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Mercedes E350 BlueDIRECT

The E-Class gets a new V6 petrol engine that promises class-leading efficiency, and a smooth-shifting revised automatic gearbox too

Mercedes E350 BlueDIRECT front

By Jo Oliviera

May 2011

Can this luxury saloon prove that petrol still has a long way to go? With diesels providing a mix of high performance and low running costs, the petrol saloon has fallen out of favour in recent years.

But Mercedes promises to change all that with its new E350 BlueDIRECT, as its 3.5-litre V6 engined claims a 20 per cent reduction in fuel consumption over the current model. By using direct injection and stop-start technology, the company has boosted combined economy by 8.3mpg to 41.5mpg.

Video: watch CarBuyer's video review of the Mercedes E-Class

 

That makes the E350 the efficiency class leader in this field by some margin, with the BMW 535i claiming 32mpg and the Audi A6 3.0 TFSI 34.4mpg. The newcomer is also the cleanest of the three, emitting 159g/km of CO2; the Audi and BMW models trail by 31g/km and 40g/km respectively. In fact, this output is nearly identical to that of the 3.0-litre diesel A6.

Most importantly, as it falls below the 160g/km threshold, the E350 is eligible for company write-down allowance – an important saving for business users. But Mercedes’ focus isn’t only on improving the model’s green credentials.

Various tweaks under the bonnet, including new air intakes, have boosted power from 288bhp to 302bhp. Torque is also slightly improved, by 5Nm to 370Nm, and it’s now delivered at 3,500rpm instead of 3,000rpm. Yet the 0-62mph time remains at 6.3 seconds, while the maximum speed is electronically limited to 155mph.

The E-Class was already a convincing package, with sharp handling and fantastic comfort and refinement. The only blot on its copybook was the occasionally unresponsive 7G-Tronic gearbox. But for the update, Merc has solved this.

An improved system, called 7G-Tronic Plus, delivers quicker and smoother shifts, thanks to a new torque converter with reduced slip and lower-friction components. This set-up will be standard on the E250, E350 and E500 models.

The new 3.5-litre petrol V6 is sure to be the pick of the range, though. Not only is it refined, smooth and punchy, it’s cleaner than the V6 diesel E-Class.

Rival: BMW 535i
sharp-looking 5-Series was crowned best executive car at our New Car Awards last year, and holds the edge for driving thrills. But it’s not as refined or comfortable as the E-Class. Fuel economy and emissions are now both well down on the Merc, too.

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2 Comments

Blue Efficiency

I would love to know how they derive these combined mpg figures because they are obviously flawed. I have an 18 month old E 350 CDi and the combined mpg for the full 18 months (17k miles) is only 28 mpg which is rubbish. So much for blue efficiency. I have to say though that it is 28 mpg of luxury driving.

By tony_hadley on 12 May, 2011, 9:42am

Claimed MPG

Mercedes (along with other major manufacturers including Audi, BMW, Jag etc) are to be applauded for continuously driving fuel efficiency and Co2, and on paper at least some of the latest statistics make very impressive reading.

The problem is - like the comment above - is that real world driving nearly always fails to deliver anywhere near the claimed figures. I have run a number of cars - BMW 3 series diesel, Volvo's, Audi's, Prius, VW's etc and although I'm not a heavy footed driver, only once over a long distance tour of Scotland in an older 110bhp TDI VW Passat did I ever get close to the claimed figures.

Until the ridiculous way in which official fuel consumption figures are calculated is changed and approved by the EEC, we'll just have to continue taking such claims with a handful of salt.

By thorntonjames on 12 May, 2011, 11:06am

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Pictures

Mercedes E350 BlueDIRECT rear
Mercedes E350 interior
Mercedes E350 engine

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FIRST OPINION

    We already loved the E-Class, but with the addition of the new V6 petrol engine, it’s better than ever. It proves diesel doesn’t always have to be the default choice for luxury cars. Company buyers can now enjoy many of the cost-saving benefits of an oil-burning engine with the smoothness and refinement of a petrol unit. The additional shove the under-bonnet tweaks deliver is barely noticeable from behind the wheel, but the updated gearbox makes a huge difference to refinement and response. While the old set-up could occasionally be frustrating and slow, the new system suits the E-Class’s character perfectly. It all adds up to an impressive luxury car.

 

AT A GLANCE

    Price: £40,000 (est)
    Engine: 3.5-litre V6 petrol
    Transmission: Seven-speed automatic, rear-wheel drive
    Power: 302bhp
    Torque: 370Nm
    Top speed: 155mph
    0-62mph: 6.3 seconds
    Economy: 41.5mpg
    CO2: 159g/km
    Equipment: Climate control, leather-trimmed seats, alloy wheels, Bluetooth mobile phone connectivity, electric windows, sat-nav, cruise control
    On sale: Now
     
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