Ultimate Sedan Comparison: Mercedes-Benz C63 AMG
Points: 380.9
An enormous, throbbing engine encased in a sports-sedan exoskeleton...that, in brief, describes the C63 AMG, the latest recipient of the 6208-cc V-8 that's hand-assembled by a single technician at the AMG plant in Affalterbach, Germany. And although it makes the scales groan at a 3920-lb. curb weight, the 451-bhp C63 leaps off the mark to a test-best 4.1-sec. sprint to 60 mph, and a ground-shaking 12.5-sec. pass through the quarter mile.
The "ground-shaking" part isn't complete hyperbole, as thick chunks of sonic energy get hurled out the quad tailpipes with every articulation of the throttle pedal. And wheelspin (with traction/stability control off, naturally) is never far away. Said Monticello: "Any C63 owner who doesn't go through a set of rear tires in 5000 miles or less should turn his car in at the 'Weenie Depot.'" (Disclaimer: Mike's opinion is not necessarily the opinion of the entire R&T staff.)
Of course, there's great satisfaction in stepping the tail out incrementally, and turning that power mostly into forward thrust. A competent ally here is the 7-speed automatic, dubbed AMG SpeedShift Plus, a paddle-shift gearbox whose three modes offer increasingly quicker shifts. In Manual mode, for instance, cog-swapping is 50 percent quicker than in Comfort, with Sport falling in between. But even in Manual, the shifts seem a bit lethargic compared to the Lexus; and the steering-wheel paddles are smaller than those of its Japanese rival. At least there's automatic rev-matching on the downshifts.
One might think that the C63's massive engine up front would hobble the Benz with nose-heaviness and understeer, but with 56/44 front/rear distribution, a 1.8-in.-wider front track and suitably adhesive Pirelli P Zero tires (235s in front, 255s in back), the C63 gives the
M3 a run. In corner-carving sharpness it's not quite a scalpel, but a high-quality buck knife after 10 minutes with a whetstone. Steering feel, communicative and with a slightly higher effort level than the others, ranked second after the BMW, and everyone was impressed with the stability control's Sport mode, which allows significant yaw angles before intervening. Said Bornhop: "A perfect safeguard for those wanting to have some fun on an unfamiliar back road."
The C63 also looks the part, with German Touring Car-Lite fender flares, mean-looking extractor vents ahead of the front wheels and a tasteful small trunklid spoiler, though some took issue with the 18-in. wheels, since all others roll on 19-in. stock. Simanaitis offered a counterpoint: "They look less boy-racer and certainly don't compromise the C63's progress."
Inside, the Lap-of-Hockenheim fantasy continues with by far the most aggressively bolstered front seats and an exquisite D-shaped sport wheel. Our test car was fitted with the Multimedia Package, with a display screen that electrically articulates into view when the car is started, then retreats within the dash on shutdown. Gauge-wise, a large floating-needle speedometer is front and center, its interior containing readouts for gear selection, trip computer functions, etc. It's a great driving environment, but those bulky front seats do compromise rear-seat leg room (tightest of the lot). And since we're in nitpick mode, Mercedes should really do something about the dash finish, whose flat, weathered-looking texture is at odds with all the other nicely turned-out bits.
So huge power and prodigious, tire-pulverizing torque end up ruling the day. That should surprise no one, but that once-stodgy Mercedes can tune a chassis that compares favorably with its perennial Bavarian rival...well, that gets our attention. And while none of these super sedans can spin its wheels at the end of the straightaway in high gear, the C63 comes the closest.
- RoadandTrackmag