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Mercedes-Benz models, news & reviews
4
Handling
3
Performance
Usability
Feelgood factor
5
Readers' rating
3.5
By Ben Pulman
First Drives
25 February 2011 09:00
This big beast is the Mercedes G-wagen, and after a decade-long absence from the UK it’s back sale on in Blighty – and in right-hand drive form. You can’t just walk into any Mercedes-Benz dealer and buy one though; orders have to be placed with the Specialist Product Division at Mercedes-Benz World at Brooklands, the same team that brought us the mad 513bhp DR520-spec C-class.
It’s hand built in Graz, Austria, for a start, with modern mechanicals and mod cons in a body and chassis that dates back to the 1970s. In left-hand drive markets you can have a short-wheelbase G – in two-door hardtop or convertible guise – but only the LWB model is on sale here. Petrol or diesel power is available, but the options are limited: you can have a bonkers AMG version with a supercharged 500bhp 5.4-litre V8 for £117k, the entry-level G300 CDI Professional (for rich builders who want a posh van), or the (slightly) more sensible 350 CDI we tried. There’s nothing smaller available under the bonnet because the G weighs over 2.5 tonnes, more than any S-class or the current GL.
Quite right, but it’s still good fun. The big turbodiesel (with Merc’s Bluetec system that reduces NOx by around 50%) only manages 207bhp from 2987cc. But there’s also 398lb ft so although the on-paper figures don’t impress, the G350 CDI will surprise you and other road users when you bury your foot. It’s as fast as this car needs to be – especially when the brakes can feel overwhelmed – but the downside of so much weight is sub-20mpg. Thankfully the tank is a huge 96-litres, though it will take ages to fill and cost you well over £100 as well.
We didn’t get try it off road but with four-wheel drive, a low-range ‘box, three differential locks and lots of ground clearance we can’t imagine it’ll get stuck too often. On road the steering is slow and heavy, the ride is bouncy, the massive door mirrors create a lot a wind noise, and sometimes the engine sounds strained, but none of that matters.
Because driving the G-wagen is a real event. From the moment you unlock the door with a fat black button, and slam it closed with an unmistakable old-school thunk it feels like nothing else on sale today. You sit high, higher than any other SUV driver, and look out past thin A-pillars, over bonnet-mounted indicators to the world below. It’s commanding, confidence inspiring, and although it looks enormous, it’s actually shorter and narrower than a Merc ML. The slab sides mean it’s easy to place, and only your view back is compromised, because whether you look through the rear-view mirror or reversing camera, all you see is the spare wheel.
The rumpled /Designo/ red leather (a £1585 option) resembles a set of theatre curtains, and although the Comand multimedia system, steering wheel and other associated interior trimmings are a generation old, there’s all the gadgets and gizmos you need – climate control, sat-nav, a 4GB hard-drive, heated seats, bi-xenon lights, and an 11-speaker Harman Kardon stereo are standard. More importantly, it all feels completely together and works as a luxury vehicle. It’s a very special place to be.
There’s lots of room inside, too: the boot is huge, and with the rear seats folded there’s 2250 litres of luggage space – a current E-class can only carry 1950 litres.
This is car you most definitely buy with your heart – if you want a 4x4 over an estate as a family car, there are many, many SUVs that are cheaper, cleaner, faster and better on-road. Heck, even Merc’s CLS63 AMG produces much less CO2: 231g/km to the G350 CDI’s 295g/km.
But the G-wagen charmed every member of the CAR team that drove it. Porsche Cayenne? BMW X6? The lack of a decent bank balance notwithstanding, half of us would have a proper Range Rover instead, and half of us would roll round in the G-wagen.
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Mercedes G350 Bluetec LWB (2011) CAR review
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abovetheparapet says
RE: Mercedes G350 Bluetec LWB (2011) CAR review
I used to own a 300GEL and it was an event to drive. The big flat rectangular screen, high driving position, disconnected ride and finger-light steering made it driving seem as if you were at the movies, watching a film about someone else motoring down the road. It also had a military bearing on the road (not surprising given its ancestry) which meant everyone got out of your way - the sort of big stick every SUV driver secretly (and sometimes not so secretly) craves. All car drivers were scared of it, as were most black cabs. Only buses ever dared to cut me up. It cost £75 to fill fifteen years ago, and drank so fast you could see the petrol gauge move. Thankfully I owned it before the current craze for SUVs made them such naff things to own. Equally as thankfully, it satisfied my desire for the 4 x 4 experience so thoroughly that I have never felt the need to own another.
I used to own a 300GEL and it was an event to drive. The big flat rectangular screen, high driving position, disconnected ride and finger-light steering made it driving seem as if you were at the movies, watching a film about someone else motoring down the road.
It also had a military bearing on the road (not surprising given its ancestry) which meant everyone got out of your way - the sort of big stick every SUV driver secretly (and sometimes not so secretly) craves. All car drivers were scared of it, as were most black cabs. Only buses ever dared to cut me up.
It cost £75 to fill fifteen years ago, and drank so fast you could see the petrol gauge move.
Thankfully I owned it before the current craze for SUVs made them such naff things to own. Equally as thankfully, it satisfied my desire for the 4 x 4 experience so thoroughly that I have never felt the need to own another.
02 March 2011 15:06
carmobster says
@ Chickenfeed; Maybe to you there is no justification in the price just like a 30k limited edition IWC watch is in no relation to a standard Portoguese IWC. The Geländewagen is a very special car, in terms of reliability it is right up there with the Landcruisers. This is why they are still making them, not just for the army but a lot of people from the Middle East enjoy them. The price you pay for exclusivity and perfect fit and finish. Oh and AMG special division can do everything you want with it; you want a V12 AMG engine? No problem. You want armor (One of the few vehicles in the world they can armor to B7 level), you want full leather interior. It's like a house, you might not like it's architecture but it sure is admired by many. Like me! Wouldn't it be great you could buy more 30+ year old cars with modern tech? How about the classic Range Rover with air suspension, modern V8 diesel, navigation and gadget galore? Love it!
@ Chickenfeed; Maybe to you there is no justification in the price just like a 30k limited edition IWC watch is in no relation to a standard Portoguese IWC.
The Geländewagen is a very special car, in terms of reliability it is right up there with the Landcruisers. This is why they are still making them, not just for the army but a lot of people from the Middle East enjoy them.
The price you pay for exclusivity and perfect fit and finish. Oh and AMG special division can do everything you want with it; you want a V12 AMG engine? No problem. You want armor (One of the few vehicles in the world they can armor to B7 level), you want full leather interior.
It's like a house, you might not like it's architecture but it sure is admired by many. Like me! Wouldn't it be great you could buy more 30+ year old cars with modern tech? How about the classic Range Rover with air suspension, modern V8 diesel, navigation and gadget galore?
Love it!
28 February 2011 13:45
Halfabee says
This is so spectacularly awful that I don't know where to start. So I won't. Just say NO.
28 February 2011 13:24
chickenfeed says
@rickerby - I don't really think LR needs to compete with this thing since it's not exactly in a niche with many buyers. A slightly spritzed up Defender isn't a bad idea though. @isuzubob - You're right. It is a very niche product and it is very solidly built with very nice extras but nothing would justify the price.
@rickerby - I don't really think LR needs to compete with this thing since it's not exactly in a niche with many buyers. A slightly spritzed up Defender isn't a bad idea though.
@isuzubob - You're right. It is a very niche product and it is very solidly built with very nice extras but nothing would justify the price.
27 February 2011 20:20
rickerby says
Another niche for Landrover perhaps? A leather trimmed defender with JLRs 3.0 V6 Diesel and a proper dashboard would be a direct competitor for this thing.
27 February 2011 11:45
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