Wolfgang
Kraftwagen König
Why only Japan got that CNS? Because they are technology freaks or?
Yes, that's probably one reason. Another one might be that the country is not that large, about the size of Germany, and the map data easier to handle.
Why only Japan got that CNS? Because they are technology freaks or?
@Wolfgang, around the time the W222 was introduced there were reports that when Lesnik arrived at Mercedes he basically begged/convinced Wagoner to let him have a go at the S-class. Does this mean he probably took Yoon's proposal and worked on interpreting that rather than starting from a clean sheet?
Also if Yoon and Lesnik did the S, who did the C?
Has anyone noticed that Asian designers are becoming more and more prominent within German Car design departments? It's great to see and proof that they are amazing designers in their own rights. Furthermore it suggests it is most likely the corporate culture at companies like Honda, Toyota, Lexus etc. that stifle their creativity.
@Carmaker1 ......what an epic post!This is very hard for me, as I like to be as objective as possible. I was the grandson of a BMW man (importer) and still the son of a BMW gal (and Jaguar guy), but greatly in love with the W222. I have never personally had an S-Class in my immediately family growing up nor personally owned anything in this class for myself. I've grown up with the 7-Series since the E38 and my maternal grandfather owned an E32 as his last BMW.
By extended family and friends, I've come into contact with the various generations of S-Class here and there, but never at home. My father does not like Mercedes-Benz (except Geländewagen) the way the rest of his family does and prefers British makes (especially Jaguar) above everything, with the exception of Audi.
I love both brands for their own respective qualities, but will try to be honest. The amount of technology and refinement packed into the G11 certainly takes the 7er forward, but will this design last 7 more years is the question?
My only gripes with the G11 is the shaping of the headlights (they look swollen) and the dash design similarity to the F30. Even the E38 and F01 dash designs did not closely resemble that of the E36 and E90, the way the E32 and G11 have with the E30 and F30 respectively. The way the make up for this, is in the attention to detail, and superior fit & finish for their respective eras.
I talked with my mother about this and we both believe that some aspects of the S-Class are too overdone, while BMW has also underdone the G11 in some ways. Does not really matter anyway, as she will never buy an S-Class saloon over a 7er.
I had much more to say on this specific topic, but cannot really remember anymore. I am usually indecisive, that I'd honestly take both if I was in her position! You can't go wrong with either. As some of you said below, it is all about subjective taste.
That's how my father has always looked at things and has never really liked what Mercedes-Benz has to offer, except for the Geländewagen. He's strictly been about British autos and Audi, except when practicality and versatility is a factor. However, he has never liked the current XJ, but does like its replacement (a reason I will not want/need one). Again, I have no favourites of course. I am not too fond of Maserati, but they are still decent.
Well, that isn't quite fair to say, but I do agree somewhat. Some people are too badge-biased to the point, that Jaguar does not even get a chance and automatically render it inferior. This is "German Car Forum" not "British Car Forum, so it's understandably expected.
We do not exactly have the most resources to work with and brand cache like BMW and Mercedes-Benz do, so we've done what we can on gambles. Outside of BMW Individual, there have been some areas where BMW doesn't surpass Jaguar and Mercedes-Benz has only fully flourished as of late.
I can see why I post less here, as I am not an argumentative person, and quite tired of the endless digs thrown at Jaguar. GCF is still very much more objective, compared to many other sites, that would give me a migraine.
Oh really? We'll see about that then, as you're very unaware how we're in the middle of development on a very large project at the moment and the current XJ (X351) is not eternal nor fully representative of our best work under less limitations.
It is very helpful seeing what the W222 and G11 have to offer, but we've already made our own plans as well with substantial investment. If we are fully incapable, then I might as well as join the unemployment queue.
Robert Lešnik came to Mercedes-Benz in January 2009 and Karim Habib in March 2009, both towards the end of the W222 design process. Habib was in Advanced Design (influenced F800), with Lešnik somehow inserting himself into design of the W222. For the life of me, I cannot understand why both Lešnik and Mark Fetherston are continually given credit nearly every new MB's exterior design. Are they that good?
Il-hun Yoon was responsible for the W222 exterior, yet has been shoved into the background for mysterious reasons and late comer Lešnik getting the sole credit, when Yoon was still working on 1:1 W222 clay models in 2009 and did much of the sketches priorly. What did Lešnik do that was so spectacular and differentiating from Yoon's suggestions, that gave him such credit so last minute?
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Yoon Sketch
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Lesnik Post-Design Freeze Sketch
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It's not so much Daimler/Chrysler era, but simply Peter Pfeiffer. When he got overall control in 1999, plus mixing the recent merger, things became a blocky mess. The W222 design was one of the first fully approved under Wagener 6 years ago and one he was allowed several months to oversee, compared to the CLS (C218).
Considering that Wagener designed the W221 himself in 2001, it is no wonder the transition from W221 to W222 went so well. Habib was promoted too late to preside over the G11 design process. The F800 was developed in 2009 for Geneve 2010 and looks to showcase Sensual Purity more.
One cannot solely blame Chrysler for Daimler's prior failures, they were both bad for each other. I have heard both sides of the story and neither is innocent. I do agree that Chrysler caused them to lose focus, as it was an unnecessary headache to additionally manage. Both companies were headed down the same path by 1993, thanks to Robert Eaton of Chrysler destroying Iacocca's visions and McKinsey's & Company's cost-cutting influence on Daimler-Benz.
The C218, W166, and X166 are of the "Aqua Dynamic" theme in my own opinion. The C218 and W166 were both frozen around the same time in 2008, while the GL followed after in 2009. Much of the design for the C218 was laid out in 2007 and probably the W166 as well.
The W222 was finished in 2009 and W205 in late 2010. The odd thing about the CLS is, that it underwent changes between design patent filings in June 2008 and the actual product was more angular. The Huckfeldt leak in May 2008 was 100% correct, but MB changed it up a bit by 2010.
Looking at the timing, Wagener was probably not allowed much leeway with aspects of the GL. He did barely take over in June 2008. I had said in the past on here, that the W212 was frozen in 2006 and X204 sometime in 2005. Pfeiffer's deep influence didn't really surface until about 2004, as no redesigns were launched in 2003. The W211 E-Class I've learned, was moreover a Sacco-influenced design and the R230 SL is also his through and through (June 16, 1997 sign-off).
When someone takes the lead post and has a different design idiom, their vision might take awhile to have proper effect. Peter Schreyer took over Hyundai design nearly 2.5 years ago and none of the recent redesigns were influenced by him. His supposed "Bauhaus" C5 A6 launched in 1997, was actually designed under Harmut Warkuss in 1991-1992 and frozen in June 1994. Schreyer took over Audi Design afterward in October 1994, yet is wrongly credited for that car. The TT was his first Audi and B6 his first saloon.
In many ways that is true, but Daimler also forced Chrysler to spend 40% less on their interiors, hence the terrible plastics that were used on their LX platform offerings from 2004-2010 and many other Chrysler vehicles. It was a very complex situation, but I am too tired to remember both sides fully. The end result has been like a bitter divorce, where "friends" of each have differing viewpoints.
Bear in mind that the E84 X1, while designed under Adrian van Hooydonk as BMW Brand Design director in 2006, Bangle was also BMW Group Design director back then. I cannot honestly vouch for how things changed, when van Hooydonk assumed his role in February 2004 and Bangle became formally in charge of all BMW Group Design.
I presume he had a say in how things were done, until departing 5 years later. Bangle's previous role (AvH's current role) as "Group design chief" is a unique one, as Ian and Gerry primarily do their work independent of each other at JLR. The F45/46 and F56 are very much of course recent stuff, so no argument there in being more subjective.
Well, he was definitely was there for the F10 and plenty more. When Bangle departed by February 3, 2009, BMW had already designed F07, E84, F10, F25, F12/13, and F20. The design for the F10 was chosen in December 2006 and frozen in mid-2007. Him leaving only had some bearing on future models (post-2012), as even the F30 was being designed back in 2008.
Lol! In some ways, that isn't too far off (no offense anyone). I always threw a fit whenever the latest thread post under the "Mercedes-Benz" section was "Mercedes-Benz A-Class (W176)", while I'm instead looking for W222/W205/C217/W213 spy shots and had to click further.
If he did, they were added very late in his tenure. I honestly would attribute those circular vents to the interior designer's visions, as plenty of Pfeiffer-directed designs have those. They just weren't on the level of the current style, that borrows more from English designs.
Quite unfair to pick on the X100 XK (and Jaguar in general), as that is very subjective and not really fact. I disagree about 1990s interiors, as you might as well include BMW interiors from the '80s as well. The E38, E39, and E46 were very good quality evolutions of their predecessors. MB took an unfortunate step-down in quality with obvious cost-cuts, while BMW worked their hardest to maintain profitability and improve on the E32, E34, and E36. Audi's only went up as well.
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Some of it is because the F30 has been out for the 3.5 years and the G11 is just arriving, while the W205 C-Class was launched less than a year after the W222 S-Class. People have had plenty of time to get used to the 3er's design, while the S and C were nearly parallel, with the former preceding it. Audi was attacked for this greatly with the B8 A4 and D4 A8, which will not be an issue again with the D5 and B9.
My mother before even getting an invitation, was puzzled at the leaked winter shots and wondered why the G11 was not "very different" and "took after a smaller car". She is content now with it (due to features and etc), but still had to be convinced initially. She lives day-in-day-out with an F02 and has done-so for 5-6 years, so for her to feel that way begs the question.
Not quite, as the G11 design process began in 2010. The design was frozen about 3 years ago and design selection months before that. BMW most certainly was not starting the G11 design process as the F30 came out (Oct. 2011 prod, launch Feb. 2012), but were actually finishing up back then. It was essentially done by around June-July 2012.
The F15 design was reached in late 2010, if not Oct-November 2010 specifically, and by then the F30 was deep into testing. Much of the F30 was designed in 2008-2009, with proposal selection on March 2, 2009 and rapid design freeze in the following months.
The W222 is actually evolutionary (not revolutionary) in design, but differentiated enough from the angular W221 facelift through more organic shapes. The F01 was never particularly angular nor too organic, so the differences are not as obvious with the G11. I never really liked the W221 overall for that reason and preferred the F02. That's not to say it wasn't a wonderful car, as the level of quality improvement in the post-facelift W221 was excellent, while the original was a necessary stepping stone over the W220.
As for revolution, I think it will be the next 7er that will take that role. The E23, E32, and E38 were so similar, they're a family. The E65, F01, and G11 are a family of 21st 7ers. Not sure if what I'm saying makes sense.
Yes, pretty much the case here, even if the S-Class was out only less than a year before the W205 C. It is better in my opinion, for the flagship or halo model to lead the brand all the way. I am pleased that at Jaguar we have corrected this issue with next model, as the XJ just kept coming "last" since the 1990s (against XK, S-Type/XF, X-Type). Audi will do so as well with the D5, unlike the D4.
The 3-Series has always been a bridge between old BMW design and new BMW design. It helps keep the 3er fresh, while not taking away the shine from the flagship. Some people don't see it this way and automatically assume the 7 is an enlarged 3-Series. Only in the case of the E65, that this did not happen. There's nothing wrong with them being the same, but merely about hierarchy in the line-up. Top-down certainly does matter to a degree and Mercedes-Benz usually gets this right.
The difference is, the F30 has been in public long enough to make a lasting impression. The G11 is new and anyone who notices that, will make the correlation that "7er copied the cheaper car", similarly the way my mother did initially. Jaguar had this terrible problem 10-12 years ago, with the X-Type (2000-01) and X350 XJ (2002-03). Will not be happening, even if the XE has certain "weaknesses". The X760 (XE) successor will take after the redesigned XJ (X360), even though development has yet to begin on the former.
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As you correctly said above, dimensions and perspective matter. Anyone that spots a 750Li and thinks it's a 318i, is clearly challenged. A C450 AMG Sport is far from being an S500.
What are you talking about? I'm not sure how these are particularly "cheaper". Maybe that applies to Mercedes-Benz more post-1995, but everybody else did very well in execution. Audi had its ascendancy for this very reason.
Audi V8 (1988-1991 version)-Cannot find any press shots
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Audi V8 (1991-1994 version)-Dual Airbags, newer 4.2L
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Audi A8 (D2)-A VAST improvement
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You can't really say that is 100% correct (E65 copy), as the S-Class looks very oddly similar to a Japanese solution introduced in 1998. The same year BMW was designing i-Drive's layout and the E65 interior. Despite that, surely Mercedes-Benz were later on more focused on the E65, their closest competitor, rather than Nissan. How do you know the W221 was not frozen by the time the E65 was launched? It was very far along by December 2002.
Again, that is variable. Only the iDrive controller vs COMAND knob can be of question, as everything might have not come from BMW. BMW's screen placement solution may or may not been influenced by a Nissan interior from 1998 (designed in 1995).
I cannot properly speak for BMW, but the design of i-Drive interface in 1998 was an interesting story, but might've had prior influences of its own. It is Japanese automakers that came up with the idea for a higher screen placement, but BMW has full credit for the idea of a centre console-mounted control knob for the infotainment system on the E65.
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Toyota was the first automaker to implement an infotainment screen at eye-level for better view, in January 1998 on the 100-Series Land Cruiser. Much of the design development for that was done between 1991 and mid-1994. Again, Nissan takes the credit in terms of screen set-up, not overall interface.
The Nissan interface handled audio, climate, communication, parking assist camera, TV, and GPS functions. That iDrive interface was a pioneering effort for BMW that influenced the marketplace, but one can see who is closer to the Japanese design and it isn't BMW.
The '90s Japanese interfaces are definitely inferior to iDrive, as the Toyota system was solely touchscreen and not fully housed with the instrument clustre. The Nissan controller knob was too small and too far away to operate. However, all somewhat give an idea of independent progression towards better ergonomics. Audi's MMI took a different approach, being mostly developed parallel to iDrive from 1997 to 2000.
Looking down at touch screens below the steering wheel was no longer favourable for driving conditions, such as the case in the E38, LS400, A8 (D2), W220.
As I said to klier, no it was not. The E65 only pioneered the infotainment system and use of a centre console-mounted controller knob, but the massive screen housing was a template already developed by Japanese automakers in the mid-1990s. The W221 and W222 COMAND screen placement resembles the Nissan example, more so than BMW's E65 i-Drive monitor placement. Not many cars have exactly copied the BMW set-up per se, if BMW was not first.
Ironically, the same individual supposedly designed both the W222 (2009) and W205 (2010). As we've seen, the W205 still took quite some work.
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The S Coupe concept looked so sexy (oh god yes it did!) with that fully upright shark nose, as that is the only element missing on the C217. Clearly the production C217 was designed years before it, so it was too last minute. Hopefully they are implementing it for the C217 facelift in 2018.
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Of course, the ultimate and original shark nose is this.
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That is specifically your subjective taste, which is quite good (based on those beautiful examples), but other's ideas of ultra luxury are not necessarily inferior.
The Germanic interpretation isn't the end-all, be-all. Everything is very subjective, as some people feel German interiors are "cold" and "clinical", compared to "warmer and more inviting" English interiors. The W222, W205, and C217 have eliminated this to a degree. BMW has also done very well with the G11, by adding certain "touches" to it for once, especially in Individual trim. In fact many BMW interiors are improving significantly via better material selection and accenting.
Also, the idea that the Japanese somehow use "plastic" or "shiny" wood is quite an unfair, if not heavily biased opinion. One has seen many odd interpretations from German offerings alike.
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No, you're actually not. My father purchased one in late 2005 and still owns it till this day. It resides with my sister in Georgia now. Wonderful car, but it's unfortunately the "best" XJ interior of this generation (X350) and that apparently isn't saying much. The '09 SV8 Portfolio (X359) that joined it temporarily, his last Jaguar purchase, is nothing special. Reaching 10 years old, it is very reliable and the best example of that generation all-around.
Don't worry. I like it too hahaΙ believe that I am the only fan of this interior in the whole GCF.
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This is very hard for me, as I like to be as objective as possible. I was the grandson of a BMW man (importer) and still the son of a BMW gal (and Jaguar guy), but greatly in love with the W222. I have never personally had an S-Class in my immediately family growing up nor personally owned anything in this class for myself. I've grown up with the 7-Series since the E38 and my maternal grandfather owned an E32 as his last BMW.
By extended family and friends, I've come into contact with the various generations of S-Class here and there, but never at home. My father does not like Mercedes-Benz (except Geländewagen) the way the rest of his family does and prefers British makes (especially Jaguar) above everything, with the exception of Audi.
I love both brands for their own respective qualities, but will try to be honest. The amount of technology and refinement packed into the G11 certainly takes the 7er forward, but will this design last 7 more years is the question?
My only gripes with the G11 is the shaping of the headlights (they look swollen) and the dash design similarity to the F30. Even the E38 and F01 dash designs did not closely resemble that of the E36 and E90, the way the E32 and G11 have with the E30 and F30 respectively. The way the make up for this, is in the attention to detail, and superior fit & finish for their respective eras.
I talked with my mother about this and we both believe that some aspects of the S-Class are too overdone, while BMW has also underdone the G11 in some ways. Does not really matter anyway, as she will never buy an S-Class saloon over a 7er.
I had much more to say on this specific topic, but cannot really remember anymore. I am usually indecisive, that I'd honestly take both if I was in her position! You can't go wrong with either. As some of you said below, it is all about subjective taste.
That's how my father has always looked at things and has never really liked what Mercedes-Benz has to offer, except for the Geländewagen. He's strictly been about British autos and Audi, except when practicality and versatility is a factor. However, he has never liked the current XJ, but does like its replacement (a reason I will not want/need one). Again, I have no favourites of course. I am not too fond of Maserati, but they are still decent.
Well, that isn't quite fair to say, but I do agree somewhat. Some people are too badge-biased to the point, that Jaguar does not even get a chance and automatically render it inferior. This is "German Car Forum" not "British Car Forum, so it's understandably expected.
We do not exactly have the most resources to work with and brand cache like BMW and Mercedes-Benz do, so we've done what we can on gambles. Outside of BMW Individual, there have been some areas where BMW doesn't surpass Jaguar and Mercedes-Benz has only fully flourished as of late.
I can see why I post less here, as I am not an argumentative person, and quite tired of the endless digs thrown at Jaguar. GCF is still very much more objective, compared to many other sites, that would give me a migraine.
Oh really? We'll see about that then, as you're very unaware how we're in the middle of development on a very large project at the moment and the current XJ (X351) is not eternal nor fully representative of our best work under less limitations.
It is very helpful seeing what the W222 and G11 have to offer, but we've already made our own plans as well with substantial investment. If we are fully incapable, then I might as well as join the unemployment queue.
Robert Lešnik came to Mercedes-Benz in January 2009 and Karim Habib in March 2009, both towards the end of the W222 design process. Habib was in Advanced Design (influenced F800), with Lešnik somehow inserting himself into design of the W222. For the life of me, I cannot understand why both Lešnik and Mark Fetherston are continually given credit nearly every new MB's exterior design. Are they that good?
Il-hun Yoon was responsible for the W222 exterior, yet has been shoved into the background for mysterious reasons and late comer Lešnik getting the sole credit, when Yoon was still working on 1:1 W222 clay models in 2009 and did much of the sketches priorly. What did Lešnik do that was so spectacular and differentiating from Yoon's suggestions, that gave him such credit so last minute?
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Yoon Sketch
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Lesnik Post-Design Freeze Sketch
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It's not so much Daimler/Chrysler era, but simply Peter Pfeiffer. When he got overall control in 1999, plus mixing the recent merger, things became a blocky mess. The W222 design was one of the first fully approved under Wagener 6 years ago and one he was allowed several months to oversee, compared to the CLS (C218).
Considering that Wagener designed the W221 himself in 2001, it is no wonder the transition from W221 to W222 went so well. Habib was promoted too late to preside over the G11 design process. The F800 was developed in 2009 for Geneve 2010 and looks to showcase Sensual Purity more.
One cannot solely blame Chrysler for Daimler's prior failures, they were both bad for each other. I have heard both sides of the story and neither is innocent. I do agree that Chrysler caused them to lose focus, as it was an unnecessary headache to additionally manage. Both companies were headed down the same path by 1993, thanks to Robert Eaton of Chrysler destroying Iacocca's visions and McKinsey's & Company's cost-cutting influence on Daimler-Benz.
The C218, W166, and X166 are of the "Aqua Dynamic" theme in my own opinion. The C218 and W166 were both frozen around the same time in 2008, while the GL followed after in 2009. Much of the design for the C218 was laid out in 2007 and probably the W166 as well.
The W222 was finished in 2009 and W205 in late 2010. The odd thing about the CLS is, that it underwent changes between design patent filings in June 2008 and the actual product was more angular. The Huckfeldt leak in May 2008 was 100% correct, but MB changed it up a bit by 2010.
Looking at the timing, Wagener was probably not allowed much leeway with aspects of the GL. He did barely take over in June 2008. I had said in the past on here, that the W212 was frozen in 2006 and X204 sometime in 2005. Pfeiffer's deep influence didn't really surface until about 2004, as no redesigns were launched in 2003. The W211 E-Class I've learned, was moreover a Sacco-influenced design and the R230 SL is also his through and through (June 16, 1997 sign-off).
When someone takes the lead post and has a different design idiom, their vision might take awhile to have proper effect. Peter Schreyer took over Hyundai design nearly 2.5 years ago and none of the recent redesigns were influenced by him. His supposed "Bauhaus" C5 A6 launched in 1997, was actually designed under Harmut Warkuss in 1991-1992 and frozen in June 1994. Schreyer took over Audi Design afterward in October 1994, yet is wrongly credited for that car. The TT was his first Audi and B6 his first saloon.
In many ways that is true, but Daimler also forced Chrysler to spend 40% less on their interiors, hence the terrible plastics that were used on their LX platform offerings from 2004-2010 and many other Chrysler vehicles. It was a very complex situation, but I am too tired to remember both sides fully. The end result has been like a bitter divorce, where "friends" of each have differing viewpoints.
Bear in mind that the E84 X1, while designed under Adrian van Hooydonk as BMW Brand Design director in 2006, Bangle was also BMW Group Design director back then. I cannot honestly vouch for how things changed, when van Hooydonk assumed his role in February 2004 and Bangle became formally in charge of all BMW Group Design.
I presume he had a say in how things were done, until departing 5 years later. Bangle's previous role (AvH's current role) as "Group design chief" is a unique one, as Ian and Gerry primarily do their work independent of each other at JLR. The F45/46 and F56 are very much of course recent stuff, so no argument there in being more subjective.
Well, he was definitely was there for the F10 and plenty more. When Bangle departed by February 3, 2009, BMW had already designed F07, E84, F10, F25, F12/13, and F20. The design for the F10 was chosen in December 2006 and frozen in mid-2007. Him leaving only had some bearing on future models (post-2012), as even the F30 was being designed back in 2008.
Lol! In some ways, that isn't too far off (no offense anyone). I always threw a fit whenever the latest thread post under the "Mercedes-Benz" section was "Mercedes-Benz A-Class (W176)", while I'm instead looking for W222/W205/C217/W213 spy shots and had to click further.
If he did, they were added very late in his tenure. I honestly would attribute those circular vents to the interior designer's visions, as plenty of Pfeiffer-directed designs have those. They just weren't on the level of the current style, that borrows more from English designs.
Quite unfair to pick on the X100 XK (and Jaguar in general), as that is very subjective and not really fact. I disagree about 1990s interiors, as you might as well include BMW interiors from the '80s as well. The E38, E39, and E46 were very good quality evolutions of their predecessors. MB took an unfortunate step-down in quality with obvious cost-cuts, while BMW worked their hardest to maintain profitability and improve on the E32, E34, and E36. Audi's only went up as well.
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Some of it is because the F30 has been out for the 3.5 years and the G11 is just arriving, while the W205 C-Class was launched less than a year after the W222 S-Class. People have had plenty of time to get used to the 3er's design, while the S and C were nearly parallel, with the former preceding it. Audi was attacked for this greatly with the B8 A4 and D4 A8, which will not be an issue again with the D5 and B9.
My mother before even getting an invitation, was puzzled at the leaked winter shots and wondered why the G11 was not "very different" and "took after a smaller car". She is content now with it (due to features and etc), but still had to be convinced initially. She lives day-in-day-out with an F02 and has done-so for 5-6 years, so for her to feel that way begs the question.
Not quite, as the G11 design process began in 2010. The design was frozen about 3 years ago and design selection months before that. BMW most certainly was not starting the G11 design process as the F30 came out (Oct. 2011 prod, launch Feb. 2012), but were actually finishing up back then. It was essentially done by around June-July 2012.
The F15 design was reached in late 2010, if not Oct-November 2010 specifically, and by then the F30 was deep into testing. Much of the F30 was designed in 2008-2009, with proposal selection on March 2, 2009 and rapid design freeze in the following months.
The W222 is actually evolutionary (not revolutionary) in design, but differentiated enough from the angular W221 facelift through more organic shapes. The F01 was never particularly angular nor too organic, so the differences are not as obvious with the G11. I never really liked the W221 overall for that reason and preferred the F02. That's not to say it wasn't a wonderful car, as the level of quality improvement in the post-facelift W221 was excellent, while the original was a necessary stepping stone over the W220.
As for revolution, I think it will be the next 7er that will take that role. The E23, E32, and E38 were so similar, they're a family. The E65, F01, and G11 are a family of 21st 7ers. Not sure if what I'm saying makes sense.
Yes, pretty much the case here, even if the S-Class was out only less than a year before the W205 C. It is better in my opinion, for the flagship or halo model to lead the brand all the way. I am pleased that at Jaguar we have corrected this issue with next model, as the XJ just kept coming "last" since the 1990s (against XK, S-Type/XF, X-Type). Audi will do so as well with the D5, unlike the D4.
The 3-Series has always been a bridge between old BMW design and new BMW design. It helps keep the 3er fresh, while not taking away the shine from the flagship. Some people don't see it this way and automatically assume the 7 is an enlarged 3-Series. Only in the case of the E65, that this did not happen. There's nothing wrong with them being the same, but merely about hierarchy in the line-up. Top-down certainly does matter to a degree and Mercedes-Benz usually gets this right.
The difference is, the F30 has been in public long enough to make a lasting impression. The G11 is new and anyone who notices that, will make the correlation that "7er copied the cheaper car", similarly the way my mother did initially. Jaguar had this terrible problem 10-12 years ago, with the X-Type (2000-01) and X350 XJ (2002-03). Will not be happening, even if the XE has certain "weaknesses". The X760 (XE) successor will take after the redesigned XJ (X360), even though development has yet to begin on the former.
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As you correctly said above, dimensions and perspective matter. Anyone that spots a 750Li and thinks it's a 318i, is clearly challenged. A C450 AMG Sport is far from being an S500.
What are you talking about? I'm not sure how these are particularly "cheaper". Maybe that applies to Mercedes-Benz more post-1995, but everybody else did very well in execution. Audi had its ascendancy for this very reason.
Audi V8 (1988-1991 version)-Cannot find any press shots
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Audi V8 (1991-1994 version)-Dual Airbags, newer 4.2L
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Audi A8 (D2)-A VAST improvement
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You can't really say that is 100% correct (E65 copy), as the S-Class looks very oddly similar to a Japanese solution introduced in 1998. The same year BMW was designing i-Drive's layout and the E65 interior. Despite that, surely Mercedes-Benz were later on more focused on the E65, their closest competitor, rather than Nissan. How do you know the W221 was not frozen by the time the E65 was launched? It was very far along by December 2002.
Again, that is variable. Only the iDrive controller vs COMAND knob can be of question, as everything might have not come from BMW. BMW's screen placement solution may or may not been influenced by a Nissan interior from 1998 (designed in 1995).
I cannot properly speak for BMW, but the design of i-Drive interface in 1998 was an interesting story, but might've had prior influences of its own. It is Japanese automakers that came up with the idea for a higher screen placement, but BMW has full credit for the idea of a centre console-mounted control knob for the infotainment system on the E65.
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Toyota was the first automaker to implement an infotainment screen at eye-level for better view, in January 1998 on the 100-Series Land Cruiser. Much of the design development for that was done between 1991 and mid-1994. Again, Nissan takes the credit in terms of screen set-up, not overall interface.
The Nissan interface handled audio, climate, communication, parking assist camera, TV, and GPS functions. That iDrive interface was a pioneering effort for BMW that influenced the marketplace, but one can see who is closer to the Japanese design and it isn't BMW.
The '90s Japanese interfaces are definitely inferior to iDrive, as the Toyota system was solely touchscreen and not fully housed with the instrument clustre. The Nissan controller knob was too small and too far away to operate. However, all somewhat give an idea of independent progression towards better ergonomics. Audi's MMI took a different approach, being mostly developed parallel to iDrive from 1997 to 2000.
Looking down at touch screens below the steering wheel was no longer favourable for driving conditions, such as the case in the E38, LS400, A8 (D2), W220.
As I said to klier, no it was not. The E65 only pioneered the infotainment system and use of a centre console-mounted controller knob, but the massive screen housing was a template already developed by Japanese automakers in the mid-1990s. The W221 and W222 COMAND screen placement resembles the Nissan example, more so than BMW's E65 i-Drive monitor placement. Not many cars have exactly copied the BMW set-up per se, if BMW was not first.
Ironically, the same individual supposedly designed both the W222 (2009) and W205 (2010). As we've seen, the W205 still took quite some work.
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The S Coupe concept looked so sexy (oh god yes it did!) with that fully upright shark nose, as that is the only element missing on the C217. Clearly the production C217 was designed years before it, so it was too last minute. Hopefully they are implementing it for the C217 facelift in 2018.
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Of course, the ultimate and original shark nose is this.
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That is specifically your subjective taste, which is quite good (based on those beautiful examples), but other's ideas of ultra luxury are not necessarily inferior.
The Germanic interpretation isn't the end-all, be-all. Everything is very subjective, as some people feel German interiors are "cold" and "clinical", compared to "warmer and more inviting" English interiors. The W222, W205, and C217 have eliminated this to a degree. BMW has also done very well with the G11, by adding certain "touches" to it for once, especially in Individual trim. In fact many BMW interiors are improving significantly via better material selection and accenting.
Also, the idea that the Japanese somehow use "plastic" or "shiny" wood is quite an unfair, if not heavily biased opinion. One has seen many odd interpretations from German offerings alike.
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No, you're actually not. My father purchased one in late 2005 and still owns it till this day. It resides with my sister in Georgia now. Wonderful car, but it's unfortunately the "best" XJ interior of this generation (X350) and that apparently isn't saying much. The '09 SV8 Portfolio (X359) that joined it temporarily, his last Jaguar purchase, is nothing special. Reaching 10 years old, it is very reliable and the best example of that generation all-around.
MB and now BMW designer Hussein Al-Attar explained it thusly:![]()
MB and now BMW designer Hussein Al-Attar explained it thusly:
The design process at Mercedes is kind of different than the one at BMW in the sense that not (like in the case of BMW) only one designer is responsible for executing their original idea, but some designers start, others pick up and maybe someone else finishes.
The original design proposal that "started it all" if you will, is courtesy of Mr. Il-Hun Yoon, who has been referred to as the Asian gentleman in the video. Robert Lesnik either finished the design, meaning he was responsible for the best possible transformation from the 1/4 scale model to the full scale model, or he was in charge of finishing it, supervising Mr. Yoon.
The interior designer you can see in the video is Peter Balko.
http://www.germancarforum.com/threads/2014-mercedes-benz-s-class-w222.48988/page-23#post-639373
And in this vid advanced global lead Steffen Köhl talks about S design.
fünfkommasechs recently filmed an early Mercedes-Benz integrated navigation system, the Communication and Navigation System (CNS). It was offered on the Mercedes W140 S-Class in Japan ONLY, starting in 1993.
Yes, that's probably one reason. Another one might be that the country is not that large, about the size of Germany, and the map data easier to handle.![]()
@Carmaker1's post has got to be one of the longest in the history of the forum haha, it's an entire thread in itself.
Will give it a try to respond later when I can properly read it and re-read the older conversations. Great post though, and in my brief glimpse I saw I might have been a bit harsh on Jaguar, but I probably wantd to irritate Kiwirob a bit there![]()
Why only Japan got that CNS? Because they are technology freaks or?









Great post, overall. I do not agree with all your statements about how the E65 HMI solution came up since its origin was not in Japanese examples at all. But the idea of only German brands bringing up big automotive innovations is kinda flawed. For that matter: Jaguar is actually working on some very innovative topics and has one major advantage compared to the German brands .... they don't get lost in internal politics and fights at Jag and do not over-test every new tech. I am pretty optimistic that we will see some serious tech from them soon.


And I thought my posts were long
Hey, are you a car designer? Like, specifically?
The 3 Series certainly is a generational bridge, that's a perfect way to put it. By the way, those x308 Jaguar XJs are dead gorgeous, I can't imagine someone talking them down. And Jaguar has those yellow B&W speakers, which I love.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge, it was a literally an article more than just a post though haha
EDIT: Agree. My Volvo is Swedish, tasteful, and European, yet it also has shiny plastic wood. But I like it.
People, don't mess with Japanese cars. Not on my watch.

Ahh, our old friend Hussein! Such a nice guy.
I know he is still a visitor to this forum but he has not posted since 2013.
I wish he'd post some comments.......but maybe it's best for him (for professional reasons) to keep a low profile.
To tell you the truth, I am getting WAY too off topic and will have to end it here with JDM/E65 vs W221 COMAND commentary above, as I'm being extremely disrespectful to the main subject discussion of this thread (G11 vs W222). Sorry!
My mother actually likes your great passion for BMW (seen some of your comments), as she looks at things similarly. It's BMW and nothing else for her, which is why the W222 will never be a contender for her. There are some comments she recently made about MB buyers, that I will not repeat on here, because of how derogatory they were and not reflective of my viewpoints.
I am unfortunately terrible at summarizing, so I go a bit overboard and turn a paragraph into a page. Gets on some folks' nerves unfortunately lol.
The unusual thing about Japanese automakers in the 1980s and 1990s, was how ahead of their time they were on the tech front (even to a degree in the 2000s).
I am not an automotive designer (I'm reconsidered that though), as I studied mechanical engineering. I do love design with a passion and have studied the creation of automobiles since birth (and could read text). I am part of making sure what is feasible (and "safe") for production, cubing, and very instrumental in the other processes up to the "design freeze" for some Jaguar products. All I will give away, as "Carmaker1" is not much of an alias.
The X308 XJ was the first Jaguar my father owned and still has it till this day as a "collectible". A classy, yet athletic design ethos. The same reason why I am disappointed, my mother did not keep her E38 740iL and sold it in 2006. It's still my favourite XJ, considering I've learned how the limitations of Ford and the carryover XJ40 chassis didn't allow for feasible implementation, of a lot of revolutionary ideas (non-design) on the X300 (1994-97) and X308 (1997-02).
The X350 overcompensated for that too much and was too bulbous (only looked good in performance variants). I will not speak negatively on an incumbent Jaguar offering (i.e. current X351 XJ), but will instead look forward to the future.
Looking at German magazines of spy shots for the E38 in 1992, they used the E36 as a base, but rounded it off and lengthened it. Irony with those two BMWs, is that Boyke Boyer designed both of them (1987 E36 and E38 1990-91). The timing of the 3-Series and X5 has always made for them being generational bridges. Only those in charge at BMW, can explain why they favour this interesting template.
To tell you the truth, I am getting WAY too off topic and will have to end it here with JDM/E65 vs W221 COMAND commentary above, as I'm being extremely disrespectful to the main subject discussion of this thread (G11 vs W222). Sorry!
My mother actually likes your great passion for BMW (seen some of your comments), as she looks at things similarly. It's BMW and nothing else for her, which is why the W222 will never be a contender for her. There are some comments she recently made about MB buyers, that I will not repeat on here, because of how derogatory they were and not reflective of my viewpoints.
I think she is my spiritual motherI already love her, that's for sure.
At this point the results are telling: nearly two-thirds of German car fans would choose the W222 over the G11/12.
I wonder how this correlates to real world, private buyer choices?
Well known fact to the GCF community that VAG, Daimler and BMW use the same supplier base, mostly German OEM's and collaboration in supply chain management is not ruled out.
Look carefully: Same Steering wheel supplier?![]()
Yeah but BMW uses dodgey Japanese airbags that blow up.
Sorry couldn't help it. :-D

Also, am I the only one who thinks the interior of the BMW in tan looks a bit, uhm Swedish?
I'm liking it more now![]()
@Wolfgang, around the time the W222 was introduced there were reports that when Lesnik arrived at Mercedes he basically begged/convinced Wagoner to let him have a go at the S-class. Does this mean he probably took Yoon's proposal and worked on interpreting that rather than starting from a clean sheet?
Also if Yoon and Lesnik did the S, who did the C?
Has anyone noticed that Asian designers are becoming more and more prominent within German Car design departments? It's great to see and proof that they are amazing designers in their own rights. Furthermore it suggests it is most likely the corporate culture at companies like Honda, Toyota, Lexus etc. that stifle their creativity.
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