Like an Electric Spaceship: Hitting the Road in the Mercedes-Benz EQS

PCMag
PC Magazine
Published in
5 min readDec 20, 2021

The German automaker’s first battery-electric vehicle for the US market offers a dashboard-spanning array of touch screens for car enthusiasts with deep pockets.

By Rob Pegoraro

The new Mercedes-Benz EQS sedan lacks two traditional features of the German automaker’s US-market cars: a trunk and an internal combustion engine.

The EQS, a sleek, four-door hatchback with six-figure pricing, is the first Mercedes distributed in the States with a battery-electric drivetrain. A high-tech, high-performing land yacht, it occupies the opposite pole of the electric-car world from Nissan’s compact, affordable Leaf.

(Photo: Mercedes-Benz)

Both trim levels of the EQS are built around a 108-kilowatt-hour (kWh) battery. The EQS 450+, starting at $102,310, has a 245 kW/329 horsepower electric motor driving the rear wheels, while the EQS 580 4Matic, $119,110 and up, features dual motors with a combined 385 kW/516 hp powering all four wheels.

As the first model of a US EV lineup set to expand to the smaller EQE sedan and the EQB seven-seat SUV, the EQS qualifies for the federal electric-vehicle tax credit—not that purchases in this price bracket likely hinge on that $7,500 incentive.

(Photo: Rob Pegoraro)

EPA estimates give the EQS 450+ a 350-mile range, with the 580 rated for 340 miles. Those numbers, below EPA figures for such upmarket rivals as the 516-mile Lucid Air, may be conservative; European benchmarking put the EQS range at up to 478 miles, and Edmunds.com’s testing around Los Angeles yielded a 422-mile range for the 450+.

The EQS charges via a standard CCS port on the passenger side. Mercedes says a 200 kW DC fast-charging station will zap 186 miles of range into the battery in 15 minutes (the vehicle comes with two years of free 30-minute visits at Electrify America chargers), while a household 240v outlet will need more than 11 hours to recharge it completely.

On the Road With the EQS 580

In a roughly half-hour drive around Tysons Corner, Va., and nearby highways last week, an EQS 580 offered both vault-like insulation from the surroundings and velocity to get away from them. It treats a driver to the usual electric-vehicle virtue of instant pickup—electric motors shove torque straight to the wheels, without a gas engine’s need to rev up, and then translate that energy through a crankshaft and gearbox.

The EQS 450+ (Photo: Rob Pegoraro)

Mercedes says the EQS 580, notwithstanding its 5,888-pound weight, can clock 0–60mph in 4.1 seconds. DC-area traffic did not permit independent verification of that, but I did confirm that this vehicle can slingshot itself out of a stoplight and onto a highway.

An electric drivetrain also makes for much simpler, cheaper maintenance—a point the EQS underscores with a hood that’s not designed to be opened except by a service shop.

While Benz lacks a gas engine’s roar, it can fill its quiet cabin with its own soundtrack of preset “Sound Experiences.” Of two I auditioned, “Silver Waves” generally hewed to the usual whirs and hums of an electric powertrain, while “Vivid Flux” added whooshes and zooms as if I were maneuvering out of Spacedock instead of pulling out of an intersection.

(Photo: Rob Pegoraro)

The starship ambience continues with the 580’s “Hyperscreen,” a 56-inch trio of displays that span the full dashboard and come accessorized with color-changing LED strips that evoke mood lighting but can also flash red to warn of a too-close car.

The driver’s screen features a variety of digital renditions of dashboard functions. The only physical controls readily within my reach from the driver’s seat were the buttons and switches on the steering wheel to adjust the audio volume, operate the traffic-sensitive cruise control, switch through performance and regenerative-braking options, and toggle between display modes for the screen in front of the wheel.

Like Tesla’s all-encompassing touch-screen interface, this “MBUX” setup risks adding to a driver’s cognitive load, especially for new drivers still learning its layout.

(At the end of November, Mercedes conducted a recall of 227 EQS and gas-powered S-class vehicles to address a misconfiguration that let people watch TV and browse the internet while the vehicle was in motion.)

One of the more conservative driver’s screen styles available. (Photo: Rob Pegoraro)

The display features Mercedes’ own navigation system—which, in places with the necessary road infrastructure, Virginia included, adds a countdown timer for the next stoplight. The car includes built-in T-Mobile LTE but also supports wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto for your own phones, with USB-C ports near the dash and a Qi cordless-charging surface to keep those devices charged. A fingerprint sensor recognizes you to bring up your saved preferences.

The exterior of the EQS is studded with sensors to support an array of assisted-driving systems that in Germany now include automated driving at up to 37mph on closed-access highways charted in fine detail by Mercedes. But on the test car, the higher-end options weren’t enabled.

The driver’s seat felt remarkably comfortable, including a pillowy headrest backing. The backseat has ample space for three passengers, provided the middle human is on the svelte side. Behind them, the hatch opens to expose as much as 63 cubic feet of cargo capacity with the rear seats folded down—a remarkably practical touch in a car that can feel like an electric spaceship.

Originally published at https://www.pcmag.com.

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