good to be true...

Mercedes C220 CDI Sport It is. Somewhere down the line the suspension designers seem to have overlooked the fact that the C-class will have to contend with British roads. On a smooth surface, the C-class rides beautifully, but get onto the lumps of city roads, and even country roads taken briskly, and there's a most un-Mercedes feel about the whole experience.

There just isn’t enough compliance; the C-class jiggles about like a hot hatch. That might increase the appeal to GTI enthusiasts looking for their next step in car ownership, but buyers looking for their first luxury Mercedes may be disappointed.

Yes, but there’s still that luxury Mercedes interior

Mercedes C220 CDI Sport You’d think. Vinyl seats, anyone? Long the favourite of the German taxi diver, they are now the standard fitment on the Elegance model while the Sport gets half vinyl, half cloth. You’ll upgrade to full leather of course, and buy into the many personalisation options on Mercedes’ long list. Particularly impressive is the full-length glass sunroof complete with electric blinds. Not so good is the mottled plastic covering to the dashboard and door panels that shows scuffmarks too readily.

There’s a decent voice control for your telephone, but the Bluetooth can’t read your telephone address book. The full sat-nav system does a good imitation of the beautiful display for navigation and radio in the S-class, but the standard radio screen, and the instruments, look smarter in a 10 grand Honda Jazz. As a microcosm of Mercedes missing the point, you can download music onto the 30GB hard drive – but from an SD memory card, not a USB drive.

Verdict

Mercedes C220 CDI Sport The shift in emphasis by Mercedes with its new C-class is to be welcomed. It’s now a vastly better car to drive. It offers sufficient passenger space to remain competitive and the design underlines the forthright new direction. With careful choice of materials and colours the interior might even look attractive.

But Mercedes hasn’t been as clever as BMW in matching handling dynamics to a comfortable ride. Can Merc really risk alienating existing core customers in its the quest for the 3-series buyer?

Mercedes C220 CDI Sport

How much? £29,097
On sale in the UK: 2007
Engine: 2148cc 16v 4-cyl, 168bhp @ 3,800rpm 295 lb ft @ 2,000rpm
Transmission: Five-speed auto, rear-wheel drive
Performance: 8.5sec 0-62mph, 141mph, 42.8mpg, 173g/km CO2
How heavy/made of? 1560kg/steel
How big (length/width/height in mm)? 4581/1770/1447
Other models in the range: 1.8k, 2.0k, 2.3V6, 2.8V6, 3.5V6; C200Cdi, C320CDI
Or try a... Audi A4, BMW 3-Series, Lexus IS

More...

Read More...

BMW 530i

BMW 530i

Er, help me out, I’ve been staring at the picture, pen poised, for 20 minutes and I haven’t ringed a single difference

See that big air intake under the bumper? See how the ends point upwards instead of down? And see that that horizontal chrome bar running between the two foglights? What are you, blind? How could you possibly miss such fundamental styling changes?

Is that the sum total of three years' work for a team of crack designers?

BMW 530i Pretty much. They did change the front lamp lenses, making them clear, and tweaked the rears to incorporate the LEDs now found in other more recent BMWs. The kidney grille surround is now flush with the bumper and there’s something new about the sills that apparently makes the car look longer.

So what's going to persuade me to trade-in my perfectly good pre-facelift 5-series?

BMW 530i The new one does lots of clever things. Take the Lane Departure warning system that warns you that you’ve wandered over white lines by sending a vibration through the steering wheel. Or the ‘Stop and Go’ feature of the Active Cruise Control that, unlike most other active cruise systems, works right down to a stop and back up again all by itself.

It won’t do a full emergency stop, but in your average stop-start trickling rush-hour jam, it promises to be a real help. We had a quick go in Lisbon traffic but not enough to find out how polished it really is. We’ll have to wait for another go back in the UK to find out.

The electric gearstick is new (although we've seen it before on the X5), but it's not that clever. It works well enough - just like the old one in fact, but no better.

Is it as good to drive?

BMW 530i Better. All three six-cylinder petrol engines (2.5-litre 523i, 3.0 525i and 530i) get direct injection and the diesels come with a newer version of the common-rail injection system. Almost all now have more power. The 523i for example climbs 13bhp to 190bhp, and the 530i and 535d get 14bhp-apiece, taking them to 272bhp and 286bhp, respectively.

The biggest impact though, is on fuel economy. Those new petrol engines are staggeringly efficient: the 530i gets to 62mph in 6.5sec and is limited to 155mph yet manages 37mpg, even mated to an auto box. That compares well with the old car’s 30.4mpg and isn’t miles behind the 530d’s 44.1mpg, meaning that at last you no longer need to justify choosing a really enjoyable big petrol Five over the diesel version that has been the default choice for so long.

And if you opt for the optional Sports auto 'box available from summer (as opposed to the regular auto), you get quicker shift times and a set of paddles behind the wheel for the first time on a non-M 5-series. Shame they're the confusing push-pull sort rather than the M5's more satisfying and more logical one for up a gear, another for down layout.

Any downsides?

BMW 530i All that technology doesn’t come cheap. Prices are up between £745 and a massive, £1745 depending on model (and both the Lane Departure and Active Cruise are optional on most models).

At least the lower CO2 emissions and better fuel consumption will help offset some or all of that cost for company car users.

Verdict

BMW 530i Don’t be fooled by the same-again styling: underneath the sheet metal the 5-series is a fundamentally better car. Cars like the 530i won’t refreeze the ice caps but they prove that technology exists to make cars more environmentally friendly - without losing their ability to entertain.

Need to know: BMW 530i

How much? £34,265 (SE)
On sale in UK: March 2007
Engine: 2996cc 24v six, 272bhp@6700rpm, 236lb ft@3000rpm
Transmission: Six-speed manual, rear wheel drive
Performance: 6.5sec 0-62mph, 155mph, 36.7mpg, 182g/km
How heavy/made of? 1605kg/steel
How big (length/width/height in mm)? 4841/1846/1468
Other models in the range: 2.5, 4.0, 4.8 petrol; 2.0, 3.0 diesel
Or try a... Audi A6 3.2,Mercedes-Benz E320,Lexus GS300

More...

Read More...

2008 Ford Interceptor

2008 Ford Interceptor

This Interceptor looks the business, can I buy one?

It’s Ford’s take on a super-saloon rival to the Chrysler 300C SRT-8 and BMW M5 and is called the Interceptor after one of the Blue Oval’s US police cars. This new model’s been based around the mechanicals of the latest generation Ford Mustang with a slightly stretched floorpan.

It's a concept at this stage, but will Ford build it? Engineers admit it would be fairly easy to put into production, it’s just down to the bean counters to decide whether it has a future. But it doesn’t just look the business. It goes fairly rapidly too…

It looks absolutely enormous!

2008 Ford Interceptor That’s a clever trick of the design that succeeds in making it look imposing with extra wow factor. It’s actually a shade over five metres long which makes it a fraction bigger than a Mercedes S-class. So it’s big but well resolved. And I guarantee if you drove down the street in the Interceptor, you’d get more looks than the most blinged-up M5 would ever attract. The high waistline, narrow windows and bluff chrome grille with that dramatically short overhang make it WWF aggressive...

What’s it got under the bonnet?

2008 Ford Interceptor Ford has slotted in a 5.0-litre version of the 4.6 V8 from the Mustang. But it doesn’t want to be accused of making yet another gas guzzler – even if it has – so the engineers have adapted it to run on E85 bio-ethanol.

That’s the fuel Morrisons in the UK bizarrely sells that’s a mixture of 85 per cent crop-grown ethanol and 15 per cent petrol. It provides a 10 percent power boost but cuts carbon dioxide emissions by a fifth, so everyone’s a winner. Or so Ford says.

Enough of the eco-friendly bit, what’ll she do?

2008 Ford Interceptor A lot. Ford isn’t sure of the top speed though reckons it’s around the 170mph mark. But it’s not what the Interceptor does, it’s the way it does it that’s exceptional. Fire the engine and that big V8 rumbles into life lazily, but when you blip the throttle it’s like a sleeping giant clearing its throat. It sounds so coarse and magical you almost expect to see flames shooting out of the exhausts.

As the revs rise, the better and cleaner it runs. It’s got a fantastic gearshift, too. The six-speed manual gate feels so close and precise, you can change gear with the flick of a wrist. Not that you need to swap cogs too much because there’s so much torque.

Does the inside match the outside?

2008 Ford Interceptor In a word, yes. Of course it’s all very much a typical concept car with hand-crafted aluminium and leather everywhere - but it’s still gorgeous. The gearlever is perfectly placed for snappy cog swaps, although the trapezoidal steering wheel will remind all Brits over a certain age of the Austin Allegro.

The seats don’t look particularly comfortable and they will be replaced in the finished article by something a little more sumptuous. Equally, it would probably have three rather than two seats in the back once/if the Interceptor ever makes it to production.

Any other details worth mentioning?

2008 Ford Interceptor The headrests are really neat. They’re recessed in the headlining and when you open the door they drop down from the roof. Not sure what the point is, but they look great.

The Interceptor also has four-point seatbelts. It’s something stablemate Volvo has been banging on about for a while and Ford has now adopted it too. They give you that special racing driver feel and certainly keep you well pinned in the seat. And the seatbelts are inflatable with an airbag built in to the strap to help prevent chest bruising in a crash. We didn't test this in our brief test drive.

Verdict

2008 Ford Interceptor If Ford doesn’t give the production green light to the Interceptor it’ll be really missing a trick. Its looks make the Chrysler 300C seem positively ordinary and it does at least make a concession to the environment by being largely ethanol fuelled.

But the looks are only a part of this car. If the raw power of the engine and the slick-shifting gearbox are anything to go by, it would actually make quite a decent super saloon. And the ride feels almost limo luxurious while controlling body roll beautifully through corners. It could be just the car to buoy Ford through its current financial crisis.

Need to know: Ford Interceptor

How much? £38,000 (estimated)
On sale in the UK Emd of 2008 (assuming it gets the nod)
Engine 4998cc V8, 400bhp
Transmission 6-speed manual
Performance 5.0sec 0-60mph, 170mph, 20mpg (estimated)
How heavy/made of? NA/Steel/aluminium
How big (length/width/height in mm)? 5121/1941/1392
Or try a... Chrysler 300C,BMW M5,Vauxhall VXR8

More...

Read More...