Toronto Star

Fashionabl­y late to crossover party

Mercedes-benz trumps luxury CUV competitio­n with turbo-diesel GLK

- JOHN LEBLANC SPECIAL TO THE STAR

GENEVA, SWITZERLAN­D— There are plenty of advantages when you arrive late to a party. Looking back now, MercedesBe­nz seems to have benefited from not being one of the first to crash the luxury compact crossover festivitie­s started almost a decade ago.

Arguably following the lead set by BMW with its successful X3 in 2004, Mercedes waited six years before jumping into the burgeoning segment with its five-passenger GLK-Class, where it quickly become Mercedes’ second-best selling model in Canada, only behind the sedan it’s roughly based on, the CClass. And except for the top-selling Lexus RX, the Benz outsells rivals from Acura, Audi, BMW, Cadillac, Infiniti, Lincoln and Volvo.

With this sales success, we didn’t expect Mercedes to reinvent the GLK for its 2013 mid-life makeover. And it didn’t. But beyond its requisite upgrades to its exterior and interior styling and new infotainme­nt and safety features, the big news for the 2013 GLK lineup is the addition of a class-first diesel engine option.

The new 2013 GLK 250 BlueTec is powered by a new, 2.1-litre twin-turbocharg­ed inline four-cylinder diesel.

If you still want a gas engine in your GLK, last year’s GLK 350 returns with an updated version of its 3.5 L V6. It now benefits from direct-injection, and a

The diesel engine option is a first in its class

stop/start system (that shuts down the engine when the vehicle is at rest) among other engineerin­g changes.

As well, the rear-wheel-drive GLK 350 has been canned. So all GLKs for 2013 — whether diesel or gas — will get the brand’s 4MATIC all-wheel-drive system as standard kit and a carry-over sevenspeed automatic as the only transmissi­on choice.

Mercedes-Benz Canada is still working on pricing for the 2013 GLK lineup. Logic says the new diesel GLK will demand a premium over the gas version (i.e. the $57,900 gas Mercedes ML SUV versus the $59,400 diesel version). But the automaker is working on equipment packages, so wait until closer to the GLK’s June sale date to get final pricing.

As a baseline, though, know that the starting point for the 2013 GLK 350 4MATIC isn’t expected to change much from the 2012 model’s $43,800 MSRP.

Even if the diesel GLK comes at a similar price premium over the gas model as its larger ML sibling does, it’s hard to argue against it.

Yes, the diesel loses out to the gas GLK in the horsepower department — 190 to 302 — resulting in the GLK 250 taking1.5 seconds longer to go from 0 to 100 km than the 6.5 seconds the GLK 350 takes.

But the diesel GLK stomps the gas GLK when it comes to torque: 369 versus 273. And more importantl­y for the typical luxury crossover buyer, the GLK 250’s 7.5 L/100 km city, and 5.5 L highway European cycle fuel economy ratings (Transport Canada has yet to confirm Canadian model ratings) trounces the GLK 350’s 10.8 and 7.3 respective numbers.

Plus, the turbo-diesel moves the sold GLK down the road in a much more satisfying nature than the gas will.

Over the course of two days of driving between the Swiss city of Geneva and the French ski report town of La Clusaz, the GLK 250’s torque-rich engine suits the crossover’s mission to a tee as swift-butsafe family transporta­tion.

It only takes a few metres from rest to discover the diesel feels stronger than the gas V6. And pulling away from numerous French autoroute toll booths during my drive was met with a wave of undu- lating forward motion, without the GLK 350’s sometimes unharmonio­us sounds.

Driving enthusiast­s should note that the new GLK’s driving characteri­stics remain tilted toward luxury — not to sports sedan buyers. When hustled, the Benz doesn’t feel terribly light, agile, or co-ordinated. The Mercedes is not the type of utility vehicle that can string together corners in a car-like fashion.

Even with the AMG sport package (optional on the GLK 250, standard on the GLK 350) that adds oneinch larger 20-inch tires and wheels, the Mercedes crossover prefers a more deliberate style of driving.

Instead, the GLK is best suited to around town errand hopping, highways, and long arcing two lanes, where its comfortabl­e ride and lazier responses are better appreciate­d. And whatever the quality of the pavement underneath, the Mercedes always feels bank vault-solid.

Maybe we’ll have to wait until the smaller, B-Class-based crossover arrives in the next year or so before a truly, fun-to-drive small Mercedes crossover arrives. Beyond the new engines and slightly softened exterior styling, including fashionabl­e LED lighting front and back, the remaining of the “new” in the new 2013 GLK can be found inside, plus new safety technologi­es.

Like when the current generation of C-Class sedan arrived in 2008, the original 2010 GLK was criticized for a cabin full of hard angles and sharp pieces of plastic. To rectify that, there’s a new dash design that includes updated driver’s instrument­ation with a 11.5-centimetre colour display embedded in the speedomete­r, ambient lighting throughout the cabin, three-spoke leather covered steering wheel, separate colour central display screen, and the addition of prominent circular air vents that are migrating into every new Mercedes from the SLS super car. Optional packages allow the new GLK to be equipped with many of the advanced safety features found on pricier E- and S-Class Mercedes. What hasn’t changed is the GLK’s comparativ­ely lack of interior space. It’s one of the shortest and narrowest in its class. Three adults in its second-row seating is tight. While cargo room behind those seats remains near the back of the class too. Regardless of its faults, the new GLK for 2013 should continue down its current path of success. Its interior upgrades and new features should keep exiting customers coming back. While the avail- ability of the turbo-diesel gives the Mercedes something the competitio­n can’t offer.

Despite its tardiness, the GLK has become the life of the luxury small crossover party. Travel was provided for freelance writer John Leblanc by the manufactur­er. Email: editors@straight-six.com Watch a video of John LeBlanc in the Mercedes GLK-class on our site.

 ?? JOHN LEBLANC FOR THE TORONTO STAR ?? Mercedes-Benz waited six years before jumping into the burgeoning crossover segment with its five-passenger GLK-Class.
JOHN LEBLANC FOR THE TORONTO STAR Mercedes-Benz waited six years before jumping into the burgeoning crossover segment with its five-passenger GLK-Class.
 ?? JOHN LEBLANC FOR THE TORONTO STAR ?? What hasn’t changed is the GLK’s comparativ­ely short and narrow interior space.
JOHN LEBLANC FOR THE TORONTO STAR What hasn’t changed is the GLK’s comparativ­ely short and narrow interior space.

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