BBC Top Gear Magazine

Coming home

Two 600bhp, AWD supersaloo­ns. Over 1,500 miles from our ice lake home to the UK. Better get cracking

- WORDS: STEPHEN DOBIE / PHOTOGRAPH­Y: MARK RICCIONI & ROWAN HORNCASTLE

Two cars didn’t make it onto the transporte­r – the M5 and E63S. So we had to drive them back

“I could spend months on an ice lake and not stop grinning”

This is going to be hard. Perhaps impossible. The power wars between M Division and AMG have been raging for a long time, and with the pair’s latest 600bhp four-doors, they appear to have reached some kind of deadlock.

The new BMW M5 and Mercedes-AMG E63S both have clever all-wheel-drive systems that make them usable in winter, but with a naughty rear-drive Drift mode to appease the purists. Each has a twin-turbo V8 engine with around 600bhp, each one mated to a long-legged but snappily reacting automatic gearbox. Both have a suite of driver modes and traction-control settings to make them malleable to all talent levels and handling tastes. I’m profession­al, though, and I promise I’ll reach a verdict. Hopefully without resorting to a coin toss. I know, #frstworldp­roblems.

It’s in situations like this where immaturely skidding around on a frozen lake has some real use. Honest. With cars whose limits are so stupendous­ly high – the AMG’s performanc­e displays prove you’re using laughably little of its 604bhp on ordinary roads – slippery conditions bring the extremitie­s of their behaviour down to low speeds, and with loads of lovely run-of. Handy when you’ve got fve metres of car not inclined to go in a straight line.

That car is the E63S. Yeah, there’s much fancy AWD tech beneath you, but it’s still happiest when you’ve got a load of opposite lock on. I begin with its electronic nannies in their halfway mode, but after just two corners of the TG ice track, I switch everything of and act like a bit of a loon. Yes, it can be driven in a smooth, neutral manner, utilising the rear bias of its transmissi­on to combat understeer... blah blah. But even in 4WD, it implores you to drop mature pretension­s and indulge its inner scoundrel.

The BMW M5 is keener to knuckle down and be serious. Its 592bhp lags slightly behind the E63S, but it feels more agile, and to a greater degree than its slim 25kg weight advantage suggests. It favours assertiven­ess over aggression; its steering is quicker, its pedals more responsive and its front tyres more willing to bite.

That also means it snaps quicker than the Merc, which seems to slide in slow motion. The M5’s engine has sound fed into the cabin, and it’s sharper and higher pitched. The thunderous AMG seems to gargle its own mechanical components in comparison.

Both are staggering­ly capable and – importantl­y – welcoming cars with AWD. It adds to their repertoire and opens up the chance to enjoy them more often, rather than being a killjoy that stifes their fun. The more gifted can switch them to RWD with simple button presses, but their power distributi­on is so rear-biased as standard that it’s an added bonus rather than a necessity.

Mind you, I ensure they’re both in AWD next morning. We’re driving them back to Britain. I could spend all month on a frozen lake and not stop grinning, but these cars aren’t only for acting an oaf in. They’re for vaporising distances and turning German motorways into the Euro equivalent of Elon Musk’s hyperloop.

There are rather a lot of countries before we get to the pair’s home soil, though, including almost a full day on Sweden’s roads, which aren’t much grippier than its lakes when it’s -20°C. I choose the cars’ middle ESP settings, providing security when what’s left of Bambi’s immediate family clumsily stroll into the road (a startlingl­y common occurrence), yet some freedom to enjoy the numerous corners and junctions in the 500 miles between us and tonight’s destinatio­n, an overnight ferry from Oslo. A few years

ago, driving a combined 1,200bhp of German sports saloon half the length of Sweden would have been a certifable activity. But the proliferat­ion of winter tyres and brilliant new AWD systems make the M5 and E63S as usable as an old Volvo estate out here.

The BMW remains a touch more serious, and the more cosseting car, while the Merc is a touch more abrupt but willing to have fun. The M5 may be the one piping its sound through the speakers, but it’s the E63S that bombards you with engine noise, even at sedate speeds. It’s the one I can’t help immaturely hoofng out of junctions, V8 rumble soundtrack­ing a quarter-turn of opposite lock. While the pair’s performanc­e and abilities are impossible to split, the attitude they encourage from their driver is starting to diverge.

Even the frmer-riding Merc is making mincemeat of our journey, though. While I’m not hoping for disaster, a roadtrip needs some spirit of adventure, and worryingly little is troubling these cars. Until we leave Swedish back roads and arrive on a Norwegian motorway, that is. There’s clearly been a warm snap (well, it’s 2°C), and as we cross the border and home in on Oslo, the mounds of snow at the side of the motorway are rather quickly and dramatical­ly melting. The cars around us are changing lanes with the measured discipline of a Russian dashcam video to avoid the rather sudden, deep puddles.

Winter tyres that proved invincible on lethally frozen roads are less helpful here. I’ve got my hands full in the BMW, and

I can see the vexed face of Ollie Kew in the Merc behind me. When we pull into Butikk services, we can barely aford a snigger at the name as we swap pale-faced tales of almost being driven into. Kew points out that messing around on ice must have sharpened up our responses in such dicey conditions. Further validation for the fun we had yesterday…

As we arrive in Oslo, the cars suddenly feel large, too. Quite rightly – they’re 5m long and 2m wide – but some of the Norwegian capital’s barely fathomable trafc-calming measures are a squeeze. We navigate rush-hour trafc to the ferry without drama, though. As we lock the cars up in its belly for the night, it’s the grumblier, older-school Merc I’m most enamoured by.

We wake the next day as the ferry pulls into Frederiksh­avn. Now, perhaps we’re in the wrong bit, but Denmark is quite a boring country to drive through. Plenty of nice architectu­re to admire, but little that driving enthusiast­s should be cancelling trips to the Alps for. Answers on a postcard, ofended Danes

with a good road to recommend. The pent-up need to drive like the clappers as we pass the German border is palpable.

With winter tyres on our cars, there aren’t going to be hell-bent attempts at their top speeds. But that doesn’t mean what happens next isn’t utterly extraordin­ary. Both cars, from 80mph and without RSI-inducing downchange­s nor a hint of turbo lag, just catapult at the horizon like two tonnes of metal simply shouldn’t. The Mercedes comes with warning stickers telling us not to take its cold-weather rubber past 130mph, so its driver sits back and watches the M5 carry on to an indicated 175mph, not far short of its optional 189mph limiter. With a load of revs still left to go.

With a shedload more torque, I doubt the Merc would have struggled to keep pace, but what the BMW undoubtedl­y does better is more sedate cruising. At, um, 120mph. It sits like that for 20 miles straight, rock solid, comfortabl­e and eerily quiet. If the very best sports saloons ofer an everyday Dr Jekyll with a ferce Mr Hyde beneath the surface, then this M5 feels unbeatable. Until a set of quirkily shaped headlights appear in the rear-view mirror. Conscious I’m holding up something far quicker and more exotic, I pull into the middle lane. To be overtaken by a Renault Scenic…

The Merc is hardly a track-day special, but its more extrovert character dents its refnement. Its 23.5mpg trip average also lags the BMW’s 26.5mpg, despite the Merc regularly deactivati­ng four of its eight cylinders. The power is shifting in the M5’s favour.

The fnal day sees the home stretch from Hamburg to the UK. Once we’re out of Germany, our need for speed sated, it’s a good chance to settle back into normal cruising speeds and to assess the minor details of these cars. Because they really might decide this.

Inside, the BMW feels techier. Its media system is a step up from the Merc’s and its dials, an analogue/digital hybrid, are nicer

“I can’t remember a battle this closely fought in any class”

to look at. It’s better at corralling your favourite drive mode settings into one button press (well, two, given you can set both M1 and M2 buttons for diferent moods). But then the E63S’s interior touches are classier, eschewing the M5’s chintzy red detailing for stuf that really matters to enthusiast­s: tactile metal paddles, Alcantara at nine and three on the steering wheel and a slim-back sports seat.

I’d always been left a bit cold by the spec wars of these brands. It’s easy to feel bored by their constant power and 0–62mph battles, when they could be focusing on cutting weight and size. But when M and AMG’s willy waving leads to two extraordin­arily talented cars like this, it’s hard to argue. In the 10 years I’ve done this job, I can’t remember a battle this closely fought in any class.

Even after 1,500 miles, I’m torn. The M5 is the more rounded, comfy car. It covers all bases with a vast depth of engineerin­g, and might well be the most complete sports saloon ever. To an enthusiast, though, such completene­ss can be a help and a hindrance. The Merc is less couth, bigger-hearted and encourages its driver to be more playful. Particular­ly if they’re on a frozen lake. Oh, and it comes as an estate, too. The AMG edges it.

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Actual proof that not all roads do, in fact, lead to Rome
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M5 cockpit is packed with almost nine kilos of technology
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