By the 50th anniversary of AMG in 2017, the Mercedes
performance division will produce 30,000-plus units per year. That's up
from today's 20,000 or so, and AMG will boast a catalog of 30-plus
models. Despite that very full range, this new CLA45 AMG is certain to
be an important contributor on all accounts.
The thrill monitors at AMG have a long-established reputation for
creating large, open-road rockets that err on the side of brute force
and everyday comfort over zippy, tight-feeling sports car finesse and
balance. The strategy has worked wonders for the company's sales ledger
and created handsome levels of profit per unit, but entire developing
sectors of the premium hot-car market have been knowingly left out of
the AMG equation. While there are exceptions, AMG has never been
considered a maker of truly agile machinery that's easily tossed around.
The very first thing that we notice while driving the CLA45 AMG – on
schedule for North American deliveries beginning in April with a
reported starting price of $47,450 – is exactly how lively its new
4Matic chassis can be. It's an entirely new feeling for an AMG, and it's
entirely welcome by us. Some will complain about the price being asked
for this super CLA-Class, but this little sedan is a true AMG of the new
genre, and as such, it might just be something of a bargain.
Physically, we have a top-trim CLA with a handsome leather interior,
very nice performance seats in front and some AMG aero extensions and
trim bits to highlight the stance and darker side of the 45 AMG. The
standard wheel is an 18-inch set, but our tester came dressed in
19-inchers, an option to be made available in a Driver's Package that
will also extend the speed limiter to 167 miles per hour. Our first
CLA45 tester was fitted with the Euro-standard lower and stiffer setup,
and it was already very sharp. Combined with a 30:70 torque split on the
4Matic all-wheel drive and the sticky Dunlop Sportmaxx RT tires –
235/35 ZR19 91Y front and back – the CLA45 can be snapped around
entertainingly between tight curves.
Yet the CLA45 only really pops all of your senses when fitted with the
optional AMG performance suspension and exhaust system. In this fully
optioned chassis, the front springs are 20-percent stiffer and rear
units are 22-percent stiffer. So, if you get one of these, opt for both
of those plus the 19-inch alloys. Thus prepped, you're bound to
seriously enjoy yourself.
We were in on earlier ride-and-drives with the engineers of this little
AMG. At that point, Benz reps admitted they wanted to improve the
electro-mechanical steering's crispness and fidelity. Boy, do they seem
to have worked out the bugs, because we felt very sure behind the wheel.
Our time with the CLA45 stretched over some hilly north-central German
country roads and lots of no-limit Autobahn. (Track time at the new and
very hilly 2.6-mile Bilster Berg Drive Resort was in an Edition 1
trimmed A45 AMG.) The AMG-specific front axle treatment and
re-engineered elasto-kinematics of the multi-link rear axle make this
CLA45 unrecognizable to the AMG family we thought we knew all these
years.
Certainly, the 147 additional horsepower (peaking at 6,000 rpm) and 74
greater pound-feet of torque (between 2,250 and 5,000 rpm) supplied by
the new 2.0-liter four-cylinder engine helps things a bit. This
sweet-feeling 355-horsepower, 332-pound-feet-of-torque powerplant
(internally called "M133") has been gifted with a wild maximum
turbo-boost pressure of 26.1 psi from its big twin-scroll Honeywell
unit, which is clearly visible when the hood is lifted. The mood button
on the center console that corrals the drivetrain includes modes for
Controlled Efficiency, Sport and Manual, and in either of the latter two
settings, your optional exhaust will flap open and make you smile
throughout the rev range and the seven shift points of the dual-clutch
AMG gearbox.
As much as we can rave about this machine, we noticed something that the
AMG dudes will only halfway admit: The A45 AMG, which we won't get in
North America, is a tick better at all of this performance driving stuff
than the CLA45. It would have been outstanding to try an
all-boxes-ticked CLA45 around the track against the A45 AMG Edition 1
cars we did have. The trouble is that the CLA45 launches in Europe this
September, whereas the A45 starts selling right now, so there were no
spiked CLA45s yet for us ham-fisted press mooks.
Compared to the A45 AMG hot hatch, the CLA45 is more of an acutely
warmed-up little grand tourer. This is not actually a criticism at all,
and we sincerely dig the CLA45. But it just feels a tiny bit
disingenuous to pull this punch from our trunked cars. AMG insists that
the suspension calibrations are all identical between the two models,
but every sophisticated yaw sensor on our bodies tells us that the whole
story has yet to be shared. The weight difference between the A and the
CLA is only 66 pounds trim for trim, so that doesn't account for it,
either – perhaps it has something to do with distribution?
With the three-stage ESP all the way off and our most aggressive track
driving packed with high lateral g-force maneuvers, we could feel the
ESP Curve Dynamic Assist chiming in ever so slightly. Or to put that
into plain English, we noticed the torque vectoring system while
wringing the car out. On this ideal tarmac under the early summer sun,
though, we didn't really need or want it to kick in, since the CLA45 was
nailing every line through every single transition and weight shift. On
these AMGs, when you've got the Speedshift dual-clutch transmission in
manual mode, the gears are held at the rev limiter, unlike in the CLA
250 Sport. What's more, in Sport or Manual, shift times are exactly as
quick as on the SLS AMG GT.
Along with this true manual treat, the redline has been extended 200
rpm up to 6,700 rpm. Downshifting is still frequently forbidden, most
annoyingly, right when you might need it heading into curves, and second
gear is too short to be of much use anyway, but the turbocharged torque
rush helps out there.
Even though we'd like a Black Series CLA45 that collaborates in some
clever way with the rear-biased 4Matic, we are definitely fans already
of this 2014 Mercedes CLA45 AMG. The chassis sensations alone are
happily unlike anything we've ever felt from Affalterbach. Sooner or
later we won't hesitate to mention the AMG lineup in the same breath as M
from BMW or even Porsche.
AMG may arguably already be there in certain cases, but it takes time
to break old perceptions that have been engraved over decades. The CLA45
is a fantastic start for a better, nimbler AMG.
Courtesy of autoblog.com

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