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Image for article titled First Drive: The 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ Is A Beautiful Electric Porpoise

Photo: Elizabeth Blackstock

When I saw the 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ in person, I laughed out loud, the same way I’d laugh at an ugly-cute goofy pug with a silly face and a perpetually stuck-out tongue. What on earth is this? Why do you look like that, huh? Aw, such a cutie!

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The EQS450+ was my first experience with a Mercedes-Benz, and it was certainly a confounding one. I had a great time. I was also confused. I loved it but had no desire to ever own it or be seen driving it on a daily basis. It’s the kind of vehicle that requires you to see the reflection of beauty through a not-so-beautiful veneer — and honestly, I love that for the EQS.

Full Disclosure: Mercedes provided the EQS450+ to A Girls Guide to Cars during our three-day test drive of multiple vehicles. I got a chance to take it for a short spin. All opinions are my own.

Image for article titled First Drive: The 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ Is A Beautiful Electric Porpoise

Photo: Elizabeth Blackstock

Image for article titled First Drive: The 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ Is A Beautiful Electric Porpoise

Photo: Elizabeth Blackstock

What Is It?

The all-new EQS is Mercedes’ first effort at using a platform exclusively designed for electric models, and it’s also the first fully-electric vehicle from the brand’s EQ line to make it over here to North America.

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I drove the Pinnacle trim of the Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ during my test drive. The standard model includes the following features:

  • $102,310 starting price
  • 329 horsepower and 419 lb-ft of torque
  • One motor, rear-wheel drive
  • Adaptive air suspension and rear-wheel steering
  • 107.8 kWh usable battery capacity
  • 350 miles EPA-estimated range
  • 0.20 drag coefficient
  • 70 percent charge in 35 minutes with a DC fast charger
  • 11 hours and 15 minute charge for Level 2 charger

The model I drove also added:

  • The 56-inch curved Hyperscreen ($7,230)
  • Augmented reality head-up display ($2,000)
  • Exclusive Trim ($1,575) that added things like massaging seats, four-zone climate control, and an in-dash climate menu

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There’s also a much more powerful EQS580 trim if you want its 516 horsepower and 611 lb-ft of torque. Its $120,000 starting price is also much higher.

Image for article titled First Drive: The 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ Is A Beautiful Electric Porpoise

Photo: Elizabeth Blackstock

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Image for article titled First Drive: The 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ Is A Beautiful Electric Porpoise

Photo: Elizabeth Blackstock

Okay, Let’s Talk About Those Looks

The Mercedes-AMG EQS 450+ is kind of cute in an ugly way, like how you look at a porpoise and think, “That is the cutest thing I’ve ever seen.” That largely comes down to two descriptors I can only think to describe as Long and Round.

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You’ll probably hear some reviewers talk about sleek lines or futuristic curves that cut through the air with excellent aerodynamic efficiency. Not me. This car is goofy-looking as hell from the outside, and I absolutely adore it for that reason. It’s not sexy. It’s not pretty. It’s not really classy. It’s a shapely blob, for which I am sure there is a market.

But that shapely blobbiness is great for anyone who spends their time inside this car. The 126.4-inch wheelbase makes for a spacious interior where rear-seat passengers will luxuriate in plenty of arm and legroom. It’s also comfortable for a shorter driver like myself, which can be a difficult feat for a larger sedan.

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It’s ultra luxurious, reminiscent of the standard S-Class sedan in the sense that you can climb behind the wheel and feel right at home — as long as your home features headrest pillows, ambient lighting, massaging leather seats, and a near-executive rear seat.

The strangest part, though, was climbing in and being surrounded by screens. I’ll talk more about the tech below, but the Wall Of Screen was a serious contrast to what was otherwise a warm and comfortable interior. The addition of mega-screens makes the EQS feel cold and utilitarian inside. That’s fine if that’s the vibe you’re going for — a lot of automakers think ‘electric’ must equal ‘spartan and modern’ — but it just didn’t work for me. That’s an aesthetic you have to commit to all the way through the interior of the car, and that’s not what happened here.

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Image for article titled First Drive: The 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ Is A Beautiful Electric Porpoise

Photo: Elizabeth Blackstock

Image for article titled First Drive: The 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ Is A Beautiful Electric Porpoise

Photo: Elizabeth Blackstock

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How Does The Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ Drive?

I can’t give you many comparisons here. This was my first time driving a Mercedes, so I can’t compare the EQS to a combustion-engined S-Class. I also can’t compare it to its Tesla or Lucid competitors in the EV world. I can only give you my vacuum impressions. You may do with them what you will.

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That being said, the drive in the Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ was delicious. There’s an exceptional blend of power and lightness that makes for a really unique experience behind the wheel. If you’re cruising on the highway or through a subdivision, you’ll feel like you’re floating on a magic carpet. The Benz absorbs all the bumps, and its near-silent cabin creates a feeling of isolation. It’s just you, hovering around through the world.

But if you’re taking a sharp turn or accelerating, the EQS450+ really highlights where EVs shine. All that torque goes immediately to the wheels, so all your throttle inputs will be instantaneous. It’s a really satisfying feeling that reminds me of the days when I used to go for long-distance runs, where I’d hit mile five and find this groove where I felt powerful, like every step I took was propelling me through the world both physically and metaphorically. I felt grounded.

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The transition between floating and settling down into the pavement isn’t jarring, either. You can feel the Benz hunker down and make the most of that minimal drag coefficient as you press the throttle. It’s an incredible experience.

Image for article titled First Drive: The 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ Is A Beautiful Electric Porpoise

Photo: Elizabeth Blackstock

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Image for article titled First Drive: The 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ Is A Beautiful Electric Porpoise

Photo: Elizabeth Blackstock

Image for article titled First Drive: The 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ Is A Beautiful Electric Porpoise

Photo: Elizabeth Blackstock

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An SUV Masquerading As A Sedan

Because of its length and weight, the Mercedes-Benz EQS 450+ feels a lot more like an SUV than it does a sedan. It’s not cumbersome to drive or park, but you can never shake the sense that you’re driving an absolutely massive piece of machinery. It reminded me of a more tech-heavy version of my 1996 Suburban than it does a traditional sedan — but that’s probably not a terrible thing for a market that wants Really Big Vehicles.

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The electric motor provides instant torque, and you’ll get 10-degree rear-axle steering, so this car doesn’t handle like an SUV in certain ways. You can swing into a tight space at the grocery store no problem. You can jump from start instantly. But I couldn’t shake the feeling that I had a formidable yacht around me, an absolute beast of the sea. It was heavy, though not impossible to maneuver. It was large but not impossible to drive. It’s all those Large Parts of an SUV without the higher hip height. It makes for a bit of a strange driving experience.

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Image for article titled First Drive: The 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ Is A Beautiful Electric Porpoise

Photo: Elizabeth Blackstock

Image for article titled First Drive: The 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ Is A Beautiful Electric Porpoise

Photo: Elizabeth Blackstock

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I Don’t Know What To Do With All This Tech

My husband used to be a sales associate at a Mercedes-Benz dealership in Montreal, and he’s spent the entire duration of our marriage telling me that no automaker is as luxuriously high-tech as Mercedes. I have never discounted this observation. I’ve just also never felt the need to drive an extremely tech-heavy car. I still have a hard time dealing with a tiny infotainment screen.

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So I think it’s probably a little bit of an understatement to say that the EQS’s offerings are a bit overwhelming. After I laughed out loud at the exterior, I also laughed out loud at the absolutely massive Hyperscreen. I wanted to ask it if it was compensating for something. I wanted to ask why such a cute fella needs such a big screen.

Functionally, the Hyperscreen is great. A single piece of curved glass, it’s a gorgeous feat of technological innovation that works with rapid speed due to an eight-core processor and 24 gigabytes of RAM. You tap on anything, and there’s not going to be lag. You’re immediately transported to the place you chose to go in the infotainment system.

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The graphics are also gorgeous, but again, it’s a little bit Much. There’s a screen for the driver, one of the passenger, and a tall screen in the center, and in those latter two, you can access everything from radio controls to vehicle settings to satellite maps to photo galleries to video games. I did poke around the Tetris game and found it took a while to load but was otherwise fun. I still can’t imagine myself using an infotainment screen instead of my phone for gaming, though.

Even worse, you still get a lot of glare, despite the fact that Mercedes tried its best to avoid that. There’s not really anything you’re going to be able to do about the reflection of the sun when it’s especially bright.

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You can also navigate with conversational commands after saying, “Hey Mercedes.” As in, you can say something like, “Hey Mercedes, I want coffee,” and your car will find you the nearest coffee spots. I used to hate voice commands because it was next to impossible to actually get what you were asking for, but this modern iteration that you see on luxury cars has really changed the game. I don’t have to think up the robotic command I’d need to change the radio station. I can just say it.

The digital dashboard was also one hell of a feature. You can cycle through tons of different displays, most of which are just mind boggling. You can literally have your navigation map displayed on your dashboard — and I don’t mean you get a little box that has navigation. The whole screen turns into a map. I’m sure some folks will enjoy it, but it was massively overwhelming for me.

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As was the augmented reality navigation, which feels a little bit more video game-y than anything else. Maybe I’m just too old to appreciate these things.

Image for article titled First Drive: The 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ Is A Beautiful Electric Porpoise

Photo: Elizabeth Blackstock

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The Verdict

It’s difficult to offer a verdict for a car that I can’t compare to the other vehicles in its class, I can say that the 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ is a delightful vehicle that transforms much of what makes Mercedes special into a flagship luxury sedan — but it does feel like the German automaker couldn’t decide what it wanted to do. It tried to combine modern austerity with Benz’s traditional elegance, and it works… but it’s probably not going to work for everyone. It didn’t work for me, but it could very well work for you. And you know what? I respect a delightfully polarizing car.

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Image for article titled First Drive: The 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ Is A Beautiful Electric Porpoise

Photo: Elizabeth Blackstock

Image for article titled First Drive: The 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450+ Is A Beautiful Electric Porpoise

Photo: Elizabeth Blackstock

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Image for article titled Tesla's Latest FSD Beta Doesn't Seem Ready For Public Use, Which Raises Big Questions

Image: JDT/Tesla/YouTUbe I recognize we write a lot

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I googled it, and apparently you can in fact surf in Texas

Elon Musk hasn’t”made a secret of his current distaste for California, as well as his preference for Texas. “He called”the California’s COVID constraints” fascist,”he’s shared a worrying lack of point of view on Texas ‘s anti-abortion legislation, as well as he’s currently moved into a little home on SpaceX’s Austin school. Advertisement Currently, he’s taking his firm on

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Image for article titled If Waymo Can't Do It Then I Wonder If Anyone Can

Photo: Getty Images (Getty Images) Self-driving vehicles is a deep dive from Bloomberg, which, after some throat-clearing gets to the complying with essential bit, focus mine:”There’s not a whole lot in assembly,”then-CEO John Krafcik, a former auto executive, stated at an occasion that year. In reality, experienced disassembly is needed. Engineers must uncouple the automobiles as well as placed them back together by hand. One lost cord can leave designers confusing for days over where the issue is, according to a person accustomed to the operations that defines the system as difficult and prone to quality troubles. Like others who talked candidly about the firm, the previous employee asked not to be determined for concern of revenge.

The meticulous nature of the process has left Waymo without a sensible path to automation, the person says. Waymo has actually reduced components orders on the Chrysler minivan project and has actually had far fewer Jaguars delivered than initially expected, according to individuals acquainted with the automakers’ strategies.

The Waymo spokesperson states the firm is not supply-constrained in Detroit, which it’s on track to strike all its internal manufacturing targets with Jaguar, however decreases to share details. The firm additionally disputes that it’s fallen back routine on creating its Chrysler vehicles, keeping in mind that these agreements are “liquid as well as conditional.”

Currently, in the contemporary globe of automobile mass production, saying that a business builds its autos by hand is primarily a slur, the example people liked to sling at Tesla in the old days.

This is since it is presumed that, if you don’t have an extremely automated manufacturing process, you can not scale, as well as if you can not scale then there is trouble at the heart of your service. As Tesla has revealed, it is feasible to overcome such bumps in the roadway, yet not without a great deal of money and dramatization in the interim, which will check Waymo and also Google moms and dad Alphabet’s willpower. This is also to claim nothing of the modern technology itself, which still isn’t Level 5 independent fail-safe, and also relatively vice versa.

G/O Media may get a commission Given that Waymo has actually gone to this for over a years currently, I would think that it would take quite a bit for Alphabet to surrender, however also Waymo’s longtime CEO gave up in April, the example that is either a rich person picking to proceed or, perhaps, a harbinger of ruin. That is waiting in the wings? There we have GM’s Cruise, Ford and also VW’s Argo AI, and also I think Zoox is still kicking around; you’ll keep in mind that Uber< a class="sc-1out364-0 hMndXN sc-145m8ut-0 cYiQhX js_link"data-ga ="[ [.”Embedded Url”,”External link”,”https://www.theverge.com/2020/12/7/22158745/uber-selling-autonomous-vehicle-business-aurora-innovation”, ]] href=”https://www.theverge.com/2020/12/7/22158745/uber-selling-autonomous-vehicle-business-aurora-innovation”target= “_ blank”rel= “noopener noreferrer”> surrendered on its autonomous desires late last year. Let’s not also talk about Tesla’s extremely suspicious project. Will self-driving cars ever before be a thing? Virtually every one of the evidence still points to: No.

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data-height=”900″data-lightbox=” real”data-recommended=”true “contenteditable=”false” draggable =” incorrect “> The Morning Shift All your day-to-day cars and truck news in one hassle-free place. Isn’t your time more crucial? Tesla is getting involved in it with the National Labor Relations Board, but it’s not about reducing unions or inadequate work environment problems.

In fact, wait

, it has to do with that. It’s also regarding a tweet. All

that as well as extra in The Morning Shift for April 5, 2021. Advertisement 1st Gear: Elon’s Tweets Must Remain Unconstrained It will always be interesting to see where a business digs in its heels. These are the concerns that are important to that service. When it comes to Tesla, Elon being cost-free to tweet whatever he seems like, driving supply costs to a frenzy, is a vital part of the operation. We understand this because Tesla wants to eliminate about it, as Reuters records: The electric-car manufacturer submitted a petition on Friday with the New Orleans-based U.S. Court of Appeals to review the NLRB’s choice as well as order issued on

March 25. In the request, Tesla asked the court to evaluate the order and grant Tesla “any further relief which the Court considers just as well as fair.”Last month, the NRLB ordered Tesla to direct Musk to delete the tweet as well as to publish a notification dealing with the illegal tweet in any way of its centers across the country and also include language that says” WE WILL take appropriate actions to make certain Musk adhere to our regulation.”To be reasonable,

the tweet concerned wasn’t a Harambe joke or some Dogecoin increase, but Elon claiming that Tesla has no need to union-bust, as it already has a really secure work environment, thanks quite! 2nd Gear: NHTSA Is Pretty Active For An

Organization That Owes This Whistleblower $13.7 Million The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration was able to press Hyundai and also Kia right into recalls and also a current $210 million settlement over engines confiscating as well as catching fire. The male accountable was a whistleblower, Kim Gwang-ho. Congress got NHTSA to establish a program to pay him for his trouble completely back in 2015.

Released from Passover constraints, I really feel astounding degrees of food power surging through my capillaries. I will certainly spend today eating a troubling number of bagels.

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Illustration for article titled I'm Not Sure If I Think Volkswagen Is Really Changing Its Name To Voltswagen, But Let's Talk About The Original
Screenshot: CALTECH 1968

As I suspect you’ve heard, Volkswagen of America is claiming that they’ll be changing their name to Voltswagen of America, as a way to highlight their new focus on electric vehicles. You may also have heard that we at Jalopnik are pretty skeptical this is really happening, to the point that our bossman Rory said he’ll get a VW tattoo if they do it. It’s April Fool’s day the day after tomorrow, people. More significantly, though, is that “Voltswagen” for an electron-powered VW is by no means a new name. In fact, it goes back to at least 1968.

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Photo: Engineering and Science October 1968 (Other)

Sure, VW is playing it up, with the Voltswagen name used on their website showcasing the ID.4, and they did tweet this:

Okay, okay, we get it. Maybe VW will use the Voltswagen name in specific EV branding, but I’m not sold they’re changing the name of the whole company in the U.S. to “Voltswagen of America.”

We’ll see how it plays out on April first. Until then, I’d like to talk about where I think the Voltswagen name first came from, and I’m happy to say it’s a pretty fun story.

It’s from the Great Electric Car Race of 1968.

That first Voltswagen (well, until we find out about an earlier one) was a 1958 VW Type 2 bus, owned by Caltech student Wally Rippel, who converted it to electric power around 1966 or so, and drove it around town to, as Caltech’s magazine Engineering and Science reported back in 1968,

“…to demonstrate an alternative to smog.”

Rippel then became part of an electric car team at Caltech that challenged an MIT team to a cross-country electric car race: the Caltech team would drive from Pasadena, California to Cambridge, Massachusetts, and the MIT team, in a 1968 Chevy Corvair donated by GM and converted to electric power at MIT, would travel in the opposite direction.

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As you might have guessed, attempting this sort of cross-country EV race back in 1968 was borderline bonkers. It wouldn’t even be easy to do today; back then, it was almost Sisyphean.

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To accomplish the feat, 54 charging stations were established along the 3,311 mile route, placed between 21 and 95 miles apart. Some of these charging stations were extremely improvised, like this one in Winslow, Arizona that looks to be tapping right off a small roadside power transformer:

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Photo: Engineering and Science October 1968 (Other)

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The race was, by all accounts, something of a shitshow: long charge times for both cars (45 minutes to an hour), the MIT Corvair caught on fire, one of the Caltech drivers got the mumps, both teams ended up burning out critical components (motors, transformers, etc), and both teams made significant use of ice to cool the batteries.

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Photo: Popular Science Jan 1969

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The Caltech team only used 50 pounds of ice, and only when recharging their lead-cobalt (a variant of lead-acid) batteries. The MIT team’s more advanced nickel-cadmium batteries constantly struggled with overheating, and had to be packed full of ice pretty much all the time, with the team using 350 pounds of ice during the trip.

The race was a great underdog vs. rich kid sort of story, like most movies made in the 1980s. Where Caltech’s Voltswagen was just a student’s personal project car, built using pretty basic and mainstream electrical tech, MIT’s donated brand-new Corvair was cutting-edge in every respect at the time, and as a result was faster (it could do about 60 MPH instead of 55) and was supposed to have a longer range, and recharge faster, as well. It even had a special aerodynamically optimized front facia. It did look pretty cool.

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The advanced NiCad batteries used by the MIT team were worth $20,000 in 1968 dollars—that’s about $151,000 today! MIT was not playing around, here.

In practice, though, the technical advantages really didn’t come to matter at all. The MIT car was plagued by technical snags and, while it technically finished the race before the Caltech bus, penalties assessed for all the time it had to be towed en route (the Corvair had to be towed 250 of the race’s first 500 miles at a penalty of 5 min per mile!) eventually gave the win to Caltech, with a time of 210 hours—30 minutes less than MIT.

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Photo: Popular Science Jan 1969

They won by just 30 minutes! That’s amazing!

The Voltswagen wasn’t all that primitive, though—it did have the ability to do some regenerative braking, using the motor driven by the wheels to generate electricity to recharge the batteries, which was used on a long downhill grade into Needles, California.

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Photo: Engineering and Science October 1968 (Other)

Caltech’s Voltswagen proved a few crucial things: sometimes proven reliability beats bleeding-edge tech, and if you’re doing a cross-country drive, it’s great to have a vehicle you can easily sleep in.

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You really should read through the whole Caltech article; it’s a fascinating look at how far we’ve come and a great insight into how clever and bold these early EV pioneers were.

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Photo: Engineering and Science October 1968 (Other)

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Wally Rippel, the owner of the Voltswagen, later went on to work for JPL and then later Tesla, helping to develop the motor for the original Tesla Roadster around 2006.

Maybe Volkswagen will really become Voltswagen. Maybe not. Either way, it’s worth taking a moment to commemorate that original 1958 Voltswagen, the winner of the first ever Great Transcontinental Electric Car race.

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