Wheels (Australia)

Crammed with advanced smartphone-like intelligen­ce, the EQS is in nine out of 10 cases more clever than its user

- GEORG KACHER

this eerily dystopian neck of the woods, nobody cares about the alien trespasser­s in their nearly noiseless red Benz whose piercing matrix headlights clear the foggy path with the authority of a cop car on call. Hooligans might be tempted to switch on the Track Pace feature and attempt beating their own record stage times going back and forth between dwellings, but responsibl­e citizens like us merely select Race and advise the passenger to hold tight in that ventilated, multi-functional massage seat. Although the magic carpet waftabilit­y meets only the Silver Eiderdown standard, the EQS AMG 53 truly excels in the handling and roadholdin­g department. Having said that, even on 21-inch rubber the compliance is cushy enough to glide over the really rough stuff as if that chassis had been designed by Hovercraft, not Mercedes. Transverse expansion joints are a different matter altogether, but potholes, crumbling shoulders and sudden surface changes are absorbed with aplomb. Due to the vast tyre size, the Benz hates aquaplanin­g grooves. That’s the bad news. The good news is oodles of grip, even in the wet, through contractin­g radii and over off-kilter surfaces. It’s all a matter of confidence, trust and commitment. The e-powered starship really does deliver, not softlysoft­ly like a Mercedes which aims to be everybody’s darling but like a champion-grade full-blooded AMG. Crammed with advanced smartphone-like intelligen­ce, the EQS is in nine out of 10 cases more clever than its user. Its hyperscree­n can stage a movie theatre, a music hall or a command centre. Its brainpower taps 5G and 3D, the sat-nav is mastermind­ed by predictive Electric Intelligen­ce, the MBUX infotainme­nt system now fulfils its potential, the Zero Layer touch zone is as intuitive as these devices can be without prior expert tuition. The most compelling feature of all is the latestgen voice control which renders most tiles, buttons, zoom and swipe areas redundant because “Hey, Mercedes!” is all it takes to switch on the seat heaters, find a cheap charge point, or order a take-away. Dynamic Select invites the driver to choose from five different modes. Ice is self-explanator­y, Comfort should be labelled Boring, Sport is exactly that, Sport Plus feels less sharp than Race which is part of the optional

overseas Dynamic Plus pack. Individual offers to unite the best of the best: steering and suspension in Sport, drivetrain and AMG Dynamics in Sport Plus. In addition to AWD, four-wheel steering is standard. Below 65km/h, counterste­er makes the big barge more manoeuvrab­le. Above this speed, stability by synchroste­er takes priority. It’s a complex system, but the driving experience is totally natural, at any speed and any steering angle. Having said that, there is an early ambiguity around the straight-ahead position which goes away after a couple dozen kilometres. Luckily, the same applies to the initial grabbiness of the available carbon-ceramic brakes which act upon the front wheels only. The one irritation which stubbornly prevailed was the extra pedal effort it took to bring the car to an embarrassi­ngly late full stop. The chassis of the base EQS is stuffed with plenty of fancy tech, but this AMG spin-off adds even more five-star sophistica­tion like new axle carriers, mounts, wishbones and anti-roll bars, not to mention the recalibrat­ed Ride Control Plus air suspension with dualvalve dampers which separately control the compressio­n and rebound volumes. Sounds trick, works to order. Despite the stiffer body structure, the crisper steering and brakes, and the expertly suppressed roll, yaw and pitch motions, the high-performanc­e e-Benz is gifted with a long enough 3210mm wheelbase – and huge 2655kg kerb weight – to isolate its occupants from most of the vagaries they are about to travel over. It certainly also helps that the centre of gravity defined by the 108kWh battery pack sits low down between the axles. Somewhere between Beaumont and Big Bear Lake, the old Route 18 spat us out onto San Bernadino Valley. About three and a half hours into a still cloudy, rainswept day, the whisperlin­er from AMG had ticked almost all the right boxes. We executed the 3.4sec-to100km/h standard accelerati­on sprint not once, not twice but three times. It did feel 911 GTS-like fast, and yet the difference between the limitedtim­e 560kW in Dynamic Plus and the regular 484kW and 950Nm available at any time is a mere four tenths to the sprint time. Although one-pedal addicts can recuperate up to 300kW in stage-3 regen mode, coasting is so much more fun and only a paddle shift away. The official maximum driving range is 580km, which suggests that the journey should ideally include several downhill sections, emphatical­ly inflated tyres, plenty of tailwind and the driver’s brain locked in Peace, not War. When we docked in Manhattan Beach at noon, the indicated distance to empty was a sobering 53km, meaning our 96 percent charge was on track to give us just 333km. Feel free to do your own arithmetic, but that equates to a kWh per 100km number in the high ’30s, a far cry from the promised 21.5kWh/100km. Which either hints at the inability to comply with the highway code on part of the driver, or expresses the fact that we had a lot of fun that morning, weather notwithsta­nding.

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 ?? ?? Above: Boot holds 610 litres (1770 litres with seats folded) and hatch gives easy access to its full depth. But rear seat isn’t as spacious as you’d expect in a car more than 5m in length
Above: Boot holds 610 litres (1770 litres with seats folded) and hatch gives easy access to its full depth. But rear seat isn’t as spacious as you’d expect in a car more than 5m in length

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