1998 Mercedes-Benz SLK-Class Sports Car Reviews & Ratings

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1998 Mercedes-Benz SLK-Class Reviews

 

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Mercedes-Benz SLK-Class Interior Review

Suddenly it's 1955. Mercedes-Benz interior stylists have unabashedly

opted for a retro look to the SLK's cozy cockpit. The three circular instruments--one

a speedometer, one a tachometer, and the other a combination fuel level/coolant

temperature dial--have chrome rings around ivory faces with black numerals

and red needles. Shiny accents are applied in numerous places, and a two-tone

effect combines black dashboard top, door panels, seat sides, glovebox

lid and center console with contrasting trim in the buyer's choice of red,

blue, dark gray or light gray.

Our only quibble with this blend of old and new is the carbon fiber

insert panel in the dash. We have nothing against carbon fiber, but in

a Mercedes it should be the real thing, rather than simulated.

But there is nothing old-fashioned about the SLK's safety features,

Beyond the dual airbags, Mercedes has opted to include separate rollover

bars behind driver and passenger, as well as adding a circuit to the airbag

system that detects a child's seat mounted in the passenger side and disables

the dash-mounted bag in front of it.

The seats, too, are modern as can be. No vintage sports car ever had

such comfortable and supportive chairs. And no open car of the past protected

its occupants from the wind as well as does the SLK's mesh wind deflector,

which fits over the rollover bars.

All controls are located in clusters for easy use, air conditioning

and a fine Bose six-speaker sound system are standard, and the whole is

finished off to the high quality level you'd expect to find in a Mercedes.



Mercedes-Benz SLK-Class Road Test

A few minutes behind the wheel makes it clear that the SLK's biggest

asset is a nearly inexhaustable supply of driving pleasure. The S in the

model name denotes Sport, and deservedly so. The fun comes from much more

than simple straight-line speed, though the SLK's claimed 0-60 mph time

of 7.4 seconds and 143-mph top speed aren't exactly unimpressive. The key

word in assessing the car's fun quotient is balance.

At right around 3000 pounds, the SLK isn't exactly a lightweight--even

though the L in SLK stands for Licht (light)--but it steers, stops, and

goes around corners with far less coaxing than its heavier SL cousins.

The all-independent suspension is tuned for flat cornering and precise

handling, and delivers exactly that, while also providing a ride that won't

rattle your teeth.

Driver and passneger will be as relaxed at the end of an all-day drive

as they were at its beginning and, if there were a few twists and turns

along the way, the driver will likely have an ear-to-ear grin. Brakes (ABS-equipped),

steering and electronic traction control all perform flawlessly.

The third component in the model designation is K, meaning Kompressor

(supercharger in English). Without it, the car wouldn't be nearly as much

fun to drive. The mechanical supercharger forces air into a 2.3-liter twincam

16-valve four-cylinder engine, the same engine, sans supercharging, used

in M-B's C-Class sedans. A variety of high-tech features work with the

blower to make the engine both powerful and responsive. Peak power--191

hp--is impressive, but the key to this engine's willingness to play is

a wide band of peak torque, available from 2500 to 4800 rpm.

Behind the engine is a five-speed automatic transmission that features

"adaptive" electronics that monitor driving style and tailor

the shift time and speed to suit. In enthusiastic driving mode, for example,

it will shift at the engine's peak power, and will not upshift when the

car is slowed for a corner. In more sedate use, it changes gears with remarkable

smoothness.

Perfection? Not quite. While the muted whine of the supercharger will

be music to some, the exhaust note has a slightly agricultural quality

to it. We also found a little more engine vibration than we'd like at cruising

speeds, and the absence of a manual transmission isn't consistent with

a real sports car image. Mercedes offers a very crisp five-speed manual

on European SLK models, but elected not to certify it for the U.S. market.



Mercedes-Benz SLK-Class Lineup



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