East Bay Times

New Mercedes-AMG sedan looks good, drives odd

- By James Raia CORRESPOND­ENT

The Mercedes-Benz C-Class debuted in 1993 as the manufactur­er’s entry-level sedan. Now 30 years old, the C class is no longer the cheapest in the lineup. It’s a go-to level for many brand loyalists and it’s expanded.

The newbie is the Mercedes-AMG C 43. It’s a turbocharg­ed, four-cylinder (the V6 is gone) and the German automaker’s entry-level performanc­e sedan. The electric turbocharg­er is a first for a production car. Competitio­n includes the Audi S4, BMW M3 and Genesis G70.

While maintainin­g a traditiona­lly attractive exterior like its stablemate­s, the Mercedes-AMG collaborat­ion means the vehicle has sports car leanings. The exterior features a new front grille and a front bumper with air intakes. The rear bumper looks similar to air diffusers on a race car and includes dual exhausts. Eighteen-inch wheels are standard, but 19 and 20-inch wheels are optional.

The interior includes AMG sport seats with synthetic leather and microfiber upholstery. Red seat belts and accent stitching ideally contrast with an otherwise all-black interior.

Performanc­e-oriented elements include Nappa leather-wrapped flat-bottom steering wheel with aluminum shift paddles. Sport pedals, floor mats and illuminate­d door sills further define the AMG signature.

Performanc­e comes from a 2.0-liter engine that produces 402 horsepower and 369 pound-feet of torque, with all-wheel drive and an AMG-tuned nine-speed automatic transmissi­on. A 48-volt mild-hybrid system takes power with the automatic stop/start feature when coasting in highway speed. The sedan-turned-sports car achieves the 0-to-60 miles per hour standard in 4.6 seconds. The C 43 is limited to 155 mph. Gas mileage averages are 19 miles per gallon in city driving, 26 mph on the highway.

The sedan-sports car persona isn’t always a smooth marriage. MercedesBe­nz models accelerate with a pleasing

quick-enough pace. The MercedesAM­G C 43 accelerate­s with a lengthy turbo lag with an aggressive engine note. The sound is more rough sore throat-sounding than smooth, confident roar.

Mercedes’ heritage as a smooth, quiet luxury sedan is deflated via the frustratin­g stop-start system. The engine stops at around five mph when decelerati­ng and then doesn’t restart for what seems like an eternity for a performanc­e car. And there’s nothing smooth about the restart. The delay is the car’s biggest disappoint­ment.

Once past the initial engine engagement, the new AMG does far better. Accelerati­on, maneuverin­g, braking and overall drivabilit­y are more likely what Mercedes-AMG had in mind. True to reputation, the sedan drives stiff, poised and proud.

Technology abounds. Automatic emergency braking with pedestrian detection, automatic high-beam headlights, blind-spot warning with rear cross-traffic warning and safe-exit warning, driver attention warning, parking damage sensors are standard. Adaptive cruise control, dashcam, highway driving assist, lane-keeping assist and a surround-view camera system are optional.

Bluetooth connectivi­ty, lumbar support split-folding rear seats, power-folding side mirrors, power heated front seats with seat memory and rain-sensing windshield wipers and wireless smartphone integratio­n (Apple CarPlay and Android Auto) extend the impressive features list.

The infotainme­nt system is top-line with a 12.3-inch configurab­le gauge cluster and an 11.9-inch touchscree­n. The system and its various maps, performanc­e data and other function operations via Mercedes’ latest MBUX (Mercedes-Benz User Experience) interface. A head-up display is also available. 001 BAY AREA NEWS GROUP

The front-engine, all-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 4-door sedan begins with a MSRP of $59,900. Six option packages and solo options, from the upgraded leather ($1,620) to the 10-spoke wheels ($1,450) to the panoramic roof ($1,000) push the price to $72,630.

Mercedes and AMG have combined for vast success in other performanc­e vehicles and C 43 fills a new niche. But it’s a niche that may not need filling.

James Raia, a syndicated automotive journalist in Sacramento, is the founder and senior editor of theweeklyd­river.com. It features a few weekly newsletter and podcast. Email: james@ jamesraia.com.

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 ?? ?? 2023 Mercedes-AMG 43 C. Photo © James Raia/2023
2023 Mercedes-AMG 43 C. Photo © James Raia/2023

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