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Mercedes-AMG CLA45 4 MATIC

Warning: Weapons-grade four-cylinder underhood

Mercedes-AMG CLA 45
Review - When Mercedes-Benz sends a model to AMG for high-performance finishing school, it’s hardly news. But until the CLA, nearly every car to make the trip to Affalterbach was packing an engine with a “V” cylinder layout. (The C30 five-cylinder diesel was the lone exception, and it never made it stateside.) So when the power brokers at AMG began dropping not-so-subtle hints that they’d already had their way with the CLA’s inline four-cylinder powerplant, our curiosity was piqued. Would the result be a roguish, hair-triggered toy or a true CLS63 AMG mini-me, blending breathtaking power with Mercedes style and luxury?

Sound and Fury
If you’re expecting the deep-throated burble of its bigger AMG brethren on startup, you’ll be disappointed. The CLA45’s exhaust note at idle is more akin to an air compressor kicking on in the neighbor’s garage than a menacing V-8. But it would be a mistake to write it off on tone alone. AMG has managed to coax 355 horsepower and 332 lb-ft of torque from the 2.0-liter engine, much of it on the shoulders of a twin-scroll turbocharger capable of force-feeding the engine with up to a whopping 26.1 psi of boost. To make sure the internals stay contained under all that duress, AMG uses a special crankshaft, pistons, and a sand-cast aluminum block, which is stronger than the die-cast unit found in the pedestrian CLA250. A dual-clutch seven-speed automatic transmission with three driving modes funnels the prodigious output through a standard all-wheel-drive system.
Mercedes-AMG CLA 45 Engine
Thanks to a butterfly valve plumbed into the exhaust, the CLA45’s song begins to sound sweet around 3000 rpm and gets better as the revs climb. The power comes on early, pulling with the steady determination you’d expect from an engine that produces all 332 lb-ft of peak torque from 2250 to 5000 rpm; redline is 6700 rpm. Stay into it until it’s time to shift—automatically or initiated by the steering-wheel paddles—and you’ll be rewarded with a downsized version of the familiar bruuuump that accompanies gear swaps in the bigger AMG models. Using launch control, which allows the engine to climb to 4000 rpm before storming off the line catapultlike, we posted 0-to-60 times of 4.2 seconds and knocked off the quarter-mile in 12.8 with a trap speed of 110 mph.

Although the CLA has a front-drive bias, torque is variable up to a 50/50 split, the distribution based on a laundry list of factors: vehicle speed, steering angle, gear selection, accelerator position, lateral and longitudinal acceleration, and any differences in wheel speed. All that processing power translates to confidence-inspiring stability on the straights and mild understeer in the corners, traits that had us wondering if the CLA45 might be too sterile in our first drive. We found the speed-sensitive electric power-steering assist to be accurate if not chatty.
Selecting Sport mode delays stability-control intervention and allows for increased torque at the rear axle, making it easier to counteract understeer with a heavy right foot. You’ll be left to your own devices when the stability control is defeated entirely—in the CLA45, “off” truly means off—except during braking; AMG has granted the stability control a Hail Mary feature of sorts that reactivates stability control whenever your foot is heavy on the slow pedal.

Speaking of binders, we managed to haul the CLA45 to a stop from 70 mph in 152 feet. The discs span 13.8 inches in front and 13.0 inches in back, increases of 1.2 and 1.4 inches over the discs on the CL250. Repeated stops showed slight fade, but the pedal remained firm and high and the car straight.

Of Price and Prejudice
Performance aside, the CLA45 has a hard time hiding its comparatively humble origins. The interior follows M-B’s current design ethos, but a quick look at the plastics around the lower center stack and bottom of the door panels reveals where a lot of the cost cutting took place. We noted the car’s Jupiter Red finish peeking through a gap between the door panel and trim on the B-pillar, and the 5.8-inch display screen looks like an aftermarket unit due to the way it’s positioned atop the dash. Although it’s easy to get comfortable in the power front seats, room in the back is tight.
Mercedes-AMG CLA 45 Interior
By the time our test car cleared the order department, it had added the $2200 Premium package (satellite radio, dual-zone climate control, heated seats, Harman/Kardon premium audio, garage-door opener, compass, and auto-dimming mirrors), the $2370 Multimedia package (rearview camera; COMAND system and enhanced voice control with hard-drive nav, six-CD changer, 10-gig music storage, and SD card slot), and the Driver Assistance package (blind-spot warning, lane-keeping assist, and radar cruise control). From the à la carte menu we added Parktronic Advanced Assist for $970, the Carbon Fiber package (front splitter, side sill inserts, and rear fascia trim) for $950, and a panoramic sunroof for $1480. All in, our car’s as-tested price reached $58,845, nearly double the $30,825 base price of a rank-and-file CLA250.

Whether that price discrepancy will help or hurt sales is up for debate: Certain buyers likely will dismiss the CLA45 as a pretender to the AMG throne, but its comparatively low price and fresh perspective on performance might entice a demographic less burdened with preconceived notions about what those three letters stand for. Regardless of how the sales numbers ultimately sort out, it’s a good bet Mercedes will find at least a few people looking for a car with a three-pointed star on the nose and a weapons-grade four-cylinder under the hood. Source By caranddriver.com

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