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Test-Driving The Mercedes-Benz EQE 500 4Matic: Practical EV Luxury

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Mercedes EQE 500 4MATIC proved over the course of a week that in many regards electric vehicles are far superior to their internal combustion equivalents, at least here in sunny suburban California. EQE is a sophisticated luxury CUV, not a hairshirt statement, not a virtue signal for early adopters who want to prove they are somehow saving the planet. First and foremost, EQE is a Mercedes-Benz.

Thanks to a larger battery for 2024, EQE 500 offers 269 miles of range and under certain circumstances up to 340 with a wink and a nod. EQE 500 can not only easily meet my modest daily demands with minimal home charging during the week, but more significantly can meet the rigorous daily demands of My Lovely Attorney. EQE 500 can execute her thrice-weekly commute to Downtown Los Angeles (DTLA) and manage weekly in-neighborhood errands without a mandatory seven night per week charging regimen.

If we add to our commuting calculus jaunts from DTLA to client meetings in Beverly Hills or Malibu to the north or Laguna in the far south of Orange County, then EQE 500 can in most cases return home with at least a high 2-digit and even a 3-digit margin of range still on the clock, to be plugged in overnight. No panicky nail-biting, no need to stop at public charging stations in the dark when battery and human are both exhausted and simply want to be home, no bouts of paranoia.

Until arrival of the AMG variant, which is aimed at acceleration junkies like me, 500 4MATIC is the highest evolution of EQE. Acceleration is impressive but free of drama: no sturm und drang, no screaming engine, no violence as the power hits the drive system. The motors produce an electric equivalent of 402 horsepower, but as always, the key figure is torque, in this case a walloping 633 lb. ft., which charts this SUV/minivan on the borderlands of sports car and performance SUV. As measurable, the AMG variant will thrust resolutely into super-sedan and Super-SUV territory.

Expressing their delight from the back seat, the tykes loved the smooth, gushy, and rapid gathering speed, laughing and giggling every time the two electric motors were fully unleashed. EQE vaults by dawdlers with impunity.

The little ones concluded EQE’s artificially generated sounds resemble those of Sebulba’s race pod in the Star Wars prequel “The Phantom Menace.” An electric twang under acceleration, and kush-kush-kush under braking. Artificial or not, these subtle sounds help the mind comprehend acceleration and braking far better than just the near-silent physics of Vector Dynamics 101.

Following the California skateboard template, EQE 500 has batteries slung low midships, with an electric motor mounted in the nose and another at the rear, hence “4MATIC” 4-wheel drive. That power is not just to entertain adult males who refuse to fully grow up. If changing lanes before the next light is required make a left turn, outrunning the pack is easy, a lane change accomplished in clear space.

EV powertrains allow very long wheelbases, affording big doors that can open to 75 or 80 degrees. On EQE the rear door is a generous parallelogram, the rear wheel arch not intruding much. Because the vehicle is taller than its 4-door EQE sedan sibling, entering is a process of leaning in and slightly dipping a knee to find a comfortable leather chair. No need for a step stool as with most Detroit full-size truck-based SUVs. Tall males can enter the rear seat with only minimal head-ducking.

A point about range. Mercedes conservatively claims 269 miles of range, but the onboard calculator offered me 343 miles as a maximum from 100 percent charge, likely because most days I am scuttling along boulevards and 2-lane suburban streets, albeit with the occasional full-throttle blitz to entertain myself.

Still, a week in the life of EQE also illustrated the significant failings of the supporting infrastructure and the need to be master of your own fate when recharging, to have home charging combined with ready access to charging at the workplace.

Discussing EQE with a former colleague, who possesses BS and MS in engineering and served as quality engineer on a highly collectible supercar, he mentioned his son in London, who drives a compact German EV most days, but keeps his older clean-diesel CUV for trips to the Midlands or the north. His son laments England’s horrific public charging facilities. His son’s experience exactly mirrors my own, except California has much bigger and broader boulevards and highways, allowing full-size vehicles like EQE.

This leads to the one and only negative, illustrated during planning for a spring break tour of Spanish missions dotting the California Central Coast. Review of charging options, including remote sections of the Central Coast, mandated a gasoline vehicle instead of EQE. Near perfect as it might be in town, EQE is not suited to long-range meandering, mostly because of charging infrastructure.

The answer is simple, and should be incorporated into governmental planning, assuming we can find politicians and regulators who are not engineering illiterates and unicorn herders. In fact, in just the past month I’ve had the perfect pairing that should serve as a systems role model for not only the government crazies here in California, but also in D.C. The new Mercedes E-class has a highly efficient gas-electric hybrid powertrain, an excellent option for longer range trips. I could use either E-class or EQE in my daily life. If My Lovely Attorney has a longer trip to a client meeting or wants a long weekend trip, well, take the E-class. The E-class eliminates any concerns about the horrible charging infrastructure—there’s enough tension on family outings without panics over charging.

Other members of my informal editorial board admit that over time EVs can potentially take up anywhere from 25 to perhaps even 40 percent of the passenger vehicle fleet, particularly here in California where conditions flatter EVs. But we unanimously agree that the all-or-nothing position of Green extremists is insanity.

The answer is the portfolio approach that the best car companies have mapped out: EVs for urban/suburban duties, gas-electric hybrids, pure gasoline for that small percentage of high-performance and off-roading vehicles that in fact log very few annual miles, and eventually hydrogen fuel cells for everything utilitarian from Class 8 tractor trailers to UPS delivery trucks and super-duty pickups. That is a template that almost any rational American can accept.

EQE embodies Mercedes’ elegant 21st Century design philosophy that melds Bauhaus with French Curve. EQE is an impressive Mercedes-Benz luxury vehicle that just happens to also have an electric propulsion system.

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