Mulsanne Bentley Mulsanne - First Drives Thread




Lord have Mercy! How did I miss this? A Black Bentley Mulsanne...the only sedan it the world I would pick over an S-class. Absolutely outstanding!

The blue one looks beyond amazing as well. Finally some new Bentley Photos!
 
Oh yes, but now I see the car in more colors it becomes clear that the rear is the weakest point. Its really soft looking, not like the Arnage which had a better defined rear. That said, no car is perfect....I'd still hae one of these with the quickness.

M
 
Journalists praising the handling strenghten the rumours that the Mulsanne will potentially serve as the skeleton for the Bugatti Galibier.
 
First Drive: 2011 Bentley Mulsanne

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Having made its entrance in the rarified environs of the Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance and its worldwide public debut at last fall's Frankfurt auto show, the Bentley Mulsanne is now ready to hit the streets. We've had a chance to do just that, but in this case the streets were the narrow village lanes, undulating country byways, and wide-open dual carriageways (divided highways) of Bentley's home turf, in the U.K. The car won't be rolling onto U.S. roads until sometime this fall.

In the Bentley lineup, the Mulsanne slips into the top spot recently vacated by the Arnage sedan, that aged doyenne of the luxury-car class. Well, perhaps not exactly the same spot. The Mulsanne is better than fifty grand more expensive, at $287,600 plus a still to be determined gas-guzzler tax. It's also a tick less than 7 inches longer while tipping the scales at the same Rubenesque 5700 pounds. The regal coachwork, much of it hand-finished, is draped over a six-inch-longer wheelbase. In price, size, and bearing, the Mulsanne moves closer to Rolls-Royce. Actually, by most measures, it nestles in between the Rolls Phantom and the new Rolls-Royce Ghost.

Bentley claims that the Mulsanne is the company's first from-scratch vehicle in eighty years (!), meaning that it's the first Bentley not adapted from another car. (The Continentals, for instance, are built off the platform of the Volkswagen Phaeton, and previous big Bentleys were adapted Rolls-Royce designs.) Even so, there are some items shared with the Audi A8, such as the Mulsanne's new, eight-speed automatic transmission (by ZF) and the car's infotainment system, which is based on Audi's Multi-Media Interface.

Although the Mulsanne is a new car, its mechanical layout is decidedly traditional, much more so than that of the Continentals. Whereas they have a W-shaped twelve-cylinder engine driving all four wheels, the Mulsanne again uses the massive V-8 and rear-wheel-drive configuration of its predecessor. The pushrod V-8 retains the same displacement, 6.75 liters, and its two turbochargers as well. Says Brian Rush, head of powertrain and chassis, "[The previous engine] was a good starting point; then we changed what we needed to change, which ended up being quite a lot." The two headline changes are the addition of variable displacement (allowing the engine to cruise on four cylinders under light load) and variable cam phasing, which lowers the peak torque rpm.

With 752 pound-feet available at a just-off-idle 1750 rpm (versus 738 lb-ft at 3200 rpm previously), the V-8 is now even more a low-revving torque monster. The peak power output of 505 hp occurs at 4200 rpm, just shy of the diesel-like, 4500-rpm redline, but that hardly matters. With so much thrust available at such low engine speeds and the V-8 betraying only a distant rumble when pressed, there's little reason to the explore the upper reaches of the tachometer.

The low-effort thrust is a key part of this car's character. "If we had gone with one of the [Volkswagen] group's V-8s," notes Stuart McCullough, Bentley board member for sales and marketing, "we would have had a much more urgent, high-revving engine."

If the big Bentley's speed (186 mph) and quickness (0 to 60 mph in 5.1 seconds, according to the factory) belie its tremendous size and weight, so too does its poise. The chassis features air springs, whose firmness can be programmed by the driver, as can the steering effort. A simple rotary knob on the console switches among the three pre-programmed modes (Sport, Comfort, and "Bentley," the standard setting) plus a mix-and-match custom mode. The custom mode lets a driver call up his own mix of steering effort and suspension firmness.

Get going quickly, and you're never unaware that this car is carrying a lot of momentum, but it is not a nodding, heaving luxo-barge. Along the English-Scottish border, where the roads are in much better repair than ours at home, there seemed to be little difference between the suspension settings, with the Mulsanne displaying excellent body control at a cost of some impact harshness.

Calling up sport mode gives you steering that is ideally weighted and just about perfect for this car. In the other two settings, it's overly light with no real build-up of effort. The firmer steering combined with the softer damping might make the ideal combination in most areas of the United States.

But as impressive as the Mulsanne's performance is, even Bentley executives admit that for the less than one percent of its intended audience of "high net worth" individuals (those with investable assets of $25 million or more) choosing to buy a car like this, performance is not what's going to win the day. At this lofty elevation, brand image, appearance, and the feeling a car imparts are paramount.

Bentley goes to great lengths to impart a special feeling with the Mulsanne, and nowhere is that more evident than in the interior. In most cars, we note the quality of the plastics; in the Mulsanne we couldn't find any plastic. Instead, 390 pieces of leather, from fifteen hides, cover every surface in sight. Wood veneers are laid over solid wood substrates. Metal-finished bits are real metal. The idea is to convey authenticity. The feel, and even the smell, exude luxury.

Unlike in the Arnage, there are no compromises in how things function. The multimedia interface is logical, and there are just enough dedicated buttons to keep you from hunting for things. The infotainment system is completely of-the-moment, with a 60 gigabyte hard drive, Bluetooth, and a new optional high-end audio system, by Maim, that offers 2200 watts of power (which Bentley claims is the most in any factory system). There are connections for all manner of personal audio devices, and a veneered wood drawer to put them in.

The driver sits behind a thick-rimmed steering wheel of surprisingly small-diameter. Through it one sees the speedometer and tachometer, whose needles sweep downward from the 2 o'clock position, in the manner of classic Bentleys. An electronic display in between can be configured to display nav system directions, a digital speed readout, or a variety of trip computer info. The view out is pretty good and can be supplemented by a phalanx of cameras. The rear chairs sit taller than those in front so rear-seat riders enjoy a good view forward, not to mention a plethora of electronic controls, including power seat adjustment. Legroom is plentiful, and headroom adequate (although the C-pillars encroach a bit), but there's little foot room under the front seats.

For all the talk of the practical aspects of this car, there's plenty that's irrational about it, starting with the fact that it even got built. "The current market is not supporting this kind of a car," says a candid Ulrich Eichhorn, Bentley chairman, "so there was much discussion about whether we were going to build it." But as another Bentley board member put it, "The one truth about [the] Volkswagen [Group] is that it's run by people who really love cars." And so Bentley won approval to design a dedicated new platform for a car that will be built-slowly, and mostly by hand-in volumes of only 800 per year. True, there will be additional variants, a sport model is mentioned and a coupe and convertible (to replace the Brooklands and the Azure) are sure to follow. But this is still a car whose image looms much larger than its sales numbers. "Its biggest job of all is to tell the world what a Bentley is," says McCullough. We think it does that exceptionally well.

On sale: Fall 2010
Base price (with destination): $287,600 (plus gas guzzler tax)


Powertrain
Engine: OHV twin-turbocharged V-8
Displacement: 6.8 liters
Horsepower: 505 hp @ 4200 rpm
Torque: 752 lb-ft @1750 rpm
Transmission: 8-speed automatic with shift paddles
Drive: Rear-wheel


Chassis
Steering: Power rack-and-pinion
Suspension, front: Control arms, air springs, adaptive damping
Suspension, rear: Control arms, air springs, adaptive damping
Brakes: Vented discs, ABS
Tires: 265/45ZR20 Dunlop SP Sport Maxx GT


Measurement
L x W x H: 219.5 x 75.8 x 59.9 in
Wheelbase: 128.6 in
Track F/R: 63.6/65.0 in
Weight: 5700 lbs
Fuel mileage: N/A

- http://www.automobilemag.com/reviews/driven/1005_2011_bentley_mulsanne/index.html
 
2012 Bentley Mulsanne - First Drive Review



It hardly fits the genteel image typically associated with the company, but Bentley’s success in the U.S. is directly attributable to the hip-hop generation’s affection for the Arnage. If rappers like P. Diddy and Jay-Z hadn’t associated that luxury liner with Cristal, Hennessy, and big-time ballin’, who knows whether Bentley would have made the leap from half-dead brand to ultra-luxury car of choice during the past decade.

Unlike the Continental models, which broadened the brand’s appeal and share much of their underpinnings with VW products, the Arnage was developed when BMW was the engine supplier for both Rolls-Royce and Bentley. Introduced in 1998 with a BMW engine—later replaced by Bentley’s own “6¾-liter” twin-turbocharged V-8 when VW acquired the brand—the Arnage was as long in the tooth as the wooly mammoth by the time the 2009 Final Edition was announced. We hear that the VW bean counters wanted Bentley to modify an existing VW Group platform for the Arnage replacement, but that the Bentley management held out for a unique architecture that plundered the corporate parts bin only where it made sense.

Limited Amount of VW Group Bits

The control-arm front suspension of the new Mulsanne, for instance, is shared with the Audi A8, while the multilink rear layout—upper and lower control arms with a toe-control link—comes from the Audi A6 Avant. The HVAC system is an A8 unit and there is shared electrical architecture with other VW cars, but otherwise the Mulsanne is all Bentley, designed and built at the company’s spiritual home of Crewe in northern England. The body is manufactured at Crewe, unlike those for the Continental range, which are made in Germany and shipped to England for final assembly. The Mulsanne is a bigger car than the Arnage, with a 128.6-inch wheelbase and an overall length of 219.5 inches, increases of about six and seven inches, respectively. Despite this and a lot more standard equipment, the Mulsanne is 66 pounds lighter than the Arnage, Bentley claims, thanks to the use of aluminum for the car’s doors, hood, and front fenders, as well as composites for the trunk. However, at 5700 pounds or so, the Mulsanne won’t be winning any medals from tree-huggers anytime soon.

Bentley decided to retain the twin-turbo, 6.8-liter pushrod V-8 engine that traces its lineage back to 1959. However, it was comprehensively re-engineered to meet modern emissions standards and for better fuel economy, which Bentley claims is improved by 15 percent. The block is all-new, even though it retains the same bore centers as the old one. Indeed, the engine has the same 104.2-mm bore and 99.1-mm stroke of the Arnage’s engine, but all the internal parts and the cylinder heads are new. This engine also has cam phasing and cylinder deactivation for the first time. At relatively low engine speeds on part throttle, in fourth gear and above, the V-8 becomes a V-4 by cutting the spark and fuel as well as closing both valves on four cylinders. The engine produces 506 hp at 4200 rpm, up 6 hp on the Arnage’s engine, as well as 752 lb-ft of torque at 1750 rpm. This is an increase of 14 lb-ft over the old engine, but delivered 1500 revs earlier. (The version of the V-8 used in the low-production Brooklands is still king, as it makes 530 hp and 774 lb-ft of torque.)

The torque is taken to the rear wheels via a ZF eight-speed automatic transmission, another feature that contributes to the improved gas mileage. There are Sport and Normal modes, as well as paddles for manual shifting. Bentley uses electronically controlled air springs all around in combination with anti-roll bars, and the suspension is continuously variable. If the computers don’t keep it in the driver’s sweet spot, there are four selectable suspension modes: Comfort, which is tuned for a cushy ride and lighter steering efforts; “B,” which is the Bentley engineers’ favored calibration; Sport, which has firmer steering and damping; and Custom, which allows the driver to mix and match suspension and steering settings. The brake discs are monstrous, cast-iron-and-aluminum pieces, 15.7 inches in diameter at the front and 14.6 inches out back. The Mulsanne rides on 20-inch wheels as standard, with 21-inchers on the options list.

More Stylish in Person

All of this is wrapped in brand-new sheetmetal that looks better in the flesh than it does in photographs. The lines are formal and a little bit old-fashioned, inspired by cars such as the 1930 8-Litre sedan that Bentley had at the launch. The car is very regal and has presence, but we really don’t like the googly eye headlamps, which spoil the front end.

Inside, as you’d imagine, the car is exquisite. Large numbers of cows and trees perished in the making of the interior, which features an unbroken ring of wood trim as well as a leather-covered headliner. Our tour guide at the Bentley factory said that this car uses three times more wood than previous Bentleys and that 17 to 18 full cow hides are needed per Mulsanne. As well as these natural materials, the cabin features some stunning piano-black finishes and acres of stainless steel. The removable ashtrays are hunks of gleaming metal and the clip-in rear cup holders are hand-trimmed in leather. Bentley says it takes more than 170 man-hours to craft the interior.

Juxtaposed against the tasteful Olde World ambience of the furnishings, the Mulsanne has all the modern technology you’d expect to see in a $285,000 car. There’s a 14-speaker Naim stereo that has a 2200-watt amplifier, as well as a 60-GB hard drive that serves the navigation and audio systems. The rear seats are heated and cooled, recline, and offer a massage feature that put one of our rear-seat riders to sleep.

Among the options are the winged “B” hood ornament, adaptive cruise control, two-tone paint, and rear- and side-view cameras. A 17-speaker Naim stereo is an upgrade, along with a six-disc DVD player and a rear-seat entertainment system. A potential owner can customize the interior with different veneers, wood inlays, even more luxurious carpets, contrasting color stitching on the leather, and rear-seat picnic tables. We say go whole hog and get the “jewel” fuel-filler cap, contrast seat piping, drilled pedals, and mood lighting, too. All of these things are available before you dip into the Mulliner personalization catalogue, mind you.

More Rewarding to Drive

On the road, the Mulsanne is a massive improvement over the Arnage and a much sportier vehicle than its direct rival, the Rolls-Royce Phantom. The relatively low-revving V-8 engine is, like a well-behaved child, only heard when it’s asked to be. At cruising speeds, it’s hard to detect that there’s a mechanical device turning up front, but when needed the V-8 responds with a torrent of torque and a muted growl that signifies some serious get-up-and-go. Bentley claims a 0-to-60-mph time of 5.1 seconds and the Mulsanne certainly feels that fast. Top speed is claimed to be 184 mph, but one engineer we spoke to said the car actually will get closer to 200 mph.

We detected a slight resonance that signals cylinder deactivation, even if our co-driver didn’t. It’s ever so subtle, and we’d have to say that Bentley has done a great job of masking it, partially by altering the pass-through in the rear mufflers so you can’t hear a change in the exhaust note and partially by using a small amount of torque-convertor slip to damp second-order inputs in the drivetrain. The eight-speed transmission swaps gears so smoothly that one can hardly sense upshifts. There’s so much torque on hand that the paddle shifters seem a bit redundant. In Sport, the transmission holds onto gears longer.

The car wafts along at 80 mph and higher in virtual silence, with incredible isolation from wind and road noise. Part of that is due to the acoustically treated windows, but the engineers have done an amazing job of reducing wheel and tire impacts. In the Comfort setting, the highway ride is glorious, especially in the cavernous rear seats, but the steering in this setting was too light and the ride too pillowy on winding English country roads. We gravitated to a custom setting that married the heftier weight of the Sport steering to the “B” suspension setting, which offers a terrific compromise between handling and ride comfort. (The Sport setting ties the suspension down more firmly, but the rear-seat ride quality, while still admirable, is notably stiffer.)

The Mulsanne has really accurate and communicative steering and drives small. The most impressive aspect of the handling is how stable it is on corner entry, with body control that would shame many lighter, supposedly sportier vehicles. The brakes, too, are phenomenal and the car can be hustled at ridiculous speeds, should the mood take you. We suspect that most owners, however, will revel in the luxurious cabin’s ambience as well as the supple ride and the isolation from the peasants outside. Bentley plans to sell no more than 800 cars a year worldwide, and it says that we should expect to see further variants such as a two-door convertible and a coupe. The Mulsanne goes on sale in the late fall in the U.S. with a base price of $285,000, although we suspect that most cars will go out the door for considerably more than 300 large.

- 2012 Bentley Mulsanne - First Drive Review - Auto Reviews - Car and Driver
 
Very informative review. To production is at 800 cars per year and is already sold out until 2012? Impressive I have to say. I didn't expect it to be such a success and given all the praise about the handling in corners, sales will soar even more.
 


Bentley Mulsanne: Road Test by John Simister

It used to be simple. There was fundamentally one British saloon car at the very top of the luxury-car heap, and it came from Crewe, Cheshire. It had a 6750cc V8 engine of notable effortlessness, and it looked large, imposing and very expensive. True, there were various versions, but the differences were merely changes of emphasis. If you wanted ultimate waftability and sybaritism, you bought the one with the Rolls-Royce badge. If you wanted a bit more pace, more bite, more sporting focus, you bought the Bentley. Same car, different personality.
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Then BMW bought the Rolls-Royce part, Volkswagen the Bentley part, and co-operation turned into competition. Not directly, though; the reincarnated Rolls-Royce marque headed yet further upmarket with the Phantom, while Bentley headed in the other direction with the Continental models which boosted Bentley sales to hitherto unseen heights. Thus was an unseemly clash avoided. Now look what has happened. Rolls-Royce has launched the Ghost, a surprisingly sporting car seemingly treading on the territory occupied since the early 1980s by turbocharged Bentleys. A thoroughly modern and disarmingly capable machine, the Ghost made the Bentley Arnage, a dinosaur on wheels, seem hopelessly outclassed. For do not forget that when Rolls-Royce and Bentley divorced, it was Bentley that kept the Crewe factory and the existing designs, including the venerable V8 engine.

And so to the subject of this test. It’s a full-size Bentley with a twin-turbo V8 of old-fashioned architecture, but a dinosaur it is not. Meet the new Mulsanne: the name is hardly original, being the one used for the generation that brought us the first turbocharged Bentley, but the car is entirely new. Even now, Bentley’s engineering and marketing brains don’t consider the Ghost a direct rival, but it is. Rolls-Royce and Bentley clash head-on for the first time in history.

Of these two uber-saloons, it is – perhaps surprisingly – the Mulsanne that is the more bespoke. None of its engine, suspension or structure is shared with any other car, and the design, engineering and manufacture are all done at Crewe. The V8 retains pushrods to operate just two valves per cylinder, just as in the 1959 original, while other common features include aluminium for the block and heads, wedge-shaped combustion chambers and very short exhaust ports. These last two items originally existed, respectively, for compactness and minimal transfer of exhaust heat to the coolant. Nowadays, they happen to be very good for clean combustion and the quick lighting-off of the catalytic converters, so they have stayed. All the engine’s castings and forgings are new, even though the capacity is identical. Fuel consumption and CO2 output drop by around 15 per cent, but the latter is still a slightly embarrassing 393g/km.

Two key enablers here are variable valve timing, an unusual feature on an engine with just one camshaft, and the ability to shut off two cylinders in each bank when demands on the engine are low. The disabled cylinders’ valves stay closed, so the air trapped within acts like a spring and no energy is lost by needless pumping of air. With all eight cylinders firing, however, there’s a healthy 512bhp on offer (slightly less than the V12 Ghost’s 575bhp) and an epic 752lb ft of torque (equating to 1020Nm – yes, four figures – and usefully more than the Ghost’s 575lb ft). So the engine is classic Bentley with a modern twist. The rest of the Mulsanne continues the theme, its hefty body kicking-up over the rear wheels in the manner of its 1950s ancestors, its nose housing large, round headlights. These contain projector-type xenon lenses for dipped beam, surrounded by a ring of LEDs for main beam. Daytime running lights sit outboard of the headlights.

The mesh grille can be surrounded by a chrome shell if you’re feeling retro, and topped by a retractable ‘flying B’ mascot to satisfy a similar craving. The tail looks short, but that’s because the rear pillars sweep back a long way. These pillars’ junction with the roof is brazed and smoothed the old-fashioned way, but there’s contrasting modernity in the bootlid (a composite moulding incorporating several radio antennae) and the front wings (‘superformed’, that is heat-pressed, alumunium able to reach a shape and depth impossible by conventional means). Trad meets modern inside, too. Of course, no material here looks like anything it is not, except that you might not expect the buttons to be made of black glass. There’s a leather-lined iPod tray and, if the standard 14-speaker stereo is insufficient, you can have a 20-speaker version by high-end hi-fi specialist Naim, with 2200 Watts on offer. Lustrous wood and supple leather are all around and, of course, there are combinations of both from which to choose, as well as over 100 exterior colours. Or your own bespoke shade of pearlescent pink, if you must.

You sit lower than you did in the imperious Arnage, because the floor now sits conventionally below the tops of the sills instead of level with them. The steering wheel is small and thick-rimmed; this and the presence of a rev-counter together give a visual hint of sporting intent. Other driver-focused fitments include paddle-shifts on the steering wheel in the unlikely event that you want to override the new eight-speed automatic transmission, a Sport setting for the same, and a control to alter the air suspension’s damping. The Ghost has none of these: that’s where the R-R and Bentley philosophies diverge. I push the Start button. It’s possible that the engine is now idling, but I can’t be certain. Into Drive, off we waft. The engine has no need, or desire, to rev; maximum power arrives at just 4200rpm, while the gearchanges are all but undetectable. The speedometer and rev-counter scales are rotated 180 degrees from the norm, apparently for reasons of tradition but it’s an annoying affectation. But you barely glance at the rev-counter, concentrating instead on the speedometer, because even 70mph feels no more than a gentle trot.

Given its head, the Mulsanne will reach an extraordinary 184mph, having passed 60mph in 5.1sec and 100mph in 11.6. The larger throttle openings required to do this elicit a deep but distant rumble from somewhere up front, but otherwise the engine is near-silent. The switch between four and eight cylinders is undetectable, the overtaking ability immense. There’s a bit too much of a pause before the whoosh unless you’re in Sport, though, sometimes followed by an unseemly lunge as torque demand and supply equilibrate. The Ghost, dare I say it, manages its torque more tidily.

Some large cars ‘shrink around you’ with familiarity. The Mulsanne will never do that; you’re always aware of its 2585kg mass and the road space it occupies, but it can still slice around corners with remarkable enthusiasm. The expected understeer never materialises, and the tyres hang on gamely as they manage the forces. The ride is wonderful, as you would expect, and only slightly compromised by the optional 21in wheels (20in wheels are standard; 265-section tyres are common to both sizes). The Comfort suspension setting is ultra-supple but never induces queasiness, while Sport renders it firm enough to discourage this mode’s use on typically broken British roads. There’s a Custom mode which lets you combine your favourite steering and damping characteristics, such as firm steering and wafting suspension as favoured by engineering director Ulrich Eichhorn. Or you can simply leave it in so-called Bentley mode because, as the name suggests, it suits the car ideally: not too firm, not too vague, able to adapt optimally to changing demands.

The Arnage used to give the impression of epic forces intent on heading off in their own directions. It was a lovable car but a flawed one. The Mulsanne takes similar ingredients, updates them and makes them work properly together. If you try to imagine what a proper, modern, flagship Bentley should be like, the Mulsanne is exactly that car. It’s a wonderful device: lavish, luxurious and crushingly capable. Trouble is, there’s also the ghost of a Bentley in the car called Ghost, which also happens to be slightly cheaper if such things should matter (£195,840 against £220,000).

But comparisons are odious. Aren’t they?

Bentley Mulsanne: Road Test by John Simister - Classic Driver - MAGAZINE - driving report

----

will post the photos in the Mulsanne Picture Thread later…

:t-cheers:
 
Very informative review. To production is at 800 cars per year and is already sold out until 2012? Impressive I have to say. I didn't expect it to be such a success and given all the praise about the handling in corners, sales will soar even more.

Like the 60 year olds + who buy this are going to care ;)

My oh my....

M

Is that good or bad?
 
FROM MOTOR TREND:

Paefgen admits VW Group originally had no plans to replace the Arnage, which it inherited in its 1998 purchase of the storied British luxury marque from Vickers Group. He fought a rear-guard action to keep the big old-fashioned Bentley flagship sedan alive: As recently as five years ago, the Arnage successor was to be a pumped up Continental Flying Spur, complete with high-tech turbocharged quad-cam W12 engine and all-wheel drive. That idea was quietly shelved when the concept was poorly received in customer clinics, and Paefgen used the failure to sell the VW Group board on a new Bentley flagship, one that retained the unique character of the Arnage its small but loyal customer base so dearly - and clearly - loved.


Makes the car all the more special for me. Imagine, they were going to do just what many of us thought they would, a sorry Continental-based replacement for the Arnage. Thank goodness someone had the **** to speak up for a proper replacement.



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The entire Motor Trend article: 2011 Bentley Mulsanne First Drive - Motor Trend


M
 
Makes the car all the more special for me. Imagine, they were going to do just what many of us thought they would, a sorry Continental-based replacement for the Arnage. Thank goodness someone had the **** to speak up for a proper replacement.

Amen to that! Bentley would have been a mess without a Grand Bentley. Can't believe they ever thought to leave that seat vacant. Bentley should aways have a proper flagship. Bentley isn't Bentley without it.

Continental-based replacement would have been a failure from the the start.

 
Amazing pictures. It's truly a worthy Arnage successor, although I still think the Arnage looks better.

...and given all the praise about the handling in corners, sales will soar even more.

C'mon Hassan, the car weighs 2.6 tons! :D I don't think handling is near the top of the list what customers are looking for in a Bentley, otherwise they would have made it considerably lighter. Even if the car had just average handling, the sales numbers probably would be the same.
 
C'mon Hassan, the car weighs 2.6 tons! :D I don't think handling is near the top of the list what customers are looking for in a Bentley, otherwise they would have made it considerably lighter. Even if the car had just average handling, the sales numbers probably would be the same.

Actually, handling is on the check list of customers buying a Bentley. Out of the two British luxury veteran, Bentley has always been the more youthful and sporty brand. I've seen quite a few Bentley CGT Supersport around the city and it seems like spending happy customers like their cars fast but big and with curves :D

But to some extent you're right. A Bentley is more of a car to cruise in than to race hotted up Golfs, but great handling does add to the magic spirit of the car -- makes it look even more beautiful. Having seen the car in the metal I wouldn't want to try and park it. It's way too long to take on a Saturday trip to a crowded mall. Anyone who wants a drivable Bentley will still opt for a Continental GT or a potential four door coupe will VAG will most certainly produce.
 
The Car Enthusiast - | First Drive | Scottish borders | Bentley Mulsanne |

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The decision to replace the Arnage at Bentley must have been a tough one. But that's exactly what the company did, and the old flagship V8 model has moved over to make way for the latest Mulsanne. The V8 cars are regarded by many as the epitome of what Bentley represents, and the firm claims that the new saloon is the opposite of a mass production car. Only tiny numbers will be hand-built in Bentley's production facility in Crewe, but the Mulsanne feels every bit as modern as the cars it competes against - all while retaining Bentley's traditional, hand crafted feel.

In the Metal

Being imposing - but not brash - means the Mulsanne treads that fine line between old and new money very well indeed. It's discrete enough to appeal to Bentley's traditional customers, and striking enough to lure in some new ones too. It's big, but carries its bulk surprisingly well. Bentley claims that the shape couldn't be re-created by any other manufacturers. It's not a car you immediately appreciate, but its lines win you over with familiarity.

Inside, it retains the beautifully hand crafted feel that you'd expect from Bentley's flagship machine. The chrome push-pull air vent controllers remain a tactile delight, while the rest of the cabin is a demonstration of fine materials and skilled detailing. There's modernity now though, with an iPod dock, satnav, Bluetooth connection and a 60 gig hard drive all secreted away behind polished wood veneers and leather. The seats are superb with ample space, though given the scale of the Mulsanne the boot space doesn't look overly generous.

What you get for your Money

Standard kit includes everything you could possibly want for £220,000, but Bentley drivers typically spend about 10 percent more on options. There are plenty of personalisation options on offer, from the paint finishes to additional chrome, larger alloy wheels and hide and wood trim inside. Rear seat entertainment is available too, but the real fun is to be had up front, behind the wheel.

Driving it

True to its roots, the Mulsanne is powered by a turbocharged V8 engine. The new saloon's powerplant shares little in common with its predecessor except its 6.75-litre capacity, as Bentley has reworked it extensively to meet modern emissions and fuel consumption targets. It's a magnificent engine that revs to 4,500rpm and offers enormous pace from mere tick over. Output is 505bhp, but it's the 752lb.ft of torque that really characterises the Mulsanne's drive, with that peak punch offered at just 1,750rpm.

They might be big figures but there's a lot of car to shift - all that hand crafted leather, wood and metal adds up to a not insubstantial 2.5 tonnes. The V8 is more than up to the task though, as 62mph is possible in 5.3 seconds. The way it so easily gains momentum is just part of its enormous appeal. It never feels ridiculously quick - that would be uncouth - instead it gathers pace with the sort of effortless impunity that should be part of the big Bentley experience.

It's quiet too, as the V8's rumble is only really apparent when it's under full load; otherwise there's just a dignified presence that suggests ample performance. The twin-turbo unit is mated to an eight-speed automatic transmission. All those ratios seem like overkill though, as the V8's spread of torque is so generous. That makes the paddles - fitted for the first time on the big Bentley -superfluous, as much down to the fatigue your fingers will get from constant gear shifts as to the fact that the transmission works just fine on its own.

Naturally, there's the option to fiddle, not least with that gearbox, which gives you Sport or Drive alongside the manual option. The suspension and steering can also be altered via the Drive Dynamics Control selector on the centre console.

Comfort mode creates a silky, cosseting ride that allows the Mulsanne to cope with even the nastiest of surfaces, though push it down a winding road without first changing to Sport and the car does wallow a little. Switch to Sport and control is better, but the steering loads up with weighting that suits long sweeping bends and requires some muscle when you're faced with tighter twists. It's best to opt for the Custom setting and select the tidier body and damping control with the lighter steering.

Do so and the Mulsanne will hustle along with frightening ease. Only its width is a limiting factor on Britain's narrow back roads.

Worth Noting

The twin-turbo V8 engine features cylinder deactivation to reduce its drinking habit, but 16.7mpg and CO2 emissions of 393g/km won't win you any friends in the green party.

Summary

Trying to rationalise a car like the Mulsanne is impossible. Realistically, there are cars that do everything the Mulsanne does for much less money. Similarly, there are others that cost more but offer nothing extra. What the Mulsanne does so well is to continue the Bentley tradition of big performance, exquisite craftsmanship and near limitless personalisation, but brings it all up to date without losing the core character. It's a remarkable car, which Bentley claims will share garage space with at least seven other vehicles. Really though, you could argue that you only need one. And the Mulsanne would do the job very well indeed.



Car reviews | Bentley Mulsanne | First Drive: Bentley Mulsanne | by Car Enthusiast


M
 
Maybe it's the choice of color, but two-tone does not work well. Either that, or they should of just done what RR did with the Ghost.
 
I just love the two-tone in this case, works for me:) Looks better in two tone than on a Ghost.;)
 

Bentley

Bentley Motors Limited is a British designer, manufacturer, and marketer of luxury cars and SUVs. Headquartered in Crewe, England, the company was founded by W. O. Bentley (1888-1971) in 1919 in Cricklewood, North London, and became widely known for winning the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1924, 1927, 1928, 1929 and 1930. Bentley has been a subsidiary of the Volkswagen Group since 1998 and consolidated under VW's premium brand arm Audi in 2022.
Official website: Bentley Motors

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