2010 Mercedes-Benz GLK-Class Review
In many parts of the world, Mercedes-Benz cars and trucks are sought for their utilitarian value. A cab driver in South Africa or a delivery truck driver in Kazakhstan is less impressed with the Mercedes-Benz tri-star as a symbol of luxury than he is dependent upon it as a promise of reliability.
That is true of a variety of vehicle brands in countries where automotive repair shops are few and often are less-than-quality enterprises when found.
Locals in those places look for names they think will stay on the road -- names that include Isuzu, Land Rover, Nissan, Toyota and Mercedes-Benz.
But in the United States, Mercedes-Benz has been more interested in burnishing its image as a manufacturer of luxury automobiles, a maker more of optional than necessary transport -- until now.
Welcome the 2010 Mercedes-Benz GLK 350 4Matic. In this country, we'll call it a "premium compact sport-utility vehicle." But here's betting that in less-developed, or perhaps less-pretentious parts of the world, it will be called what it is -- a little lorry, a "carryall" of particular prowess, designed to go anywhere most SUVs can and do what most of them can do without their egregious thirst for fuel or appetite for space.
I was prepared to trash the thing -- the result of an erroneous judgment developed two years ago during a corporate "product reveal" in which I was shown a prototype of this week's subject vehicle.
Back then, I was decidedly un-wooed. The prototype GLK 350, built on Mercedes-Benz's compact C-Class car platform, looked smaller than any SUV ought to look. It seemed a delicate, nanny-boo-boo mobile -- an overpriced conveyance of ill-defined nature wearing a luxury badge.
I erred.
The all-wheel-drive GLK 350 4Matic and its rear-wheel-drive GLK 350 sibling are brilliant -- perfectly sized and mannered for routine urban use, yet built and tempered to run over the most challenging roads.
My wife, Mary Anne, and I drove the test model all over northern and central Virginia, over roads smooth and rough, through weather fair, but mostly foul, often compromised by sleet and snow.
Our verdict was that we liked it so much, we would like to own one -- an aspiration not completely beyond possibility, as it might have been in the case of other vehicles wearing the Mercedes-Ben badge in the United States. The rear-wheel-drive GLK 350 starts at $33,900. The tested all-wheel-drive GLK 350 4Matic starts at a price $2,000 north of that. For employed members of the upper-middle class, ownership in that price range is at least dream-range.
That is what Mercedes-Benz's executives were thinking when they dreamed up the GLK 350. Their target was a Subaru Forester-Subaru Outback customer who someday dreamed of owning and driving something with a Mercedes-Benz badge -- a psychographic recipe for a neither-nor mobile that, in execution and road performance, risked being little more than cheap.
But the GLK 350 4Matic is a world-class Mercedes-Benz, minus the froth. It has an intelligent four-wheel suspension, a computer-sensor enhanced affair that automatically adjusts vehicle ride and feel to rapidly changing road conditions. The result is a feel in which the road, regardless of the condition of its point of contact with the GLK 350 4Matic, is rendered unobtrusive.
"Unobtrusive" here does not mean soft, wimpy or dull. The ride is more firm than most sedan lovers would like. But it will please anyone who prefers having some sense of contact with the road, as opposed to floating upon it in the manner of piloting a boat upon the sea.
The overall feel is tight, right. The GLK 350 4Matic feels much lighter, much less bulky than its 4,036 pounds.
The interior is simple, functional, appealing and designed to serve drivers with passengers who spill things. The leatherette seat coverings are durable, wipe-capable.
The engine -- a 3.5-liter V-6 with 268-horsepower and 258-foot-pounds of torque -- is no slouch. It moves the GLK 350 4Matic with authority and can tow up to 3,500 pounds. It gets up to 21 miles per gallon on the highway. But we do wish it would drink something other than premium gasoline.
How about a diesel in this one, Mercedes-Benz? Please?
See also:
Sport Utility Vehicle
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