TV evangelists tell us miracles happen. Maybe so.
Actually so, when it comes to the seemingly limitless power that’s pulled out of limited displacement engines.
Have a look, for instance, at this Benz CLA 35 AMG or rather under its clamshell hood. There you’ll find not much in the way of cylinders or size—just four of them and merely 2.0 liters, but somehow with 302 horsepower.
Wait, there’s more.
Benz pulls 382 horsepower out the same 2.0-liter four in the CLA 45.
And that’s probably not the full depth of the well, either.
What’s the limit?
Only Ernest and Mercedes know!
What It Is
The CLA is Mercedes’ other small sedan—the prettier (and faster) one.
It shares a basic platform with the entry-level A-Class sedan and comes with nothing larger than a 2.0-liter four. It also starts with front-wheel-drive, and all-wheel-drive (4Matic) is available.
The main difference between the two is the CLA’s “coupe-like” styling—as Mercedes styles it—which means a sharper windshield rake, a lowered roofline, and a stretch of about six inches to add to the sleekness of its look.
It also means a bit less headroom, but for most people, not meaningfully so, because Mercedes builds in a lot of seat adjustability such that even a driver well over six feet tall (like me) won’t brush his head on the headliner.
Surprisingly, you get more trunk, too—11.6 cubic feet vs. the A’s 8.6 cubic foot trunk, which is surprising given the more upright and formally styled A-sedan looks like the more practical of the two.
Mainly, it’s less expensive. Style doesn’t cost you practicality. But it doesn’t come free.
Prices start at $36,650 for the front-drive CLA 250 with a 221 hp version of Mercedes’ 2.0-liter four-cylinder engine vs. $32,800 for the base A220, similarly equipped.
Adding the optional 4Matic all-wheel-drive system raises the MSRP of the CLA to $38,650 (vs. $34,800 for a similarly equipped A220 4Matic).
The CLA 35 AMG is the hot one.
It gets the 302 hp version of the 2.0-liter engine, paired with a performance-calibrated version of the 7-speed automatic and standard AWD. This one also sits even lower to the ground and gets additional functional and cosmetic AMG-specific flourishes.
It’ll set you back $46,900 (vs. $44,950 for the AMG’d A).
There’s also an even hotter one.
It’s the CLA 45 AMG. It also has a 2.0-liter four but hand-built (and hand-signed), making 382 horsepower, bundled with additional performance/styling upgrades, including a drift mode that lets you smoke all four tires sideways.
It stickers for $54,800.
Mercedes doesn’t yet offer an A45 AMG in the US, but it’s probably coming soon.
What’s New
The CLA gets a significant makeover for 2020, including freshened exterior and interior styling for all trims, several inches more backseat legroom, a stronger standard engine, and a stronger top-of-the-line engine in the AMG 45.
Mercedes has also added the MBUX (Mercedes Benz User Experience) voice-command interface to the CLA’s roster of standard equipment. It was introduced just a few years ago exclusively in Mercedes’s top-of-the-line S and E-Class models.
What’s Good
• Adjusts your back via your right foot.
• Almost S-Class features for about $40k less to start than the base price of an S-Class.
• Sexier looking and more practical than the more practical-looking A-Class sedan.
What’s Not So Good
• Looks cost more.
• The displacement of this car’s gas tank (just 13 gallons) needs increasing.
• You can get just about everything that’s available in an E or an S, except Mercedes’ to-die-for massaging seats.
Under The Hood
Every CLA comes standard with a 2.0-liter four. There is no optional displacement, but there are three power levels.
The baseline is the CLA 250’s lightly turbocharged version. It summons 221 horsepower (a bump up from 208 last year) and 258 ft.-lbs. of torque at 1,800 RPM.
It’s sufficient to get the CLA 250 to 60 in 6.3 seconds while also managing 25 MPG in city driving and 35 on the highway—the latter figure in the same ballpark as several current-year economy cars, which don’t have 221 hp and do not get to 60 in just over 6 seconds.
Or look like this.
For even quicker, Benz offers the AMG 35 version of the CLA. It also has the same displacement 2.0 liter four, but with heavier turbocharging and higher-volume injectors, among the numerous upgrades responsible for its stupendous 302 horsepower rating.
It takes 4.6 seconds to run up to 60 mph. Cool!
East bound and down with a big three-pointed star leading the way!
A moment’s pause for reflection—closer in time than ’77. Back in ’95, I got to spend a week in a brand-new Ford Mustang Cobra R—a very limited production, just-barely-street legal Mustang intended for racing. It came with eight cylinders, 5.8-liters, and 300 horsepower. It also came without AC, carpets, or a back seat.
The Benz has all three plus the three-pointed star and two more horses from half the cylinders and a third the displacement.
We have come a long way, baby.
Almost as impressive as the little four’s power is its appetite, which is the one thing that is small about it. In fact, it is only slightly thirstier than the base-tuned version of the 2.0 liter four in the CLA250: 23 city, 29 highway.
Summoning my best Paul Prudhomme Cajun TV chef voice, “I can guarantee you the Cobra R I drove back when never approached the Benz’s city mileage — even on the highway.”
But for some buyers, more is never enough. For them, Mercedes offers the CLA 45 AMG, with its hand-built version of the 2.0-liter four. Same displacement but beefier block and internals. All the good stuff needed not just to make 382 hp but to hold up while making and delivering it.
So equipped, the CLA can get to 60 in the high threes, and it still gets 20 city, 29 highway.
On The Road
This thing is in its way a kind of high-rent take on popular AWD/turbo’d Rally cars like the Subaru WRX. The boy racer for the boy who grew up but still likes to play when no one’s looking.
And who needs a car that won’t embarrass him when people are.
Of course, if you buy one in superfly electric yellow (not the actual paint code, but it ought to be) like the one Mercedes sent me to test drive, you won’t be fooling anyone about your intentions.
In which case, be sure to fill up before you act on them so that you don’t have to stop for Smokey.
Being a small car, the Benz has a small tank. Just 13 or so gallons, which empties almost as fast as the car drives. Not because it isn’t capable of almost-economy car mileage, but because driving this car like an economy car is like buying an ice cream cone just to look at it.
The Cobra R I drove back in 1995 had a larger-capacity for fuel, and I didn’t have to stop for gas from DC to NYC, which only took a bit more than two hours (read more about that here).
On the upside, it takes less time to instill 13 gallons of premium unleaded than 20—the Cobra’s capacity. So, with the Benz, you’re ready to go fast again, sooner.
Like other AMG-massaged Benzes, the CLA AMG comes with an active exhaust system that works like an extra turbo. It has a kind of wastegate built into the pipes that release backpressure in time with each of the seven-speed transmission’s upshifts.
Still, it’s almost disappointingly quiet—given what it can do. That is the one piquant missing from this salsa.
Sound.
It’s not because the CLA’s four is small. There are many banshee-sounding fours. But they are high-RPM fours, which are usually paired with a manual transmission and designed on purpose not to make much power until you make them holler.
Some of the best of these don’t sound like much until the tach needle swings past 5,000 RPM. The sweet spot is in the vicinity of 7,000 or even higher (that’s you Honda S2000).
Then they do.
The Benz’s four relies on boost down low to make the torque of a six. And in the case of the CLA 35 and CLA 45 versions, the torque of a V8. This gets you going without much revving but without the scream or the burble.
Some thought should be given to adding some whistle from the turbo—for the AMG versions, at least. These are, after all, performance cars and performance people appreciate the sounds of performance as much as how well the car actually performs.
Why keep it a secret?
AMG versions of the CLA do get additional driver-selectable programs the non-AMG models don’t. This includes the new Slippery setting and, naturally, Sport+ which ramps up everything from throttle tip-in to the aggressiveness of shift points and the furioso look of the twin flat-panel display. That was something else that used to be found exclusively in the most expensive Benz models only. The backlighting shifts to reddish, bar readouts of boost, horsepower, and torque appear.
All versions come with the godawful stop/start system (ASS, literally) that automatically cuts off the engine (and the AC, which is driven by the engine) every time the car stops moving. Then restarts it when you take your foot off the brake and press down on the gas after a sight but noticeable delay.
You can turn the ASS off by pressing the button just under the ignition on-button. It can also be permanently defeated legally.
At The Curb
It’s interesting that the most stylish of the two As, the CLA, is also the more practical of the two—at least, for the moment.
The 2020 CLA, which is heavily updated, is about two inches longer overall than it was last year (184.4 inches vs. 182.3 inches) and so about six inches longer than the current A-Class sedan (179.1 inches).
Backseat legroom in the CLA has increased to 33.9 inches vs. 27.1 inches last year. It now has the same room for legs in the back as the A and more room for stuff in its trunk, which is 11.6 cubic feet vs. 8.6 cubic feet in the current A220.
There is less headroom in the CLA.
38.5 inches for the driver and front seat passenger, then sloping backward with that sexy roofline to 35.7 inches for the backseaters vs. 40.3 inches upfront in the A sedan and 37.2 in the back.
However, the lower roofline can be compensated by lowering the seat. The back seats can’t be lowered, but there’s still adequate space for most adults and all kids. The CLA doesn’t pretend to be a family car. But its stylishness doesn’t preclude it from serving as one when “sedan-like” practicality is needed.
Visibility all around is surprisingly good given the abbreviated roofline and side glass, which is also frameless, adding to the elegant vibe.
The flat-bottomed, extra-thick, and small-diameter AMG steering wheel looks almost as good as steering wheels used to look before the airbag blob ruined their shape.
The rest of the interior looks like an S-Class interior on a two-thirds scale. Virtually the same dual flat-panel main gauge and secondary/infotainment cluster fitted together in such a way as to look like a single flat panel display. It also has the same attractive and functionally superior ball-type air vents (superior to square ones that can direct airflow up and down/left and right but not in any direction) and cabin-suffusing ambient mood lighting, which includes the vents.
The Rest
One of the few things you can’t get in a CLA (or an A) is a wagon. Or a hatch. Both are available in Europe.
Also, the massaging seats that are available in the more expensive Benzes.
Likely, even these features will eventually filter down to less-expensive and even entry-level Benzes, just as the dual-flatscreens and everything else (just about) already has.
This includes the Mercedes Benz User Experience (MBUX), which you can use to talk to your Mercedes. Literally. Ask it a question. Ask it to do something. And it does.
Well, almost everything. It won’t conjure a plate of hot sausages, but that, too, is probably in the works.
The Bottom Line
It used to take a big engine to get big power.
It doesn’t anymore.
Comments?
*** Photo courtesy of Caricos