The Mercedes G-class has been revealed at the Beijing motor show, with company bosses vowing the military grade off-roader, which has just entered its 33rd year of production, will continue to be part of its product line-up for many years to come.
"The Mercedes G-class is at the top of all off-road luxury vehicles, and it is now seen as an icon," said G-class director of product line Axel Harries. "It is the godfather of all Mercedes off-road vehicles, and we see the group of potential customers growing every day.
"It is back on the radar and seen as cool, so that is why we see further potential with this vehicle - in 2011 we sold 6600 cars, our best sales year for seven years. People ask us how long we can build this vehicle and my message to you is that the legend lives on. There is no run-out date and no reason to try and think of one."
The reworked G-class is planned to go on sale in the UK in June boasting a series of subtle exterior styling tweaks, a new range of engines mated to an updated seven-speed gearbox, a lightly altered interior and a brace of new electronic driver aids.
Among the changes made to the G-class’s classic square rigged exterior is a restyled grille with standard models receiving three prominent slats in place of the older model’s seven slats, new headlamp inserts featuring horizontally mounted LED running light, redesigned mirror housings, altered tail lamp graphics and a new line of alloy wheels.
In the UK just two G-class models will be sold: the G350 BlueTec for just under £90,000 and the G63 AMG, which will cost around £110,000. The former is expected to account for around 70 per cent of UK sales.
However, in other markets a G500 and G65 AMG performance flagship will be offered. All are assembled at Mercedes-Benz partner Magna’s factory in Graz, Austria.
The two new AMG models are visually distinguished from their standard siblings by a two-slat grille, a deeper front bumper with larger air ducts, red brake callipers and unique 20-inch wheels. As with the outgoing G55 AMG, the G63 AMG also receives side mounted exhaust pipes that exit from underneath the rear doors on either side.
Both of the G-class’s standard engines are retained for the 2012 model year, including the 383bhp naturally aspirated 5.5-litre V8 and 208bhp 3.0-litre V6 common rail diesel in the G500 and G350 BlueTec respectively.
Further up the line-up, the 12-year-old G55 AMG’s long running 500bhp supercharged 5.4-litre V8 finally makes way for a 544bhp version of AMG’s contemporary twin-turbocharged 5.5-litre V8 engine in the new G63 AMG.
The big news, however, surrounds the addition of a plush new G65 AMG range-topping model to the G-class line-up. It runs an earlier evolution of the twin-turbocharged 6.0-litre V12 engine recently confirmed for the SL65 AMG. With 612bhp, it is described as the most powerful series production four-wheel drive on sale right now.
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Re: Revised Mercedes G-class revealed
Jaguar Land Rover <- Hello, anyone in there - stop mucking about and just upgrade the Defender - even Mercedes knows how!
Re: Revised Mercedes G-class revealed
It is funny how this car engenders such a great deal of affection, from myself included.
I think it must appeal to the thing that got most of us interested in cars in the first place - a- mixture of mad, funny and cool that has generally been lost in a po-faced world of car manufacturers who have forgotten that to a greater or lesser extent, anything more than a basic Golf diesel is pointless and silly.
I am not saying "pointless" and "silly" as bad things, quite the opposite in fact. They are the very essence of what made the world fall in love with Ferrari's and Lamborghini's of old. Enzo knew this too by all accounts, and bizarrely, Audi seems to now with Lamborghini as well. But despite the fact that modern Ferrari's are far more impressive than any of their predecessors, I really don't think the operators of Ferrari do.
I digress. But there is certainly a derranged lunatic working at AMG, and God bless him.
Re: Revised Mercedes G-class revealed
I'd rather have this than a Porsche Cayenne. Easily.