Autocar UK – 31 July 2019

(lu) #1

MERCEDES X-CLASS DRIVE


3 1 JULY 2019 AUTOCAR.CO.UK 59


hey’re making them


too fancy these days,”


declares Cam, juggling


a schooner outside the


iconic Prairie Hotel in


outback Australia.


Nestled on the tailgate of a top-


shelf Mercedes-Benz X-Class, the


w e l l lubr ic at e d lo c a l i s k e e n t o le a r n


why anyone would consider the


three-pointed star over the favoured


ride out here: Toyota.


We mention the price, which is


almost enough to get you into a BMW


Z4. It’s certainly enough to blow more


than the froth off his (latest) ale.


LOADING UP


Our journey began with beer the


previous day.


Blame it on Mercedes-Benz.


When the world’s oldest car maker


announced its first off-road pick-


up (or ute, as they’re called Down


Under) in 2016, it proudly boasted


it w ou ld c a r r y up t o 17 f u l l k e gs of


frothing golden nectar in its tray.


It’s a claim we couldn’t let through


to the keeper, prompting a visit to


the Coopers brewery in Adelaide, a


c ompa r at i v e m i n now b y A u s sie b e e r


standards but the largest locally


owned brewery.


As we’re watching a forklift


guiding matt metallic cylinders to


our X250d, we uncover a Brexit-like


issue with the 17-keg claim: it only


applies to the base X-Class, a car that


lacks the four-wheel drive system


mandatory in the outback. Ours


also has an automatic transmission,


electric seats and other luxuries that
shave previous kilos off the payload.

A recalculation confirms that


to dip in below the 1021kg payload


of our car, we’re limited to 14 kegs,


allowing for a driver.


Turns out that the lower limit is a


ble s si n g. W it h e a c h r ol l of t he


keg onto the tray, the Merc’s


r e a r e nd s a gs p e r i lou sl y


close to its bump stops.


The X250d follows


its Nissan cousin in


eschewing leaf springs for


coils at the rear, with the


aim of upping control and ◊


Mercedes reckons the X-
Class can carry 17 kegs of


beer, (^) but there’s a (^) catch...

T
Our X250d
was nicknamed
‘the speedboat’ for
its tendency to stick
its fully loaded
nose in the air.

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