Mercedes-Benz SLK55 AMG
                     Mercedes-Benz SLK55 AMG 
We know that AMG, the high-performance wing at Mercedes-Benz, has a  pretty good handle on engine tweaking—just look at its spring catalog.  AMG offers up 14 models, each packing no fewer than eight cylinders and  outputs ranging from 355 horsepower to a mind-boggling 604 horsepower  and 738 pound-feet of torque.
                       Mercedes-Benz SLK55 AMG And although we've rarely knocked an AMG vehicle for lack of  straight-line juice, neither have we been known to heap praise on the  entire package, as it's been our experience that these souped-up cars  are sometimes overweight and underperforming on the skidpad and during  back-road boogies.
                       Mercedes-Benz SLK55 AMG Now, lest you think we're making excuses for this new SLK55, AMG's  least-powerful car, let us introduce a previously unused AMG performance  trick: Mercedes' seven-speed automatic. The German automaker introduced  this transmission for 2004, but until now the most powerful engine it  was bolted to was the company's 302-hp, 5.0-liter V-8, so all AMG models  had to rely on the five-speed automatic. So what are a couple more gear  ratios going to do? Let us explain.
                            Mercedes-Benz SLK55 AMG The previous-generation car, the SLK32 AMG, had a supercharged and  intercooled 3.2-liter V-6 putting down 349 horsepower and 322 pound-feet  of torque. The last one we tested ["Topless Toys," C/D, August  2001] weighed 3265 pounds, scampered to 60 mph in 4.5 seconds, and  crossed the quarter-mile in 13.0 seconds at 110 mph. Now, the SLK55's  24-valve, 5.4-liter naturally aspirated
                    Mercedes-Benz SLK55 AMG Despite this fact, the SLK55 outaccelerates its predecessor, ripping to  60 mph in 4.3 seconds and clearing the quarter in the 12s—precisely,  12.7 seconds at 111 mph—largely because of improved gearing, not just  power. Still not convinced? How about this: The 400-hp Corvette in a  recent comparo ["It's-All-About-Me Roadsters," C/D, March 2005] outguns this SLK55 by 45 horsepower and 24 pound-feet of torque, and weighs 155 fewer pounds.
                    Mercedes-Benz SLK55 AMG Yet the Vette ties the SLK at 4.3 seconds to 60 mph and loses the  quarter-mile race by a 10th, 12.8 versus 12.7 seconds. And that was a  six-speed manual Corvette, not the wimpy four-speed automatic. Or  consider this: The SLK55 matches its big brother E55 from 0 to 60  mph—despite the E55's 469 supercharged horsepower propelling fewer  pounds per pony—and is just 0.2 second slower through the quarter-mile.
              Mercedes-Benz SLK55 AMG Besides the overachieving numbers, acceleration runs are just so darn  pleasing in the SLK55. Modulate the throttle for launch to produce an  appropriate amount of wheelspin, and then hammer it—the rest is taken  care of for you. With the closely spaced cogs, the engine is always kept  in a sweet spot between 5000 rpm and the 6700-rpm redline; thus,  acceleration is never peaky, just strong and constant, with upshifts  executed nearly manual-tranny quick. Mercedes says AMG's modifications  to the standard seven-speed netted 35-percent-faster shifts, and the  tranny must swap ratios quickly since it has to shift twice before  reaching 60 mph in the SLK55. Delayed reactions would spoil any  increased performance from the enhanced gearing.
             Mercedes-Benz SLK55 AMG







