Orders open for electric, £129,170 Mercedes-Benz EQS SUV

Orders open for electric, £129,170 Mercedes-Benz EQS SUV

Autocar

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Mercedes EQS SUV is based on the same platform as the EQS saloon

BMW iX rival lands in the UK with up to 536bhp, 364 miles of all-electric range and two premium trim levels

The Mercedes-Benz EQS SUV – the German car maker’s all-new, electric luxury flagship - is on sale now in the UK, with prices starting from £129,170. 

A rival to the Audi E-tron and BMW iX, the EQS SUV joins Mercedes' rapidly growing line of EVs. It's based on the same dedicated Electric Vehicle Architecture (EVA) platform as the Mercedes-Benz EQS and Mercedes-Benz EQE saloons. 

Two power levels are available, both with four-wheel drive. Entry-level models produce 355bhp and 419lb ft, while the EQS 580 4Matic with 536bhp and 632lb ft tops the range. 

Both models benefit from the same 108.4kWh battery, which provides up to 364 miles of range. 

Drivers can also choose from two specification levels starting with AMG Line Premium Plus, which includes a black Nappa leather interior, anthracite wood trim, the firm's three-display hyperscreen system, the latest generation of MBUX, wireless phone charging and a head-up display. 

The top-spec is Business Class, starting from £143,495, which adds macchiato beige Nappa leather, ship deck wood, rear entertainment, an advanced augmented head-up display and comfort package.

The battery used is the same lithium-ion unit used by the EQS saloon – packaged within the floorplan to give the luxury SUV a largely flat floor and what Mercedes-Benz says is the lowest centre of gravity of any of its SUV models.

Despite the EQS SUV sharing many of its mechanical parts with the EQS saloon, Mercedes said it was tough to develop. 

“At the end of the day, it was quite difficult. It took us nearly six years. We designed the platform from the beginning to have this spread [saloon and SUV], so we knew the requirements for the SUV very well from our experience with the GLS,” said Holger Enzmann, chief engineer for Mercedes’ EVA2 platform.

“We also incorporated the GLE and the knowledge from those two models for the EVA2 platform. We talked about higher ground clearance than for the sedans, and we talked about the higher loads of the seven-seater SUV, but we also incorporated a lot of lightweight parts with higher ratios of aluminium to reduce the kerb weight of the vehicle.”

Enzmann said Mercedes used much of its experience from successfully developing large internal-combustion-engined cars to further differentiate the EQS SUV. Up to 80% of the model’s development was unrelated to its electric drivetrain, with a focus on the MBUX infotainment system, intelligent safety equipment and other parts such as the seats, electric wiring harnesses and disc plates. 

The firm has also drawn inspiration from some of the technologies used in the Mercedes EQXX concept, which is based on Mercedes’ next-generation MMA platform. 

“We incorporated some good ideas on aerodynamics on the EVA2 platform, and some good learnings were made out of the infotainment systems and how we can reduce energy usage,” Enzmann said. 

“Also, the drivetrain, steering… we learned a lot. For the EQS sedan, we made big steps forward in the last six months of the development process. We found some small benefits in the wind tunnel, and we changed some parts. We closed the underbody covers a little bit more to bring down the drag coefficient.

“As we see for both models, we made a lot of tweaks in the last month and our colleagues did an enormous job to find the last tenth of drag coefficients of the efficient drivetrain. To be honest, not everybody at the company thought we could come up with values like that but we managed it.”

The EQS is also the first Mercedes EV to feature a bespoke off-road mode to improve how it drives in extreme conditions. Enzmann told Autocar the mode wasn’t a key priority when developing the EQS SUV, but the model still impressed in hot and cold climates. 

"It wasn’t one of the main goals in the development spec book to have off-road capabilities. As we drove, we saw very excellent behaviour from the vehicles on the ice in Sweden and also on the off-road courses,” said Enzmann. 

“We were very excited and a little bit surprised how this big and heavy vehicle managed icy roads and driving in Sweden and so on. We did test drives on dunes near Las Vegas, on the ice in Sweden and in other off-road areas so we developed the capabilities of the vehicle during the development phase. It was a very interesting process and we’re very happy with the result and what the vehicles can do.”

-Design-

At 5125mm in length, 1959mm in width and 1718mm in height, the EQS SUV is 82mm shorter, a scant 3mm wider and 105mm lower than the Mercedes-Benx GLS SUV. It also rides on a wheelbase that is 75mm longer than its combustion-engined sibling, at 3210mm – the same as that of the EQS saloon. The exterior draws heavily on the smooth-surfaced design first established on the three-year-old Mercedes-Benz EQC SUV and apparent on the more recent EQS and EQE saloons.

Key styling elements include a blanked-off black panel grille that extends well into the lower section of the front bumper (optionally with a star pattern treatment), angular LED headlights (optional with Mercedes’ Digital Light functionality) and a horizontal LED light bar across the leading edge, all of which provide a clear family resemblance to other EQ models.

As on the EQS and EQE saloons, the EQS SUV’s large clamshell-style bonnet is designed to be opened only during servicing, with the filler for the windscreen washer integrated into the driver’s-side front panel.

In a departure from the EQS and EQE saloons, the doors are framed. They also feature flush handles as standard across the range. Narrow running boards will be offered as optional equipment, and these are claimed to contribute to aerodynamic efficiency by smoothing the airflow along the side of the new model. The firm has yet to reveal a drag co-efficient for its latest EQ model, although officials suggest it is the most aerodynamically efficient SUV in its ranks, thanks in part to a completely flat undertray as well as a heavily shrouded tailgate.

-Powertrains-

Mercedes-Benz has confirmed two EQS SUV models with three powertrains will be available from the start of UK sales.

Entry point to the line-up is the EQS 450. It comes in single-motor, rear-wheel-drive EQS 450+ and dual-motor, four-wheel-drive EQS 450 4Matic guises, both with 355bhp and with 419lb ft and 590lb ft respectively.

Efficiency for the entry car is pegged at between 23.0 and 18.6kWh per 100km on the WLTP cycle, giving corresponding ranges of between 333 and 410 miles. The twin-motor EQS 450 4Matic musters between 315 and 381 miles from a charge. The battery can be charged at up to 200kW on a DC system, enabling a 10-80% charge in a claimed 31 minutes.

Heading the line-up is the four-wheel-drive EQS 580 4Matic with 536bhp and 632lb ft. These figures represent slight increases over the equivalent EQS saloon, but the SUV manages the same range figures as the lesser-powered 4WD model.

There are three different levels of energy recuperation: D+ (coasting), D (standard regeneration) and D- (enhanced regeneration).

The driver can also choose an adaptive setting called D-Auto, which constantly alters the regeneration depending on the driving conditions.

-Chassis-

As with the EQS, the SUV is underpinned by four-link front and multi-link rear suspension featuring Mercedes’ AirMatic air springs and variable damping control as standard.

The ride height can be raised by up to 25mm at speeds of up to 50mph, while above 68mph it is automatically lowered by 10mm in Comfort mode and by 15mm in Sport mode to reduce drag and aid overall efficiency.

A rear steering angle of up to 4.5deg is standard across the EQS SUV line-up but can be optionally boosted to 10deg to bring the turning circle down from 11.9m to 11.0m, or roughly the same as that of a Volkswagen Golf.

There are four primary driving modes: Eco, Comfort, Sport and Off-Road, the last of which can be operated with or without the electronic stability program engaged.

In Off-Road mode, the respective thresholds of the traction control system, anti-lock brakes and downhill speed regulation, as well as the mapping for the throttle, are matched to “enable the EQS SUV to tackle light terrain”, according to Mercedes.

-Interior-

A high-mounted dashboard houses individual 12.3in digital instrument and 12.8in portrait-style infotainment displays as standard, while the plusher EQS 580 gets the headline Hyperscreen, which operates on an eight-core processor and with 24-gigabytes of RAM. Some 1410mm wide, it includes 12.3in instrument, 17.7in central infotainment and 12.3in front passenger screens in one expansive surface.

The MBUX operating system supports conversational speech commands via a ‘Hey Mercedes’ prompt and can receive over-the-air software updates. There is also an optional head-up display with augmented reality navigation.

An optional third row of seats extends accommodation to seven in all, although leg room and knee room are at a premium for adults. So configured, the new Mercedes-Benz model offers 195 litres of luggage space.

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