2010 Mercedes-Benz E250 Reviews

You'll find all our 2010 Mercedes-Benz E250 reviews right here. 2010 Mercedes-Benz E250 prices range from $10,010 for the E-Class E250 Cgi Elegance to $21,670 for the E-Class E250 Cdi Avantgarde.

Our reviews offer detailed analysis of the E-Class's features, design, practicality, fuel consumption, engine and transmission, safety, ownership and what it's like to drive.

The most recent reviews sit up the top of the page, but if you're looking for an older model year or shopping for a used car, scroll down to find Mercedes-Benz E-Class dating back as far as 2009.

Or, if you just want to read the latest news about the Mercedes-Benz E250, you'll find it all here.

Used Mercedes-Benz E-Class review: 2004-2013
By Ewan Kennedy · 18 Nov 2013
The Mercedes E-Class is a prestigious medium-large car that’s been reinvented in recent years. Once a conservative model, it has become pretty stylish as the Germans aim for a wider range of buyers.
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Mercedes-Benz E250 2010 Review
By Karla Pincott · 29 Nov 2010
What were Mercedes Benz thinking when they put a diesel engine into their sexy E250 Cabriolet?  Remarkably good thinking as it turns out.  The engine is quiet, gives bucketloads of torque at low revs, and delivers sporty performance when asked.Add to that the build quality and attention to detail that have been the hallmark of Mercedes Benz in recent years, and you have a car that’s easy to drive around town and on the freeway, fun on the twisty back roads, and won’t punish your wallet when you come to fill up.VALUEIf you’re shopping for a Mercedes you’re shopping at the luxury end of the car market, right?  So stop messing around, decide that you want the Mercedes, look at the sticker…. then buy it anyway.The E250 Cabriolet has a ticket price from $94,762 in the petrol version (CGI), with the CDI (diesel) version starting at $101,202.That’s not cheap, and you have to weigh up what you get – which includes the gunsight badge – against rivals like the Lexus I250 and BMW 330D convertible.TECHNOLOGYBuy a German car, and you can be sure that latest technology will be the main course, not just a side salad.  What Mercedes have got right is making this easily accessible to the driver.  The satnav is fairly intuitive and easy to operate with the central knob that also controls radio, phone and information.All of the controls were easily reachable from the drivers seat, labelling was clear and easy to understand.  And the big win was having a mute button on the dashboard to silence the satnav voice, although she sulked after that and refused to continue the conversation. Admittedly, a little time spent with the manual might have coaxed her back.BlueEfficiency is the name Mercedes gives to both the petrol and diesel engines in the E-Class.  The 250E CDI is a four-cylinder 2143cc unit, producing 150kW at 4200rpm.  More impressive is the torque, with 500Nm delivered at between 1600 and 1800rpm. In comparison, the  petrol engine also delivers 150kW, but at 5500rpm, and it only manages 310Nm of torque.  Fuel consumption is 5.8-6.0 l/100km with emissions of 148g/km of CO2 (Mercedes official figures)DESIGNThe black car we drove had tan leather seats; the leather trim continued into the door panels set these off beautifully.  The range of materials available to manufacturers now means that having acres of plastic on the dashboard was disappointing.Seating is comfortable and an adult could be shoehorned into the rear, but the Cabriolet roof takes up most of the boot space.  Think about carry-on, but no checked baggage on this trip.SAFETYMercedes has long stressed their commitment to passenger safety, and no less than nine air bags are provided within the passenger cell.  An active bonnet is standard equipment, the aim of which is to reduce injury to pedestrians or cyclists by raising the rear of the bonnet by 5cmStandard equipment includes ‘Attention Assist’ -- the Mercedes ‘drowsiness detection’ system, or really the ultimate ‘Driver Reviver’.  If your driving makes the car think that you are nodding off it will remind you to take a break – by popping a coffee cup up on the driver’s display. Or at least, the image of a cuppa. Perhaps future development in Stuttgart will see a steaming mug of the real thing delivered onto the dash.Available as optional equipment are a lane tracking package that uses the white lines on the road to warn you if you are using more than your share of the road, and ‘Distronic Plus’ -- a forward looking radar that will hit the brakes for you before you hit the car in front.DRIVINGSitting in the E250 is more like being in a cockpit than a cabin - the car wraps itself around you.The turbocharged engine delivers loads of torque down low, and if you’re gentle with the throttle makes for a sedate drive.  That’s compounded if you’re in the full auto mode, where it puts more emphasis on fuel economy than fun driving.But if you give the pedal a nudge – or better still, slip it into sports mode and start using the shifter – it gives snappier response, although there is a slight delay as the revs come up, the turbo boost chimes in, and the car picks up its heels and takes off. But it gets away from the lights at a very respectable pace, and the steering is precise and accurate.And the cabin is surprisingly quiet, given that the folding roof is a cloth one. We drove this through an unseasonal downpour – which might be deafening in other softops – and found that the thrumming was muted enough to not impact on normal conversation.The speedo is large and easy to read, with numbers wrapped around an LED display for the cruise control – flick this minder on, and the arc of LEDs lights up to show the speed that you’ve set.VERDICTThe diesel may not be the engine of choice for everyone, and it carries a hefty price tag, but the improvement in economy and CO2 emission reductions are significant.MERCEDES-BENZ E250 CDI DIESEL CABRIOLETEngine: 2.1-litre 4-cylinder turbo dieselPower: 150kWTorque: 500NmTransmission: 5-speed automaticFuel consumption: 5.9L/100km (combined cycle)Wheels: 17-inch 5-spoke alloys
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Mercedes-Benz E-Class 2010 review
By Kevin Hepworth · 30 Mar 2010
Mercedes-Benz has drawn a full house for its E-Class family with the arrival of the soft-top convertible. The final member of the E stable joins the sedan, coupe and wagon to give those who enjoy open-top touring an option that doesn't involve any risk to a loose-fitting toupee.Like the Coupe, the Cabriolet owes a good deal of its DNA to the C-Class platform rather than the larger and newer E-Class underpinnings. However, again like the Coupe, there is little lost in the exchange and in the case of the drop-top much gained by way of new comfort features.The headline technology for the Cabriolet is the all-new Aircap which joins the company's proven Airscarf system to keep occupants snug and unruffled through even the coldest weather. While the Airscarf (unveiled in the SLK a couple of years ago) blows warm air across the back of the neck from vents in the top of the seats, Aircap works by creating a virtual roof with directed airflow from the top of the windscreen over the passenger compartment. This is facilitated by a mini wing which rises 6cm from the top of the windscreen at the touch of a button to ensure cold external air is forced up and over the passenger compartment.An additional benefit is that the less disturbed air flowing through the cabin reduces wind and road noise, making it easier for occupants to carry on a conversation.Mercedes-Benz Australia spokesman David McCarthy says the decision to develop the E-Class Cabriolet with a soft-top rather than the more up-market folding metal roof, pioneered by Mercedes-Benz six years ago and now favoured by many manufacturers, was driven by customers."Customers told us that they wanted a soft-top to differentiate the car more clearly from the Coupe," McCarthy says. "The customers wanted it and we wanted to satisfy those needs."The four-layer roof developed for the E-Class is as good, if not better, than any on the market. Noise insulation is excellent, the styling in no way detracts from the look of the car with smooth flow lines across the roof and an elegant storage solution into its own compartment behind the rear seats that allows a couple of airline roll-on bags and several soft sportsbags to be comfortably stowed in the boot. At 20 seconds to stow or deploy it is not the quickest available but it can be operated up to 40km/h.Across the range the cabriolet is serviced by a brake package that is both strong and durable. A run through Victoria's twisting alpine roads showed that even in the nose-heavy V8 the last application of the brakes was as effective as the first.The speed sensitive rack and pinion steering in both cars has a nice meatiness and a comforting directness that transmits input from the driver to the wheels in as timely a manner as feedback is sent in the other direction. It is not as sharp as the BMWs but more than adequate for what will mostly be a boulevard cruiser.On the safety front the Cabriolet wants for nothing with a full suite of active and passive acronyms. There are nine airbags, electronic stability control, brake assist, adaptive brake lights (which glow brighter in an emergency stop), Pre-Safe (which prepares the car for a collision when sensors deem one unavoidable), adaptive high beams and distronic plus cruise control.Not a personal gripe, but some drivers with smaller hands may find the steering wheel a bit chunky.Mercedes will launch the E-Class Cabriolet in Australia with two models, the 285kW and 530Nm 5.5-litre V8 E500 ($186,950) and the 200kW and 350Nm 3.5-litre V6 E350 ($139,950). A 1.8-litre turbo four-cylinder petrol version, the 150kW and 310Nm E250 CGi will arrive in May for $105,950 while a 150kW and 500Nm 2.1-litre four-cylinder turbo diesel completes the engine linup when it arrives in July."Demand for the diesel engines is definitely growing," McCarthy says. "In the SUV models diesel makes up the majority of sales while for the passenger vehicles it is up to almost a quarter of all cars sold."At the first Australian drive of the Cabriolet in Melbourne this week the Cabriolet's new comfort technology was given a stern test on a cold and wet Victorian morning. It passed with flying colours. There is a noticeable decrease in wind buffeting within the cockpit with the window-mounted deflector deployed and a consequent improvement in the ability to hold a conversation. It is not quiet, but it is quieter.While the comfort factor of the roofless E-Class is the wow factor being pushed by Mercedes, the driving synamics of the car are being allowed to slip quietly through ... and that's a mistake because this is one of the best examples of just how to make a convertible behave like a coupe.A coupe-like construction philosophy for the body — strength and more strength with a traditional b-pillar construction up to the waistline of the car, extra stiffening of the windscreen frame to rollover standard — which works in concert with the pop-up rollbars behind the passengers, and stronger chassis cross-bracing all culminate in an ability to toss the E-Class freely into corners without fear of body or chassis torque threatening to unload the wheels.The only engines on hand for test this week were the V6 and V8, of which the eight is certainly the pick for any with a need for power and deep pockets to match. The seven-speed automatic box is a good match to both engines, for differing reasons.In the V8 fat torque curve means that maximum attack is never too far away and the ability to dump a couple of ratios quickly gives the cabriolet a lightness of being that belies its rather hefty 1840kg kerb weight. In the V6 the call to action is not as immediate but the ability to cruise effortlessly in the higher gearing does mean the hit at the bowser is not as severe with an average combined economy of 9.8 litres per 100km seemingly very achievable.
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