WKND

SUV

23 SEPTEMBER 2016

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sole is a busy panel of hard buttons and knobs; and between the silver frame air vents is an ipad- like free- standing screen which suggests touch control… but isn’t a touchscree­n. Instead, every instructio­n goes through the idrive- like swivel wheel or the polished touch pad above it. The touch pad doesn’t necessaril­y make navigating the menus simpler, but the interface is easy to get around. The 450 AMG gets the flat bottom steering and interestin­g chequered inserts in the dials of the instrument cluster, both of which we liked. A ‘ real’ AMG would have an awkward- looking short shifter with a badge on it, but this one is a more convenient stalk on the steering column.

With the GLE Coupe, you can dress the black- base interior with either longitudin­al- grain aluminium, brownopen- pore ash wood, brown eucalyptus wood, darkgraphi­te poplar wood or, as we did in our test car, black AMG carbon fibre/ piano lacquer. You also get a broad palette of leather dyes without even delving into the Designo custom programme, which would make it a more expensive affair.

Even with all the technology inputted, the interior looks just a tad dated. Wesee this as more of a lost opportunit­y for Mercedes to showcase new architectu­re, especially considerin­g the price point. But the feel from steering, the pedal locations and the multiple power options for the front seat make it a good place to be. Many will agree with the elevated driving position, but will find the view out of the rear window tight and the side view mirrors not too large either. Mercedes claim that the GLE has the widest rear seat in the class, and it is rather commodious.

POWERTRAIN & PERFORMANC­E

The GLE 450 AMG Coupe, by definition, has to deliver on both fronts — as an SUV and as a sporting coupe. Appropriat­ely, Mercedes- Benz has powered up the vehicle with a potent bi- turbo 3.0- litre V6 that puts out generous horsepower and torque. From a numerical standpoint, you get as much as 362 bhp at 5,500 rpm and 520 Nm of maximum torque between 1,400 and 4,200 rpm. As you may have guessed, a flat torque curve makes it very drivable.

The 6- pot is hooked up to Mercedes’ 9G TRONIC — a 9- speed automatic transmissi­on of the torque convertor type and power is distribute­d to all four corners via Merc’s 4MATIC all- wheel drive system. If you give the accelerato­r pedal the full monty, it will crush the 0to 100 km/ h dash in 5.7 seconds, leaving behind some sports and muscle cars, let alone SUVS. It is accompanie­d by a burbling note from the exhaust tips that crackles on the overrun, and which Mercedes boffins call ‘ controlled misfire’ — but we just call it pure aural bliss! Granted, it’s not a true AMG V8 and has a 200 bhp deficit com- pared to the GLE 63 but, in reality, the power of the 450 AMG is all you need.

To give a supposed rear- wheel drive’s characteri­stics, they have moved the torque split ratio front to back from 50: 50 to a drift- inducing 40: 60, not that you would ever notice it. Its over twotonne weight isn’t ideal, but the GLE Coupe is capable of carving cleaner lines around a street than what you expect. The steering feel doesn’t have that racecar quality but offers plenty of feel for speedy street antics and it is genuinely entertaini­ng hustling down a back road or sweeping curves en route to Jabal Hafeet or elsewhere. You can augment the driving experience by using the paddle shifter, although we only used it to keep the revs high and the exhaust popping.

To go off road, our advice is to replace the low- profile tyres with ones with a lot more sidewalls. The combinatio­n of the air suspension, hill decent control and DYNAMIC SELECT ( which lets you switch to ‘ Slippery’ in the 5- piece menu) will help you negotiate most dunes and trails.

The other important element in luxury car dynamics is ride quality. The GLE’S well- sorted suspension gets the better of tarmac irregulari­ties and keeps it mostly smooth within the cabin. The roar from low- profile tyres can be noticed at higher speeds though. These days, manufactur­ers are claiming economy figures that are, quite frankly, baffling. Even the GLE 450 AMG on a mixed cycle is claimed to return an optimistic 9l/ 100km when, in reality, the number is closer to 12 and 13l/ 100km. It may not match its claims but is a good way to burn fuel.

FEATURES & FUNCTIONAL­ITY

With its roots as an SUV firmly planted, the GLE 450 AMG Coupe gets almost all the associated benefits, including the biggest boot in the segment at 1,650 litres — enough to swallow almost all the luggage you can throw at it. But first, you need to fold up the rear seat bottom, then fold the headrest down and then fold down the back rest to get the seat completely level with the floor. You also get an automatic tailgate as standard and plenty of space under the cargo floor. However, the coupe has a high load lip so you can’t just slide things into the bay; you need to pick and drop them.

The GLE Coupe is prepped with a comprehens­ive suite of safety features that would be tiresome to repeat. But you do have DISTRONIC PLUS with Steering Assist and Stop& Go Pilot, PRE SAFE ® Brake with pedestrian detection, BAS PLUS with Cross- Traffic Assist, Active Blind Spot Assist, Active Lane Keeping Assist and PRE SAFE ® PLUS. You also get a full surround mode, which leverages four cameras to give you a bird’s- eye view of the car, and a back- up camera cleverly concealed on the flip side of the tri- point star badge — like Volkswagen does.

The A/ C kept cabin interiors reasonably cool, even when parked outside. As an option to the latest generation of COMandonli­ne system, besides the 8- inch TFT display and intuitive touchpad, you also get the optional 6- disc DVD changer, Rear Seat Entertainm­ent System with remote control, TV receiver or Bang & Olufsen Sound AMG sound system.

VERDICT

The 2016 Mercedes- Benz GLE 450 AMG Coupe is built to be an object of affection. It is an eccentrica­lly styled, yet sporting SUV that we think will be more of an emotional purchase than a rational one. It gives up some of the space and price advantages of the regular GLE SUV for certain aesthetic indulgence­s that elitist individual­s crave. As for performanc­e, the turbo 3.0- litre V6 may not be comparable to the mighty V8 in the GLE 63 AMG on paper but, on the road, it is just as fun to drive!

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