[Carfreeliving] Funny car review from LA times
Brinkman, Cheryl
Cheryl.Brinkman at McKesson.com
Thu Mar 16 11:32:07 MST 2006
Hi Car Freers, had to post this funny car review from the LA Times.
In between the sadness it made me laugh:
"and never tow anything heavier than the weight of their owner's
childhood traumas."
My other car is a plane
Mercedes' new SUV couldn't come at a worse time. Can consumption be more
conspicuous?
DAN NEIL, Automotive critic Dan Neil can be reached at
dan.neil at latimes.com.
March 15, 2006
THERE'S something peculiarly egregious, something antagonizing about the
2007 Mercedes-Benz GL, the company's new full-size, 15-mpg sport-utility
vehicle, which might be described as a Cadillac Escalade with a
hankering for Czechoslovakia. For one thing, it goes to show that, even
though the full-size SUV market has fallen off dramatically in the last
year, there are still sufficient numbers of selfish rotters out there to
constitute an appealing market segment.
Mercedes-Benz executives offer this wholly meritless defense: Many of
its customers leave the brand because the company does not offer a
full-size SUV that meets their needs, which is to say, a
seven-passenger, 17-foot 4x4 with a 9,300-pound towing capacity. At this
point in the presentation in Napa Valley last week, execs showed slides
of the GL pulling a 30-foot boat. So there you have it: Mercedes'
audience of water-skiing polygamists is underserved.
Needs? Did the man say needs? OK, then. I propose needs testing for the
purchase of such a vehicle. You must have a Chris-Craft and three or
more school-age children in the yard to qualify. Your vehicle must do
double-duty as, um, a bookmobile.
Need has very little to do with it. This segment is about want, naked
and unquenchable, I-got-mine-you-get-bent appetite. It's well
established that the vast majority of these vehicles never touch gravel,
never carry more than a couple of people, and never tow anything heavier
than the weight of their owner's childhood traumas.
Most people who buy the GL won't know a Class IV hitch from a Mark 48
torpedo. And I, for one, am not going to congratulate some Bel-Air
singleton for his wise vehicle purchase when it is so patently purblind
and morally retrograde.
Plainly, I'm disappointed that Mercedes-Benz - the company of Gullwings
and 500Es, of elegant engineering and F1 cars - has decided to get into
delivery van business. And yet I cannot fairly blame the company, which
being a corporation is doing what corporations do in the absence of
governance: Make as much money as is within its ken to do.
The case for the GL was compelling: As one of three products to come out
of the company's newly enlarged Alabama factory - the others are the
redesigned M-class and the new R-class luxury van - the GL's development
and production costs are shared. The powertrain, suspension, electronics
and auxiliary systems are common with the M-class.
Purely as a piece of machinery, the GL is exemplary. With a unit-body
chassis of high-strength steel, four-wheel independent air suspension
with automatic damping, all-wheel drive, a powerful 4.6-liter V8 and
seven-speed automatic transmission, and a full complement of safety and
convenience features, the GL is a mighty, mellow dreadnaught, roomy,
comfortable and - compared with its Iowa-class competitors - reasonably
light. Its curb weight of 5,249 pounds is several hundred pounds lighter
than the Escalade, Infiniti QX56, Lexus LX470 or the Lincoln
Annihilator.
And, while the full-size SUV segment was a lot more tempting five years
ago (when the GL was planned), it is still surprisingly robust. Early
returns on the new Chevy Tahoe and Escalade look good for GM. Audi just
launched its own seven-passenger full-sizer, the Q7, and BMW is in the
midst of taffy-stretching its X5 for the 2007 model year.
Why, in the midst of a slow-rolling energy crisis, an unpopular war in a
region of the world made strategic only by its oil, and the globe's
climbing mercury, should precisely the wrong kinds of vehicles remain so
popular?
One reason is surely the tax breaks associated with 3-ton SUVs: business
owners get a $25,000 tax break on the purchase of full-size SUVs (scaled
back from $100,000 in 2004) and five-year depreciation schedule. For
people taking advantage of this cozy corner of Section 179, the GL -
with a base price anticipated to be about $60,000 - will be virtually
free. That makes your $4,000 hybrid tax break look pretty punk, doesn't
it?
The tax code is the most obvious point of inflection between vehicle
choice and public policy. Another knee-point is CAFE - that's Corporate
Average Fuel Economy standards, in case you forgot, and who could blame
you?
Last year, the Bush administration proposed raising the light-truck
standard - long frozen at about 20 mpg - to 24 mpg by 2011, an
incrementalism that is marvelously measured, to say the least.
Meanwhile, the administration plans to scrap the current CAFE structure
in favor of a size-based regime co-written by the automakers, with
larger vehicles required to achieve lower mileage.
Incidentally, some SUVs are so large that they transcend fuel-economy
standards altogether. Vehicles with a gross-vehicle-weight rating over
10,000 pounds - such as the Hummer H2 and the heavy-duty version of the
Suburban - are not counted among fleet ratings that automakers need to
hit.
We have been told recently that we are addicted to oil, but we seem to
be unable to do much about it. California's clean-air bureaus are trying
to regulate carbon emissions from vehicles and are being sued by
manufacturers and the federal government for their trouble.
Raising fuel taxes cannot be accomplished, no matter the mood of
national urgency and no matter the obscenity of oil companies' profits.
Fuel taxes are doubly problematic: For one thing, they are regressive,
hurting lower-income consumers; for another, buyers of luxury vehicles
are less likely to be dissuaded from their giant purchase.
What about all the alternative vehicle technologies we've been promised?
Thanks to a decade-long stonewalling by Big Oil and the trucking
industry, it has taken until this year to phase in clean-diesel
requirements that will give automakers the slightest hope of meeting
50-state emissions requirements (diesel-powered vehicles can be 25% to
40% more fuel-efficient than gas-powered vehicles). Other technologies -
bio-diesel, hybrids, ethanol, plug-ins, fuel-cells - can in the near
term only nibble at the edges of our 20 million barrels per day of oil
consumption.
If we were serious about oil dependence, we would dramatically raise
fuel economy standards, impose gas-guzzler taxes on noncommercial light
trucks and lower the national speed limit.
None of that is going to happen.
So, in the face of this enormous governmental and regulatory inaction,
this paralysis and denial, a curious new market equilibrium has arisen.
Call it the marketplace of shame.
SUV owners are mocked. Late-night comics have become scolds.
Evangelicals have enlisted Jesus Christ himself in the "What Would Jesus
Drive" campaign. The crass and criminal Sopranos - Tony and Carmela -
drive an Escalade and a Porsche Cayenne Turbo. If you don't think their
characters are defined by these vehicle choices, think again.
The cultural opprobrium that afflicts SUV owners - often overheated,
occasionally misdirected, frequently ignored - is virtually the only
disincentive in the market, the only defense the rest of us have from
these rolling hot tubs of avarice. People feel slightly embarrassed,
even a little ashamed. Good.
It's having an effect. Sales of these vehicles are declining, and it's
possible that one day they will align with actual customer need - after
all, if people truly need a full-size 4x4, they should be able to have
them. Meanwhile, the carmakers are finding ways to give people the
utility and all-weather agility they want without the massive steel
edifice.
One day, to describe a vehicle like the Mercedes-Benz GL as a very good
full-size SUV - which it is, by the way - will be a contradiction in
terms.
*
2007 Mercedes-Benz GL450
Base price: $58,000 (est.)
Price, as tested: $67,000 (est.)
Powertrain: 4.6-liter, dual-overhead cam, 32-valve V8 with
variable-valve timing and two-stage intake manifold; seven-speed
automatic transmission; full-time all-wheel drive (optional two-speed
transfer case in off-road package)
Horsepower: 335 at 6,000 rpm
Torque: 339 pound-feet at 2,700-5,000 rpm
Curb weight: 5,249 pounds
0-60 mph: 7.5 seconds
Wheelbase: 121.1 inches
Overall length: 200.3 inches
EPA fuel economy: 14 miles per gallon city, 19 mpg highway (est). Mixed
mileage 15 mpg (observed)
Final thoughts: Steroid abuse
Cheryl Brinkman
McKesson Corporation
Sr. Product Manager
Generic Rx
415-983-7501
415-732-2699 - fax
cheryl.brinkman at mckesson.com <mailto:cheryl.brinkman at mckesson.com>
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