Jeremy Clarkson reviews the Mercedes-Benz E500 Sport and oh dear...


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... He didn't like it at all!

Oh and just for the record, Jeremy Clarkson hates conspiracy theories.

Mercedes E 500 Sport
By Jeremy Clarkson.



There’s a curious and extremely ugly styling detail on the rear wings of the new Mercedes E-class. It’s a crease that sets off from the back end with much purpose and drive, but when it reaches the door, it sort of gives up and, like the Okavango river, meanders about before giving up on the idea of existing in the first place.

One thing is for sure. It serves no purpose. It will make the car no faster, no more stable at speed and no more economical. And it’s not a traditional Mercedes thing either — it’s not like the BMW Hofmeister kink in the rear window, which is present on all models.

Mercedes says, apparently, it added the crease as a nod to some model in the company’s dim and murky past. Probably the one Hitler drove. But this makes no sense really. When I buy a new iPod, I don’t want it to look even remotely like my grandfather’s gramophone player. So why should I want my new car to have a feature from the days of running boards?

And, anyway, no one is going to say: “Ah so. I see you’ve hinted at the 1942 Doogleburger model with that crease on the flank.” They’re just going to do what I did: spend hours wondering if Mercedes has the first idea about form and function.

I dislike conspiracy theories. The smug, self-satisfied, arms-crossed demeanour of those who would have us believe that Neil Armstrong didn’t walk on the moon or indeed anywhere more exciting than a sound stage in Nevada invariably fills me with an uncontrollable need to set them on fire.

We see the same sort of thing with Top Gear fan sites on the internet.

Every single thing we do is analysed and then dismissed as fake. All the races are staged. Every word is scripted. Every opinion bought and paid for. Recently a deer ran out while I was belting down the runway in a Mercedes. The shot was included in the film and, immediately, the boys were at their keyboards. “Aha,” they said, “the car wasn’t moving. Television jiggery-pokery has been used.”

Honestly, chaps. If we were going to spend a fortune CGI-ing something onto the screen, we’d blow Richard Hammond’s head off. Or detonate Belgium. Certainly, it’d be something a bit more exciting than a horned rat running about on an airfield.

Nevertheless, despite all this, I don’t believe the crease in the E-class was there from the get-go. I may be wrong, of course. But in my mind the stylists did the car and then thought: “Oh dear. That’s a bit boring. Let’s put a styling detail on the rear wings to distract people from the tedium.” Think of it, then, as one of Jon Snow’s ties.

There are more problems with this car. I tested the E 500, which has a 5.5‑litre V8 engine. That means 382 horsepowers and 391 torques. It means 0-62mph in 5.2sec and, you’d think, plenty of excitement. However, there is none. I have experienced more interesting drizzle.

No matter how brutal you may be with the seven-speed gearbox, it is extremely reluctant to put down its paper, extinguish its pipe, change out of its slippers and actually go. Kickdown provokes a reluctant surge of sorts and if you go right to the bottom of the throttle pedal’s travel, right through the carpet and into the firewall itself, the surge becomes a bit more meaty. But if this car could talk, and you did that, it would say: “Oh, for God’s sake.”

Seriously, asking this car to behave like a 5.5-litre V8 super-saloon is like asking a man to empty a dishwasher. It’s technically possible but only if you are prepared to put up with a lot of harrumphing. I wouldn’t mind, but the engine — the only one in the line-up not changed from the previous model — is either silent or making a strained noise you don’t want to hear.

There are other things too. The steering is inert. The brakes feel as uninterested as the engine, and the ride, on air suspension, is disappointing at low speeds. On the move, it’s fine, or even good, but around town, which is where this car will spend most of its time, picking up Cilla Black from functions, it’s as jittery as the Jag XF I recently tested (of which, more next week).

There is, then, absolutely no point in buying the 500 version of this car. You may as well have the diesel, which is less powerful but much more economical and, in the real world, every bit as fast. But if you are going to buy a mid-range diesel saloon, then the E-class simply doesn’t hold a candle to the Jag.

Normally, with a Mercedes, you feel that everything is there for a reason. With the E-class you have that crease on the rear wing — which isn’t — and a lot of things on the options list that border, I suspect, on being a bit gimmicky.

Certainly, if you specified everything, you’d have a car that would buzz and beep and bong more than Apollo 13 after the oxygen tank exploded.

This is a car that can read speed limits and alert you if you break them, that uses radar to decide how much braking force you should use, that spots pedestrians in the dark, that knows about traffic jams ahead and cars that are overtaking in your blind spot and walls that you are about to reverse into. This is a car that shouts at you if you take your seatbelt off or open the door or leave your key in the ignition. And if you shout back, it will respond without fuss or murmur. Individually, some of these things are interesting. Some might even be worth specifying. But combined, they’d drive you mad.

The upshot is that the new E‑class is not as good as the Jaguar XF or the BMW 5-series. It doesn’t look good, it’s boring and, worse than that, it probably signals that the end of the road for the four-door saloon car is not very far away.

Mercedes has always been the company to which we turn for the next bright idea. It was first with internal combustion and first with antilock brakes and first, frankly, with everything in between. But all I see on the E-class is a rounding-off of the edges. A bit of fiddling with an idea that’s out of steam.

In the olden days, the four-door saloon was the only real choice for the consumer. It sat in our lives like fish and chips and the Post Office and British Rail tea. What do you mean, you want a skinny latte? Or an Earl Grey? Or a curry? Or O2? Or a Mac? Choice hadn’t been invented. So you had a Cortina.

Now, though, the family man or woman can have an MPV or a mini MPV or an SUV or a drop-top or an estate or a four-seater coupé. And every single one of these alternatives is better than the traditional three-box idea.

It’s very difficult, as Porsche has just proved with the Panamera, to make a four-door car sexy. And it’s very difficult to think of any new way of making the drive feel different or better than it was in the previous model. Yes, you might find an extra 2mm of legroom here and a slight cut in carbon dioxides there. But, really, the genre is advancing like world records in athletics. A tiny bit at a time towards a moment when going any faster or making things any better will be simply impossible.

Mercedes has always shown us the way forward. But with the new E-class it has shown us that we’re at the end of the line. Some day, then, all saloon cars will be this dull.

The Clarksometer


Mercedes E 500 Sport

Engine5461cc, V8

Power 382bhp @ 6000rpm

Torque 391 lb ft @ 2800rpm

Transmission Seven-speed auto

Fuel 26.2mpg (combined)

C02 261g/km

Acceleration 0-62mph: 5.2sec

Top speed 155mph (limited)

Price £47,010

Road tax band M (£405 a year)

Clarkson's verdict

Source: Driving News and Car News from The Times and Sunday Times - Times Online
 
I wonder what he thought about the S-Class ... cos it has most of the features he's now criticizing. He went in already hating the looks of the car and it just got worse from there.
 
... He didn't like it at all!

And I don't like his review at all. The car has been reviewed from a wrong angle. Mercedes have never ever proclaimed or marketed the E-Class to be the most revolutionary product since sliced bread. This is a car that has always have a conservative foundation catering to looking to buy a dependable and conservative luxury sedan. It does not need to generate controversy like the Panamera -- there is the CLS for specifically that purpose. For that reason my verdict on Clarkson's review is 1 star. I wonder how much he gets paid per word for trolling like this.
 
I'm sorry, but I couldn't agree with Clarkson less.

-The performance figures are pretty good considering it's not the hot model, the engine is not that old and there's nothing wrong with the concept four door saloon car; I'm glad the four door saloon still lives on.
 
Lol dude just wanted to show that he doesent always love MB..
To kill one of the conspiracys...
Poor E class fell victim to that:D
 
We also have to bare in mind that Clarkson is an entertainer. Informing the audience is second to him after entertaining. This is exactly what The Times paid him for, to write a opinion splitting review sprinkled with nonsense and a healthy dose of artificial comedy. The studio audience surrounding him during the show is a mixture of men and women. I'd do cartwheels naked around Buckingham Palace if any of the women at the show enjoys reading Evo or any other periodical tailored to the taste and interest of real car enthusiasts.

Top Gear is 80% entertainment, 20% intellectual information. It's a terrific franchise but not a dependable reference for insight. In-line with the vast majority of TV-shows, the majority of content is scripted but blended together with some a bit of improvisation.
 
I still am very confused why do people take this idiot and what he says as to mean anything creditable at all.

He can't drive shit and he has no real personal life record for being involved in any serious creditable and respectable races.
 
Well, this is Jeremy. He has been talking nonsense ever since I first saw him on tv...
 
I don't agree with his take on the driving, but I agree every bit on his take on the styling, blandness-mixed-with-odd-lines and copy-catting, and break-from-norm in M-B's styling direction and past styling innovation. All in all I found it funny, but maybe that's just because I don't like the W212 much at all.
 
C'mon guys, it's fun to read his reviews. I agree on some things though. While he is worried about cars being dull, I'm more worried about cars being more and more expensive to repair. It sucks as it is that many of the new cars, especially german, can't be fixed at your house because of all the electronics and etc. Cars might still be fun to drive, but they are becoming a pain to work on for those of us who like to turn our own wrenches.
 
The difference here is this:

Clarkson has made millions from:

a) being a brilliant motoring journalist to start with
b) having an inate understanding of all things automobile related
c) being able to use this understanding to become the most entertaining motoring writer in the world.

It's funny how people on internet boards criticise him and figure him for a clown when deep down this brilliant, entrepreneurial and out-spoken journalist by trade has driven more cars, over more miles, in more countries than probably any other person on the planet. C'mon people. Open your minds, what Clarkson says might not be gospel but his opinion is worth a hell of a lot. Ollie Marriage from EVO had a similarly dull impression made on him by the E500 by the way.

If I knew 10% of 10% of what Clarkson knows about cars, I'd be a happy happy man.
 
I consider Clarkson more of an entertainer then a true professional car guy.

I remember Sabine Schmitz's Nurburgring van trial "to prove" Clarkson she could drive faster.
 
The difference here is this:

Clarkson has made millions from:

a) being a brilliant motoring journalist to start with
b) having an inate understanding of all things automobile related
c) being able to use this understanding to become the most entertaining motoring writer in the world.

It's funny how people on internet boards criticise him and figure him for a clown when deep down this brilliant, entrepreneurial and out-spoken journalist by trade has driven more cars, over more miles, in more countries than probably any other person on the planet. C'mon people. Open your minds, what Clarkson says might not be gospel but his opinion is worth a hell of a lot. Ollie Marriage from EVO had a similarly dull impression made on him by the E500 by the way.

If I knew 10% of 10% of what Clarkson knows about cars, I'd be a happy happy man.

Word.
 
The difference here is this:

Clarkson has made millions from:

a) being a brilliant motoring journalist to start with
b) having an inate understanding of all things automobile related
c) being able to use this understanding to become the most entertaining motoring writer in the world.

It's funny how people on internet boards criticise him and figure him for a clown when deep down this brilliant, entrepreneurial and out-spoken journalist by trade has driven more cars, over more miles, in more countries than probably any other person on the planet. C'mon people. Open your minds, what Clarkson says might not be gospel but his opinion is worth a hell of a lot. Ollie Marriage from EVO had a similarly dull impression made on him by the E500 by the way.

If I knew 10% of 10% of what Clarkson knows about cars, I'd be a happy happy man.

Yeah, no sh!t man. When it comes to car guys, Clarkson is one of the top most guys on the list. His understanding of cars is massive.

The other thing people are missing is that he gets paid for his opinion because that is what sells. Anyone can write an objective, and drab, review about a car, but it's the the style of his writing that puts Clarkson on top.
 
Did you guys really need to hear Clarkson's review to understand that the new E-class is shitty car :D
 
Who honestly cares what Clarkson says? He wants to stir up the automotive world with his contraversial reviews. If 9/10 reviews love the new E-Class, he'll hate it just to stand out and create a fuzz. It's showbiz, people. Who cares? :D :t-cheers:

I bet he's already signed up for his E63 AMG...
 

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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