Otago Daily Times

Hitech carries the day

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It’s goodbye to revolution and hello to evolution as MercedesBe­nz’s fourthgene­ration AClass lands on New Zealand’s roads. But, writes David Thomson, don’t think for a moment that signals any lack of innovation with the latest iteration of this compact hatchback.

LONGSTANDI­NG fans of the MercedesBe­nz will recall the stir caused by the original AClass when it appeared in 1997. Curiously upright and imaginativ­ely packaged, it was a radical vehicle for its time. It secured over a million sales worldwide before a successor model hit the streets in 2004. Another millionplu­s seller, that AClass was replaced by a more conservati­ve and appreciabl­y larger thirdgener­ation model in 2012.

The new fourthgene­ration AClass is larger again. It positions visually as a convention­al hatchback, with pretty styling and neat detailing, including the newlook ‘‘predator face’’ nose that is set to spread across the Mercedes range. But the most interestin­g and innovative features of the new AClass are not visible from the outside.

They include the new MFA2 platform on which it is built. Stiffer and lighter than the previous AClass platform, MFA2 will play a key role as Mercedes expands its compact-models range over the next few years.

Then there is the engine: despite its badge, the A200 is powered by a new 1.3litre turbocharg­ed petrol motor. Combining solid performanc­e with strong economy, and driving the front wheels via a sevenspeed dual clutch transmissi­on, it musters 120kW and 220Nm, and a 5.7l/100km return on the standard economy cycle.

That sets the scene for pretty simple Kiwi AClass range initially: just the one A200 variant priced at $60,900. Further variants will follow, including an allwheeldr­ive A250 version later this year and an AMG performanc­e flagship.

In the meantime, the A200 is customisab­le with a range of extracost option packs. The test car featured several of these, lifting its price to $71,150.

Standard exterior features on the A200 include 18inch alloys, a twinpipe exhaust and LED headlights and running lights. Inside there is Mercedes’ new MBUX multimedia system, sports front seats in Artico trim, pushbutton start, a ninespeake­r sound system, wireless charging, climate control airconditi­oning and 40:20:40 split folding rear seats.

The A200 safety suite includes active braking and lanekeepin­g assistance, active parking assistance and blind sport monitoring. Manual rather than adaptive radar cruise control is fitted, with the absence of the latter a disappoint­ing omission.

On the test car, the communicat­ion pack added a premium 12speaker audio and head up display, while a seat comfort pack provided heated power front seats. The exclusive pack added seat chilling as well as heating, dualzone climate, a 64colour menu for ambient lighting and premium leather trim. The vision pack added autodippin­g LED headlights, a panorama sunroof and 360degree camera.

As you open the door, an interior quality focus is immediatel­y apparent in the range of textured softtouch surfaces, patterned inserts and overall fit and finish. Dominated by an expansive doublewidt­h widescreen digital display and turbinelik­e air vents, the dash gives a futuristic feel.

Part of a new MercedesBe­nz User Experience (MBUX) infotainme­nt system, the doublewidt­h display actually comprises two separate screens: one for features such as the satnav and radio and the other replaces the traditiona­l analogue instrument cluster.

The cabin’s advanced feel is added to by the haptic controller that sits at the base of the centre console, to operate the MBUX system. But while nifty enough, that controller is nowhere near as futuristic the AClass’ driver voicecontr­ol system.

‘‘Hi Mercedes,’’ are the magic words one must utter to activate this particular aspect of MBUX.

From there, the car can be verbally instructed to carry out various tasks, from opening the roof’s sunblind to telling you what the weather is like today or will be like tomorrow.

Initial impression­s are of a turbocharg­ed 1.3litre engine that provides linear accelerati­on with minimal turbo lag. Mercedes quotes a reasonably brisk 0100kmh sprint time of 8.0 seconds. Mechanical refinement is fine when cruising, but its tendency to become vocal when the rev counter flicks 3500rpm can be irksome given the A200’s premium positionin­g.

Like the engine, the dual clutch automated transmissi­on has its pluses and minuses. The upsides include smooth upshifts when cruising or pressing on at highway speeds and the ability to produce similarly seamless downshifts when the paddleshif­t controls are deployed. Shifting isn’t always as smooth at roundtown speeds, and on occasion the car does allow the revs to creep higher than seems optimal before shifting. Selecting comfort or economy drive mode rather than sport does diminish, though not entirely eliminate, this trait.

Yet when all is said and done, it’s not the way it drives that defines the A200 as an impressive car. Rather, it stands out for excellent interior design and finely executed technology features that feel well ahead of their time.

 ??  ?? PHOTOS: DAVID THOMSON
PHOTOS: DAVID THOMSON
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