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The Mercedes-Benz E-Class comes with fine engines and a typically laid-back dynamic character. Not one for the interested driver, but a good advert for being disinterested.

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For its fifth generation, the Mercedes-Benz E-Class gets a new look and some new engines as the mid-size saloon aims to reinstate itself at the top of the executive car market. It will need to fend off the BMW 5 Series, Audi A6 and Jaguar XF

Tested for the first time in the UK, the E-Class is available in three bodystyles, as a saloon, an estate and the rugged All Terrain estate. There are also seven engines to choose from, three of which are oilburners, with the E 200 d and E 220 d being the first models fitted with a brand-new 2.0-litre diesel engine, codenamed OM654, which will be adopted by most of Mercedes’ smaller models and gives it some eye-catching vital statistics.

The E-Class feels like a car engineered to make actually driving it almost no different from being driven

Capable of accelerating to 62mph in less than 7.5sec, it has also moved from a position of relative weakness versus its nearest rivals on peak power, claimed fuel economy and CO2 emissions, to one of real strength. And given how long Mercedes has languished somewhat behind the cutting edge of four-cylinder diesel engine technology, few will have expected the change in pace. The E 220 d is also available with Mercedes-Benz's 4Matic four-wheel drive system too.

Heading the diesel range is a 3.0-litre V6 diesel in the Mercedes E 350 d. There's a 2.0-litre petrol hybrid Mercedes E 300 e and a full complement of AMG models to choose from as well, including the Mercedes-AMG E 43 fitted with a 395bhp 3.0-litre V6, while the Mercedes-AMG E 63 comes fitted with a 4.0-litre V8, as found in the AMG GT, but in two flavours - the 563 bhp standard car or 603bhp S model. The E-Class Estate range is far simpler with all the diesels available and currently the entry-level E 43 AMG model, although the gargantuan E 63 variants will join in due course.

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There’s plenty more to report about the car: compared with its predecessor, it’s bigger, lighter, stiffer and all the usual stuff that engineers spend years achieving, for car reviewers to glibly sum up in a couple of sentences. You may have read exactly how in our earlier European first drive of an E 350 d – as well as about the quasi-autonomous driving technologies that have been fitted and the Mercedes-Benz S-Class-level cabin overhaul that Mercedes has lavished. Time to find out how well it all comes across on second acquaintance.

Is the new E-Class as lavish as a Mercedes-Benz should be?

While the character of the E 220 d hasn’t substantially changed, that new engine certainly makes it a better traditional laid-back Benz, as well as an undoubtedly more competitive prospect when judged against its rivals from Audi, BMW, Jaguar and elsewhere.

Mercedes’ right-hand drive conversion is a thorough one, the car’s pedals being no more offset than will be comfortable for most drivers. The driving position is more upright than some similar executive saloons, the seat set higher for a good vantage point – albeit with less of the snugly installed sporting feel of, say, a Jaguar XF.

Cabin and boot space are both fairly generous, although neither is a standout asset for the E-Class. But in other respects the car’s interior is exactly that. Entry-level SE-grade cars won’t blow you away with their material lavishness; Mercedes expects you to pay extra for the car’s impressive twin 12.3in LCD instrument and infotainment screens and doesn’t throw in a leather-wrapped dashboard to match the standard heated leather seats unless you spend the necessary on upper-level AMG Line trim.

The entry-level SE trim comes with Mercedes’ 8.4in infotainment complete with Garmin sat nav and DAB tuner, a reversing camera and cruise control. If you opt for the E 350 d or the hybrid E 350 e then you will get the 12.3in Comand Online infotainment, air suspension and 18in alloys as part of the SE trim.

Spec the E-Class in AMG-Line trim and expect AMG branded alloys, bodykit and decals, and electrically adjustable front seats. Those who opt for the entry-level AMG E 43, will find their E-Class adorned with an aggressive body kit, AMG-tuned air suspension, a sports exhaust, black leather upholstery with red stitching and red seatbelts.

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If 395bhp isn't enough for your executive saloon, then the bombastic E 63s not only gets a vociferous 4.0-litre V8, but also their own trims, with the standard car fitted with a mechanical rear axle slip differential, a AMG-tuned nine-speed automatic gearbox, electrically adjustable front seats, AMG sports seats and AMG-adapted infotainment software, while the E 63 S gains 20in alloy wheels, dynamic engine mounts, an electronic rear limited slip diff, a Nappa leather upholstery and AMG performance seats.

But the car’s cabin mouldings and fittings look and feel solid and expensive, and they’re supremely well finished. Those looking for a saloon in which to spend the kind of time, over a three-year ownership period, that other breeds of new car simply don’t see will be delighted with the robustness and usability of what’s on show.

Does the Mercedes-Benz E-Class retain its fabled cruising ability?

Likewise, they may approve wholeheartedly of the becalmed style in which the E-Class delivers its assured, refined performance on the road. The 2.0-litre diesel is smooth at idle and quiet under part throttle, particularly so on the motorway, where its standard nine-speed automatic gearbox allows it to cruise at the legal limit at well under 1500rpm.

With so many intermediate ratios to juggle, the gearbox shifts quite early as you accelerate, keeping the rev needle well inside the engine’s range of peak torque provision below 2800rpm.

Get far enough down the pedal and it will hold onto a gear up to 4000rpm and beyond – but while the car is quick for a 2.0-litre diesel of its size, the engine still doesn’t rev very keenly. Fuel economy should be a selling point, with our testing suggesting that a day-to-day return of around 55mpg is achievable.

On the standard lowered comfort suspension that UK-bound SE-trim cars come with, the E-Class has a soft, gentle ride that smothers bad urban roads and motorway lumps and bumps well. Its standard wheels and tyres make little road roar, and as long as you’re prepared to adopt the unhurried gait that the car so plainly favours, you’ll find the car’s dynamic performance relaxing and agreeable.

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But if you like your business saloons with just a little bit of dynamic poise and communicative flair, you won’t find the E-Class so agreeable. Not, at least, unless you upgrade to the adaptively damped sports suspension or the Airmatic springs, both of which we’re yet to sample enough to speak of.

On standard suspension and 17in wheels, the E-Class’s grip levels are only modest; its body control can begin to run out well inside the national speed limit on a testing road and its steering – which starts off very low-geared but picks up pace and weight quite aggressively off-centre – doesn’t feel very coherent compared to the rest of the car’s controls and handling responses. Although weight builds as you add lock, the rim is short on centre feel and overwhelmingly devoid of feedback. You suspect that's because Mercedes thinks E-Class drivers consider the latter an undesirable trait and would rather have a fairly light and consistently monotone-feeling wheel that's entirely free of kickback.

The E-Class feels like a car engineered to add so little to the stress and fatigue of the daily grind as to make actually driving it almost no different from being driven. You could get out of it after a 100-mile commute feeling almost as fresh as you got in – particularly thanks to the new Drive Pilot enhanced adaptive cruise functions, which work well. So if an upmarket interior feel, a servile and suave dynamic character and a now very competitive powertrain are enough to sell it, by all means buy.

This is now a car more clearly defined as a luxury item than ever it has been before, though – in contrast to rival saloons with a much greater sporting edge. So if you still like driving at least on parts of your weekly routine, other mid-sized executives will probably suit you better. But if you’re not sure, the E-Class is well worth considering.

 

Matt Saunders

Matt Saunders Autocar
Title: Road test editor

As Autocar’s chief car tester and reviewer, it’s Matt’s job to ensure the quality, objectivity, relevance and rigour of the entirety of Autocar’s reviews output, as well contributing a great many detailed road tests, group tests and drive reviews himself.

Matt has been an Autocar staffer since the autumn of 2003, and has been lucky enough to work alongside some of the magazine’s best-known writers and contributors over that time. He served as staff writer, features editor, assistant editor and digital editor, before joining the road test desk in 2011.

Since then he’s driven, measured, lap-timed, figured, and reported on cars as varied as the Bugatti Veyron, Rolls-Royce PhantomTesla RoadsterAriel Hipercar, Tata Nano, McLaren SennaRenault Twizy and Toyota Mirai. Among his wider personal highlights of the job have been covering Sebastien Loeb’s record-breaking run at Pikes Peak in 2013; doing 190mph on derestricted German autobahn in a Brabus Rocket; and driving McLaren’s legendary ‘XP5’ F1 prototype. His own car is a trusty Mazda CX-5.