Green Drives: Mercedes F700 concept CAR


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Advanced engineering wrapped in ‘aquatic’ styling made the Mercedes F700 concept car one of the stars of the Frankfurt motor show in September 2007, and CAR has been itching to put its technologies to the test ever since.

Flip-over, cork-faced seats and a navigation system run by a virtual assistant called Gloria are novel enough, but we’re really here to find out about the revolutionary DiesOtto engine and Pre-Scan suspension.

What’s so clever about the Mercedes F700’s engine, then?

Mercedes calls it DiesOtto because it combines elements of diesel and petrol (Otto cycle) engines. Centrepiece of the DiesOtto concept is a new combustion system called Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition (HCCI), which several manufacturers are now developing. It uses carefully controlled in-cylinder temperature and pressure conditions to ignite the air/fuel mixture without a spark.

The result is very clean, efficient combustion, but the drawback is that HCCI struggles to work over a wide range of engine speed and load. So for cold starts and full-throttle acceleration, DiesOtto switches back to spark-ignition mode.

So is the F700 a green special, or does it fly too?

With twin sequential turbochargers and a capacity of just 1.8 litres, the F700 DiesOtto generates 238hp. An electric motor adds another 20hp and boosts total torque to 295lb ft. As a result, the S-class-sized F700 has S350 performance.

Thanks to the efficiency of the engine, plus an urban start/stop function and regenerative braking, it returns up to 53mpg. Highly impressive for a big limo like this.

And Pre-Scan, what’s that about?

Pulsed laser sensors scan the road surface up to 7m in front of the car, detecting bumps and feeding the information back to the F700’s Active Body Control suspension. As a bump approaches, ABC uses its hydraulics to raise the body slightly, then releases the hydraulic pressure to allow free wheel movement. In effect, it lengthens and softens the springs as a bump approaches, to provide what Mercedes likes to call a ‘flying carpet’ ride.

Does it really ride like a flying carpet?

Mostly, yes. Roll and pitch are all but eliminated, transverse ridges in the road surface are magically erased, and minor ripples are smoothed for a calmer, quieter ride. Speed bumps are more heard than felt: Mercedes says production versions of the system will need ‘environment detection’ so the car will know when it’s in an urban area, and won’t let you race over speed bumps…

And does a 1.8-litre four-pot really work in a luxury saloon?

That was one of the questions Mercedes aimed to answer by building DiesOtto as a four-cylinder engine: small, light fours are bound to be more environmentally friendly that hefty multi-cylinder motors, but can they provide the performance and refinement an S-class customer expects?

Performance isn’t in doubt. At 1700kg, the F700 is no featherweight (though it is light for a full-size saloon) yet the combination of 1.8-litre DiesOtto engine and the electric motor deliver brisk performance.

In some ways the engine is remarkably refined: the trickiest part of getting DiesOtto to work is to manage the transition between HCCI and spark-ignition modes, which Mercedes has done incredibly well. An almost imperceptible difference in engine note is the only indication. But ultimately this is still a four-cylinder engine: it needs to be smoother and quieter for a big, pampering luxury car. Merc’s current S-class has it licked for refinement.


Verdict

You know what? We were mightily impressed by this tech fest of a concept car. Mercedes’ Pre-Scan suspension system works amazingly well, while the DiesOtto engine delivers good performance, exceptional economy and clean emissions.

If the F700 is a fascinating glimpse of the next generation of executive car, then it appears your next S-class will be able to square green credentials with the need to pamper, cosset and let the business world know you’ve finally arrived.


CAR's rating:
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Mercedes F700 concept CAR review | Green Cars | Low Emission & Clean Cars | Car Magazine Online


M
 
They forgot to mention 1 thing, the engine has a variable compression ratio, which explains why MB covered everything below the cylinder head. Right now nobody knows how they did it, Saab had a go by tilting the entire cylinder head by 4 degrees or more to control the compression ratio, but it seems like MB engineers have found an alternative way to do this.
 
Indeed, nice review.

Only the design is a bit repulsive so if the next generation S-Class will look anything like this I will personally go into the Daimler-Benz headquarters and shoot someone. :D
 
They forgot to mention 1 thing, the engine has a variable compression ratio, which explains why MB covered everything below the cylinder head. Right now nobody knows how they did it, Saab had a go by tilting the entire cylinder head by 4 degrees or more to control the compression ratio, but it seems like MB engineers have found an alternative way to do this.

When you say covered, you mean they hid it?

I HOPE pre-scan debuts on the FL S-class. It would be a huge step forward.
 
I HOPE pre-scan debuts on the FL S-class. It would be a huge step forward.

I think it will. Distronic debuted in the facelifted W220 and so far the W221 has yet to feature any major technology. Pre-Scan coupled with LED daytime running lights and other exterior touches will leave the F01 and new A8 crying on the pavement.
 
Yeah they hide it pretty dam well with this massive plate and 8 massive bolts. The shape of the top of the piston is well hidden as well, wish I can take a closer look.

lol that's cool. Don't want those inglostadts and peeps from munich peeping. :D
 
I agree. It would surprise me to see it on the FL, it would mean a big big rework of the car, even if it's based on ABC it seems.

However, maybe it's under testing since a long time: we can't really see it, it's a technical thing, it could be hidden under a conventional car.

Some pics of the FL 221 have very weird headlamps, and one pic shows a rather strange body-movement...

It does not say it'll be out for the FL though, but at least real-world testings of this suspension clearly are well advanced. I'd be very glad to see it on the FL, but only if it's reliable.

I prefer a less advanced, but more reliable car, I'm very happy Mercedes seems to thingk the same.
 
If the F700 has a reliable pre-scan which already got praise for it's excellence then i see no reason for not making to the FL.I think the weird spy shots may indicate the pre-scan for the FL,if MB is serious about trouncing the new 7 and A8 they should introduce it reliably with the FL.
 
LLN Article

Futuristic laser beams scanning the road to give a car an immensely supple yet perfectly responsive ride sounds like science fiction. It isn’t. After riding in one of Mercedes-Benz’s Pre-Scan prototypes in Spain recently, I can confirm that the Pre-Scan system works and, if it doesn’t achieve Benz’s goal of halving the impact of bumps in the cabin, it would go very, very close.


Dubbed the “Magic Carpet Ride” by Benz engineers, the system will find its way into luxury Benzes inside two years, according to senior company officials.

The constantly scans the road one to seven metres in front of the car via infra-red laser beams, then tells the suspension to relax or brace itself for whatever it sees coming.

Officially, the sensors are LIDAR, for Light Detecting and Ranging and has been carried across from military hardware.

The real beauty of the system is that it can plug straight into Benz’s existing Active Body Control suspensions, currently standard on the S- and CL class luxury models.

The computer controlling the suspension will read the Pre-Scan data and compare it with the information coming from the steering, accelerator, brake and g-sensors to come up with a beautifully compliant ride.

Corner harder in a Pre-Scan car and it shows up as a suspension system with hardly any body roll and with hardly any bumps in the cabin, either.

Over stiff, sharp bumps, such as speed bumps, the system destroys at least half of the shock before it ever reaches the cabin. It dissipates noise just as effectively, too.

The system weighs only 1.5kg per unit – so 3kg across the car – but it will necessitate a new style of headlight. And, on Benz’s F700, that meant maximum ugly.

Its only real limitation is top speed. The system switches off over 100 mph, because it cannot scan far enough ahead of the car for the suspension to cushion the blows in time.

But, for the U.S. market, that’s hardly going to present a problem.




Mercedes-Benz Pre-Scan: a ride on the magic carpet



Uh oh...looks like it might make the S/CL facelift next year or the year after. I just hope they aren't rushing it just for sake of being first at the cost of reliability. Better still I can see this debuting on the next SL.


M
 
Re: LLN Article

This Pre-scan system is mind boggling complicated engineering stuff, full respect to MB's engineering team for making this work effectively :bowdown:
 
Re: LLN Article

This Pre-scan system is mind boggling complicated engineering stuff, full respect to MB's engineering team for making this work effectively :bowdown:

I think the bigger challenge is getting the system to work flawlessly for an allotted amount of time. This will no doubt be an expensive option if it does come out for the W221
 
I wonder when will we see the new F Concept by MB. Probably previewing the next S-Class under the "no-creases" design approach.
 

Mercedes-Benz

Mercedes-Benz Group AG is headquartered in Stuttgart, Germany. Established in 1926, Mercedes-Benz Group produces consumer luxury vehicles and light commercial vehicles badged as Mercedes-Benz, Mercedes-AMG, and Mercedes-Maybach. Its origin lies in Daimler-Motoren-Gesellschaft's 1901 Mercedes and Carl Benz's 1886 Benz Patent-Motorwagen, which is widely regarded as the first internal combustion engine in a self-propelled automobile. The slogan for the brand is "the best or nothing".
Official website: Mercedes-Benz (Global), Mercedes-Benz (USA)

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