Posts Tagged ‘BMW 3-Series’

2007 Mercedes-Benz C-Class

October 28, 2008

Mercedes-Benz’s smallest sedan is largely unchanged for 2007, pending a 2008 redesign due in calendar ‘07. C-Class models are defined by their engines and by Sport or Luxury designations. Sports include a sport suspension, specific appearance details, and aluminum vs. wood interior trim. The C230 Sport has a 201-hp V6. The C280 Luxury has a 228-hp V6. The C350 Sport and Luxury have a 268-hp V6. Discontinued is the 362-hp V8 C55. The C280 and C350 Luxury are available with Mercedes’ 4Matic all-wheel drive. C230 and C350 Sports are available with a 6-speed manual transmission. AWD versions have a 5-speed automatic, all other models use a 7-speed automatic. Standard are ABS, traction/antiskid control, and curtain side airbags. Rear side airbags are optional. Options include a navigation system, bi-xenon headlamps, and 60/40 split folding rear seat.
Competition
Consumer GuideĀ® Automotive places each vehicle into one of 18 classes based on size, price, and market position. Premium Compact Cars are similar in size but more expensive than Compact Cars. Premium Compacts have more standard equipment and an upscale image when compared to Compact Cars.

Our Best Buys in the Premium Compact Car class are the Audi A4 and BMW 3-Series. Our Recommended picks are the Acura TSX and Audi A3.

New or significantly redesigned is the BMW 3-Series.

2003 Mercedes-Benz C-Class

October 28, 2008

Available all-wheel drive, revised engine choices, and new sport models make 2003 news for Mercedes’ least-expensive line. The C-Class offers sedan, wagon, and hatchback-coupe body styles. C230 models come as coupes or the new Sport Sedan. They use a supercharged 4 cyl, a 189-hp 1.8 liter in place of last year’s 192-hp 2.3. The C240 has a 168-hp V6 and comes as a sedan or wagon. C320 models have a 215-hp V6 and come in all three body styles after adding coupe and Sport Sedan versions for ‘03. The high-performance C32 AMG sedan has a supercharged 349-hp V6, sport suspension, and 5-speed automatic transmission. On other C-Class models, a 6-speed manual transmission is standard and a 5-speed automatic is optional. Mercedes’ 4Matic all-wheel drive is newly available for any automatic-transmission C-class sedan or wagon, except the C32. Sport versions come with sport-tuned suspension, body cladding, and aluminum interior trim. Sports and the C32 have 17-inch wheels, other models use 16s. Every C-Class has ABS, antiskid/traction control, front/rear side airbags, head-protecting curtain side airbags, and Mercedes’ BabySmart child-seat recognition system. A unique coupe option is the large Panorama sunroof that teams with a fixed-glass panel over the rear seat; each has a power sunshade. Mercedes’ TeleAid assistance system is standard on the C32, available for other models. A navigation system also is available, and high- and low-beam xenon headlamps are a new linewide option replacing low beams only.
Competition
This hotly contested segment has its benchmark in the Lexus ES 300. It blends comfort, style, luxury, and sport into an efficient package at an affordable price. ES 300 manages to offer a little more luxury than others in the class.

We Recommend the Acura TL, Audi A4, and new Infiniti G35. All offer comfort, speed, and nimble handling at attractive prices. The sporty and Euro-flavored BMW 3-Series is Recommended as a rear-drive alternative. The “3″ has enough bodystyles and engine choices to suit anyone. At the other end of the near-luxury spectrum is the posh and comfortable Buick Park Avenue–an old-school luxo-cruiser from Detroit.