Why we ran it: To see if a plug-in hybrid Mercedes S-Class could be as convincing an ultimate long-distance luxury saloon as its diesel ancestors
Month 6 - Month 5 - Month 4 - Month 3 - Month 2 - Month 1 - Specs
Life with a Mercedes S-Class PHEV: Month 6
Despite the presence of a plug-in hybrid powertrain, it was a true S-Class at heart - 16 November 2022
I concede I was sceptical, borderline cynical about the S-class. Well, this S-class if we’re being picky. If I’d been choosing it myself, I’d have had a diesel-powered S350d in a heartbeat, yes, even at two quid a litre or whatever ransom motorway services are charging this week. But where’d have been the story in that? The whole point of this car was to see if, at this level, a petrol-electric hybrid really is any kind of alternative to the diesels that have ruled the class for long. So the hybrid it was.
It turned up at the end of March and, save for a couple of weeks when it had to go back to base to fulfil some pre-existing commitments, stayed until the end of October, during the course of which I added not quite 12,000 miles to its digital odometer. It’s done all those things S-classes do – roamed around the UK, belted down European motorways and so on – but also a lot of things they tend not to. Of which more in a minute.
When it arrived, the feeling uppermost in my mind was not, you may be surprised to hear, a certain blissful joy at the knowledge of half a year in what I already knew to be the best mass-market luxury car in the world.
It’s a position the S-class has occupied since before I started doing this job in the late 1980s and previous exposure to the current generation suggested nothing was likely to change that now. It was worry. I’ve worked for Autocar since I’ve been in the business but left the staff 26 years ago, and as a freelance contributor, I’ve always paid for my own fuel. So question one was: could I even afford to run the bloody thing?
Happily, I had failed to take at least three points into sufficient consideration. The less important of the two was the fact that the 3-litre straight six motor is remarkably frugal, capable of putting almost 40 miles under the wheels of this heavy but slippery car even with a completely drained battery. The second was just how much electricity it scavenges back from the road. Look down at the rev counter on the gentlest descent and you’ll notice (because you cannot hear) that the engine’s switched itself off and the battery is being charged with energy that would otherwise have been lost to engine braking.





