Browse over 9,000 car reviews

Mercedes-Benz SLC 300 2016 review

EXPERT RATING
7
Paul Gover road tests and reviews the Mercedes-Benz SLC 300 with specs, fuel consumption and verdict.

Paul Gover road tests and reviews the Mercedes-Benz SLC 300 with specs, fuel consumption and verdict.

Mercedes refreshes a familiar formula and puts the $100K two-seater in the sweet spot.

If the Mazda MX-5 had a big brother it would look, feel and drive a lot like the latest Mercedes-Benz SLC.

The German two-seater has just had a midlife tickle that includes the new name for a car that began life two decades ago as the SLK. It's a little cheaper and a little sharper, with new safety gear and a standard nine-speed automatic gearbox.

This is the third-generation car and the sweet spot is held by the new SLC 300, which is not as snoozy as the 200 or raunchy as the 43 AMG and feels most like a grown-up MX-5.

Then again, with a price tag from $99,855 it should be good, since the same money would deliver a pair of MX-5s for your garage. Plus a hatchback.

Planners have sprinkled some AMG fairy dust with 18-inch alloys, body kit, lowered sports suspension and the multi-mode driving for the engine and gearbox.

After 20 years, the SLC is a familiar package with its two-seater body, folding metal roof and choice of engines. The boot is a little bigger and more usable, there are three versions of the roof and the maker claims to have improved performance and economy alike.

"The renamed compact roadster remains an ideal combination of passion and rational commonsense, appealing to both the heart and the mind," says Benz sales and marketing boss Ola Kallenius.

In Australia, the SLK has been more popular with women but the new model is expected to win more blokey buyers ... not just for the AMG 43 with twin-turbo V6 (270kW/520Nm).

The name change is part of a universal switch. Benz's SUVs are now aligned to the similar-sized sedans, from GLA to GLS.

The SL gets its C from the C-Class. There are four models, from the base 180 at $70,900 to the AMG 43 (pictured, and on cover) at $134,615.

Mercedes-Benz Australia says it has "realigned" the pricing (not-so-subtle code for price cuts) so the SLC 180 has had an effective $12,000 cut on its SLK 200 precedessor.

There's no real change in performance but there's more equipment, as in all variants.

Standard are Garmin satnav, heated front seats, reversing camera, digital radio, Apple CarPlay and leather seats that actually reflect solar rays.

Benz not surprisingly is making the most noise about the hottie SLC 43, with newly developed sport suspension, AMG brakes, sports leather seats, LED headlights and Harman Kardon audio.

On the road

Until now, the SLK has been an underachiever at Benz. The basic models were underpowered and overpriced and the SLK 55 AMG — with an explosive V8 that turned it into a snub-nosed revolver — had way too much engine for the chassis.

The SLC 300 is a revelation. Australian planners have sprinkled some AMG fairy dust with 18-inch alloys, body kit, lowered sports suspension and the multi-mode driving for the engine and gearbox.

On a practical level, there is keyless operation and the Airscarf that blows heated air over your neck to extend the number of top-down days.

The 300 is a four-cylinder but, with the turbo and new nine-speed auto, it gets along. It's fast when I want, calm and quiet when I like and, returning 6.3L/100km, it's good for trips.

The best thing is the balance of the package. It's swift but never unruly, the sports suspension compliant without getting too stiff.

The drive mode selector means I can leave it in Eco for commuting and dial it up to Sport+ on Sunday morning down the river valley to exploit its 180kW/370Nm.

The new gearbox spoils the driver for choice. Sport+ does the hard work for keen driving while keeping fuel consumption down and giving the mid-range response that's best for everyday work.

With the top up, the car is quiet. Fold the roof and it's surprisingly blow-free, with reasonable boot space.

I almost need to be stopped to operate the folding roof — other cars do the job more quickly at up to 40km/h — and the test car has a glass sunroof. Why? Surely you put the top down when the sun is shining.

The basic opaque roof is fine but Benz buyers also get the choice of a glass insert for about $3500 or switchable glass — like the electronic privacy glass in upscale hotel bathrooms — if you have more than $6000 to splash about.

The seats are comfy but, among the few little niggles, the audio is underwhelming.

Verdict

The SLC 300 is a pleasant car at a reasonable price. I'm not sure it's for me, in fact I would prefer an MX-5 at less than half the price, but it's more appealing now than in the past.

What's new

Price - Starter price down by $12,000, with similar value improvements on other variants.

Equipment - Reversing camera is standard, as are heated seats. Trick leather trim now reflects light to stay cooler in the sun.

Performance - Nine-speed auto improves flexibility and economy on all cars. SLC 200 still makes 115kW/250Nm despite 1.6-litre turbo four.

Driving - SLC 300 gets lowered AMG sports suspension for best driver involvement. There's full-house 43 AMG for real enthusiasts.

Design - Not much to see, although AMG wheels and body kit lift the 300's impact.

Could the new Benz drop top be your summer driver? Tell us what you think in the comments below.

Click here to see more 2016 Mercedes-Benz SL-Class pricing and spec info.

Pricing guides

$46,990
Based on 3 cars listed for sale in the last 6 months
Lowest Price
$45,800
Highest Price
$49,990

Range and Specs

VehicleSpecsPrice*
SLC180 1.6L, PULP, 9 SP AUTO $40,700 – 47,850 2016 Mercedes-Benz SLC-CLASS 2016 SLC180 Pricing and Specs
EXPERT RATING
7
Pricing Guide

$45,800

Lowest price, based on 3 car listings in the last 6 months

View cars for sale
Disclaimer: The pricing information shown in the editorial content (Review Prices) is to be used as a guide only and is based on information provided to Carsguide Autotrader Media Solutions Pty Ltd (Carsguide) both by third party sources and the car manufacturer at the time of publication. The Review Prices were correct at the time of publication.  Carsguide does not warrant or represent that the information is accurate, reliable, complete, current or suitable for any particular purpose. You should not use or rely upon this information without conducting an independent assessment and valuation of the vehicle.