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Thursday 27 October 2011

MERCEDES SL500


The SL 500s design has a sense of rhythm and cohesiveness that makes the SL ever so special. The interlocking ovoid lamps, the slatted grille, or gills, used on all sporting Mercs and the tight-fitting flared front wheel arches deliver class that is seldom attained. The SL is the first road-car application of the company’s Sensotronic Brake  Control (SBC) system  -a system which sends electronic instructions to the individual brake calipers on the basis of pressure applied on the pedal and the ability of the wheel to cope with the braking force. The system can brake wheels individually, balance braking forces in corners and provides faster, harder braking due to the use of a pump that is constantly maintained at a higher pressure.

 

The SL’s also features an Active Body Control (ABC) suspension system, which mixes conventional springs and dampers with a hydraulically-controlled servo cylinder that controls the car’s dynamics for the best possible ride and handling compromise. 
The hydraulically-controlled servo cylinders located in each of the wheel struts, acting on data acquired from a host of sensors, exert pressure to counteract even the slightest movement from the body. 

Ride height is also adjustable and with a mere press of a button you can feel it rise by about 30mm. 
SL stands for Sport Light, and Mercedes has made liberal use of aluminium and special steels but the SL still doesn’t live up to its name and tips the scales at a scarcely believable 1.8 tons! Packed with reinforcements to make it rigid and safe, the SL is actually heavier than a Tata Sumo! What’s amazing is that the SL uses all its technology to make it feel lighter than a Honda City. 


Interior
Full of swoops, dips, rises and hooded binnacles, the SL’s interiors are attractive and make the car very look adventurous. The central console with its array of switches look like they were freshly lifted off the Starship Enterprise -the headrests look a generation ahead and the brilliantly detailed tacho and speedo have dials that look great. The ‘recycled’ cheap-looking black plastic buttons and four-spoker steering wheel remain a Merc constant. Strictly a two-seater, the SL however offers space and levels of comfort and convenience not found on other D-segment saloons. 


Driver ingress is aided by a steering that gets out of the way and seating only two, the SL has acres of legroom on offer. Everything is adjustable by a phalanx of electric motors. Seat height, lumbar and thigh support, and even the inside rearview mirror is electrically adjustable. You can even have cold or hot air blown out of the leather seats. With the roof, rear windscreen and pillars stowed in the boot, the SL does lose out on boot space which shrinks to a mere 235 litres and restricts the amount of luggage you can carry — a couple of small soft bags at best. Also, no spare — just a collapsible space saver and an electric air pump. But we found these quite easy to use.


Performance
 With a massive kerb weight of 1840kg, you would expect the SL to have a serious weight penalty. Drive it for even a few metres and it’s hard to believe how light the SL actually is. It’s all got to do with that sumptuous five-litre V8 stuffed under the hood. A low-stressed, three-valves per cylinder wih a modest 6000rpm redline. 


Pushing out a substantial 306bhp and an even more impressive 46.9kgm of torque, the SL’s true skills lie in its dual character. Delve into just a wee bit of the travel of the perfectly sprung accelerator pedal and the beast remains asleep, deep in slumber. 
The power lies in reserve for when you want to drive. And like the Smith & Wesson ad emotes, all you need to know what to do — is squeeze. The soft burble from the V8 now attains a harder edge and the muted growl from under the long hood tells you to hang on. Floor the right pedal down hard, beyond the first ‘stop’, and the SL immediately kicks down a couple of gears to unleash nothing short pure velvet-lined savagery –the speedo needle sweeping effortlessly into the last quarter of the dial. The throttle response is sharp and instantaneous and anything above 2500rpm produces a shove that presses your cheeks back. 
The numbers spat out by our timing gear showed that the SL reached 100kph in 7.54sec and 200kph in 26.82sec. Easily, the fastest car we’ve tested on Indian soil. Max speed is ‘limited’ to 255kph by Mercedes and though we didn’t find the space to hit the speed limiter, the unrelenting pace of the SL left us in no doubt that it would be good for another 20kph if the engine was unrestricted. 
Big V8 plus big kerb weight plus big attitude mean fuel efficiency is bound to go south. Even our regular highway cycle failed to haul the average up above 7.3kpl. The city cycle was a thirsty 4.3kpl and the worst recorded figure was 3.3kpl at the test track, enough to keep pump owners smiling for years.


Handling
With a massive kerb weight of 1840kg, you would expect the SL to have a serious weight penalty. Drive it for even a few metres and it’s hard to believe how light the SL actually is. It’s all got to do with that sumptuous five-litre V8 stuffed under the hood. A low-stressed, three-valves per cylinder wih a modest 6000rpm redline. 


Pushing out a substantial 306bhp and an even more impressive 46.9kgm of torque, the SL’s true skills lie in its dual character. Delve into just a wee bit of the travel of the perfectly sprung accelerator pedal and the beast remains asleep, deep in slumber. 
The power lies in reserve for when you want to drive. And like the Smith & Wesson ad emotes, all you need to know what to do — is squeeze. The soft burble from the V8 now attains a harder edge and the muted growl from under the long hood tells you to hang on. Floor the right pedal down hard, beyond the first ‘stop’, and the SL immediately kicks down a couple of gears to unleash nothing short pure velvet-lined savagery –the speedo needle sweeping effortlessly into the last quarter of the dial. The throttle response is sharp and instantaneous and anything above 2500rpm produces a shove that presses your cheeks back. 
The numbers spat out by our timing gear showed that the SL reached 100kph in 7.54sec and 200kph in 26.82sec. Easily, the fastest car we’ve tested on Indian soil. Max speed is ‘limited’ to 255kph by Mercedes and though we didn’t find the space to hit the speed limiter, the unrelenting pace of the SL left us in no doubt that it would be good for another 20kph if the engine was unrestricted. 
Big V8 plus big kerb weight plus big attitude mean fuel efficiency is bound to go south. Even our regular highway cycle failed to haul the average up above 7.3kpl. The city cycle was a thirsty 4.3kpl and the worst recorded figure was 3.3kpl at the test track, enough to keep pump owners smiling for years.


Verdict
The SL500 is a very useable, well-rounded sports car. Boulevard cruiser, open-top sportster, mile-muncher, headturner, super coupe — each label fits. A car that disguises its weight superbly, the SL500 revels in being driven hard or pottered around in. Okay, it’s got only two seats but who wants to cart around the in-laws anyway?


The SL is a rare treat: a German car whose technology doesn't intimidate but adds to its personality. SL owners are likely to stick to urban environs and cruise from one five-star hotel to another and that's unfortunate. 
Nothing else on four wheels comes close and alternatives are a house by the beach, a small yacht or a 24-carat diamond.

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