
For to drive, it's a very able car. It takes all that's good about the A-Class - high seats and sporty driving position, good ergonomics, nimble handling and much-improved stability - and adds a longer wheelbase to improve the ride. The engines are the same, so avoid the petrols and go for the far-better diesels; B-Class sees the introduction of the 200 Turbo, a unit that's pleasingly torquey but far too gruff, noisy and unrefined. Revving it is not a pleasant experience. The smaller B 150 and B 170 petrols are also not strong enough to row the B-Class along; a B 180 CDI should be your bare minimum. Unfortunately, that takes the list price to £19k that, for a family car, is serious money. How many will simply choose a better-spec'd Golf, or even an Audi A4, instead? The B-Class is a nice idea, and a good-looking vehicle that doesn't disappoint once inside, but expensive enough to take it beyond the reach of the families it's seeking to attract.
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