2011 Mercedes-Benz SLS Reviews

You'll find all our 2011 Mercedes-Benz SLS reviews right here. 2011 Mercedes-Benz SLS prices range from for the SLS-Class SLS to for the SLS-Class SLS Amg.

Our reviews offer detailed analysis of the SLS-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 SLS-Class dating back as far as 2010.

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

Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG roadster 2011 review
By Glenn Butler · 21 Sep 2011
It is surreal to be driving through the streets of Monaco, home to the insanely rich and beautiful, its roads swarming with exotic cars… and everybody’s looking at me. Okay, its the SLS Roadster that’s turning heads and dropping jaws, not a slightly jetlagged journalist from Australia.The latest drop-top from the AMG magicians at Mercedes-Benz looks like sin, sounds like a road-going thunderstorm, and will have you grinning like a child locked in an ice-cream shop.It’s pointless applying typical value equations to a $500,000 roadster, because cars like the SLS Roadster will never make financial sense. Equally there’s little point comparing it to convertible versions of the Ferrari 458 Italia, Maserati Gran Turismo or Porsche 911 Turbo. Multi-millionaires buy these cars on emotion and desire more-so than pragmatism, and in that regard the SLS is worth every penny. For the power, the sound, the styling, the exclusivity, the sheer hedonism. No car delivers the ‘theatre’ of a supercar better, and it has the performance to match.If you must crunch the numbers, the SLS Roadster has all the luxuries found on the $464,000 Coupe plus a triple-layered folding soft-top that extends or retracts in 11 seconds at speeds up to 50km/h. And that, says Benz, justifies a $40,000 premium over the SLS Coupe.The Roadster is built on the coupe’s lightweight spaceframe chassis which mounts its 6.2-litre V8 low behind the front axle. New doors and additional chassis members front and rear to restore rigidity lost by removing the hardtop roof account for the 40kg weight increase over the 1620kg Coupe.The SLS’s 420kW V8 is one of the best sounding engines on the road today, a free-breathing technical highlight in a world fast succumbing to the efficiencies offered by turbochargers. And it’s matched by a brilliant seven-speed transmission that can change gears itself, or cede total control to you, though it can be a little slow to respond in manual mode.Despite the extra weight and subtle change in roofline and drag, the Roadster matches the Coupe’s 0-100km/h time of 3.9 seconds and 317km/h top speed, not that anyone will reach that in Australia, and its 13.2L/100km fuel consumption figure actually betters the Coupe’s by 0.1L/100km.The roof itself is a triple-layered cloth unit which makes the cabin quieter than most soft-tops when up. It retracts in 11 seconds and can do so at speeds up to 50km/h, giving occupants front-row seats at the mechanical symphony of the decade. Mercedes-Benz says the Roadster and Coupe were designed together from the start, which is why boot space remains relatively unchanged (173litres for the Roadster, 176 for the Coupe) despite stowing a folding roof between boot and occupants.One interesting technology point introduced with the Roadster, and now available on the Coupe, is a race-style telemetry system which can record lap-times and display real-time G-forces and pedal pressure, among other things. The AMG Performance system comes pre-loaded with many of the world’s most famous race tracks so owners can record their laps for later analysis. The system, which is an extra-cost option on Coupe and Roadster, is fundamentally similar to that fitted standard to HSV models, though Benz’s execution and graphics are superior.Some convertibles based on coupes look ungainly or ill-proportioned. Not the SLS Roadster. Roof up or roof down, it looks natural, cohesive and oh so sexy. The SLS Roadster’s sleek silhouette builds on the Coupe’s head-turning road presence, looking not unlike those sleek speedboats of the 50s and 60s most often seen on the emerald waters of the mediterranean.This is not a car for shrinking violets or conservative types. This is a 1950s roadster with modern muscle and rippling road presence. The interior strikes a beautiful balance between luxury and the overt sportiness of the exterior. It’s the perfect place from which to shred a mountain pass or cruise an sea-side boulevard.Don’t hold your breath for independent crash testing of the SLS in either coupe or roadster form. No independent lab would buy one when the same money would crash test a dozen popular models. Mercedes-Benz says internal testing confirms the SLS’s five-star safety rating, so we’ll have to take their word for it.Crash avoidance plays a big part in the SLS Roadster’s armoury. It has all the major electronic assistance systems, such as ESC and Brake Assist. The windscreen header rail is stronger and there’s a fixed roll-over protection system built into the seats to protect occupants if the car flips during a crash.The SLS Roadster may cost close to half a million dollars, but it’s a surefire way to unleash the child inside you. Just sliding deep into its sports seats and thumbing the starter button gets me giggling like I did watching saturday morning cartoons before the parents got up. Every city laneway flanked by tall buildings is a chance to blip the throttle and hear that thundering, crackling engine come bouncing back into your ears. Every tunnel means dropping the roof and revving the engine so it can deafen me like the speaker stack at an AC/DC concert.In fact, you’ll seldom have the roof up — or the radio on — because the SLS’s sonorous voice is heaven to a rev-head’s ears. Screaming as it accelerates, popping and crackling like a rally car as it slows, and when the super-smart 7-speed transmission changes gears you’d swear 12-foot flames just toasted the car behind.Even better, you can do all this without exceeding the speed limit. But, should a race track be available, the SLS’s stratospheric performance will have you laughing maniacally, and not a little fearfully, as it charges the horizon like an enraged bull elephant. Make no mistake, this is not a superficial supercar, it has the ballistic ability to match its muscular looks.Perhaps the biggest trick AMG pulled with the SLS — both Coupe and Roadster — is how incredibly nimble and responsive they are. Both combine stability and poise with rapid response of a big cat on the prowl. The SLS is far more than just a boulevarde bruiser; it is a true supercar. And the ability to drop the roof takes it one adrenaline-pumping step further.
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Aston Martin Virage vs Mercedes SLS 2011 review
By Owen Mildenhall · 06 Sep 2011
Is the Aston Martin Virage the perfect GT car? Owen Mildenhall puts it up against the Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG in this track review to find out. Aston Martin ViragePrice: from $371,300Engine: 5.9-litre V12 petrol; 350kW/600NmTransmission: 6-speed auto, RWDThirst: 15.0L/100km; 349g/km CO2Mercedes-Benz SLS AMGPrice: from $468,320Engine: 6.2-litre V8 petrol; 420kW/650NmTransmission: 7-speed dual-clutch auto, RWDThirst: 13.3L/100km; 311g/km CO2  
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Mercedes-Benz SLS 2011 review
By Philip King · 07 Aug 2010
THERE'S an old chestnut about Formula One cars generating so much downforce that they could drive upside down if they went fast enough. The idea inspired a stunt by British TV show Top Gear, using a tiny Renault, and a more convincing effort by Mercedes-Benz, scoring big hits on YouTube, featuring its latest sportscar.The footage shows the SLS racing into a tunnel, up a ramp on to the walls, over and down the other side for a complete 360. Local executives say the stunt, a sort of upmarket viral ad for the SLS, was done without special effects. The Germans found a suitable venue in the US and calculated that the SLS would need to hit 148km/h. At the end the driver is revealed as Michael Schumacher. Perhaps he's not past it after all.Even without this sort of stuff, the SLS is the sort of car unlikely to escape notice. It is based on one of the most famous Mercedes models, the 1950s 300SL Gullwing, which helped re-establish the brand's reputation after World War II. Named for its dramatic roof-hinged doors, a racing version spawned a production car that was the fastest in the world in its day and which has become a collectible classic.The SLS aims to harness that heritage and re-establish Mercedes credentials in the top division. Its previous supercar, the $1 million SLR, failed to win buyers despite blistering performance. Built by McLaren in Britain only in left-hand drive, it never achieved its 500-a-year sales targets.This time Mercedes handed the project to its captive tuning house, AMG, which in the SLS has developed a model from scratch for the first time. Half the price of the SLR, the SLS aims to sell 10 times as many -- 5000 a year -- with right-hand drive markets such as Australia about to get deliveries.The original Gullwing doors were forced upon designers because normal doors were incompatible with the 300SL's tubular structure, or spaceframe. Since it's built in a similar way, the SLS might have encountered the same problem. But it didn't. Mercedes set out to re-create those doors in what is the first retro supercar.As well as those happy apertures, the curves of the new car are a modern echo of the 300SL. What it lacks in originality it makes up for with stunning road presence and some great angles. It's wider than you expect, at almost 2.3m taking in the wing mirrors, but also lower and shorter. At 4.6m, it's not even as long as a C-Class, the junior executive Mercedes sedan.The layout is pure race car: a naturally aspirated V8 mounted behind the front axle, transmission at the rear axle for balanced weight distribution, and double wishbone suspension all round. The engine is a reworked version of AMG's stock 6.2-litre item (badged as 6.3), with dry sump lubrication and 120 new components lifting output to 420kW. It drives through Mercedes's first double-clutch transmission with seven ratios and five levels of shift aggression.Almost the entire car is made from aluminium, with some magnesium and carbon fibre components. Only 4 per cent is steel, concentrated in areas which need extra strength such as the windscreen pillars. So the SLS tips the scales at a relatively modest 1620kg, or nearly 150kg less than the carbon fibre SLR.Although the SLR's supercharged 5.4-litre V8 develops another 40kW and 130Nm, these are negated by its extra mass. The two cars record identical zero-100km/h times -- 3.8 seconds. And the SLS goes on to hit 317km/h.Braking performance on the SLS is no less impressive, with stopping distance from 100km/h a mere 32m. That's without carbon ceramic brakes, which are an option along with bucket seats, extra carbon fibre trim and a new paint finish called Alu-beam, which looks like liquid metal. Tick all the boxes and the on-road price can reach $600,000 -- that's in Ferrari territory.Notable absentees from the options list or spec sheet are adaptive suspension, active anti-roll bars and myriad technologies designed to enhance a car's dynamics that are now commonplace at this level. With the SLS, Mercedes has adopted a traditional approach that relies on the quality of the engineering and components. If you want firmer springs and dampers, then the sports suspension must be ordered from the outset.That's not a decision to be taken lightly. Even Mercedes acknowledges that the sports suspension is best avoided unless the SLS has been bought for track days, where it can make the most of a smooth surface. On the drive event in NSW one of the three cars available was fitted with sports suspension, and that's the car I drove first. On Australian roads, it's impossibly firm.It may have coloured my view of the standard suspension, which felt like blessed relief by comparison, because others were grumbling about it. The softer set-up retains disciplined control of the body -- the long bonnet lifts just a little under a firm throttle -- but overall composure is much better on torn-up country roads for both ride and handling. There's nothing lush about it, but it is recognisably a Mercedes.In the absence of active dynamic systems, the drive experience is accessible and engaging at any speed. Mercedes says the SLS is an easy-to-live-with supercar that can be used ever day.But it's more than that. The chassis, steering and brakes keep the driver in touch with the car even on a gentle commute. The engine is constantly engaging too, with one of the best V8 soundtracks around. It is a lazy, slow rumbling that has something in common with American muscle cars. I found myself tickling the throttle unnecessarily at low speeds just to trigger a bit of chortling over-run.So slow speeds in the SLS aren't anaesthetic and glimpses -- only glimpses, unfortunately -- suggest that it has plenty of higher pace potential, with excellent stability and ultra-quick turn-in to corners. The SLS feels like a balanced result next to some AMGs, which deliver more power than dynamic ability.The automatic gearbox was a standout, anticipating the need for shifts with precision, and I left the paddle changers alone most of the time. They sit behind an attractive steering wheel in one of Mercedes's better recent cabins. The seats are first-rate and there's a surprising amount of room thanks to the car's width. In a clean design, leather covers almost everything but pleasing details, such as the vents, are rationed. The thick A-pillars have been cleverly shaped so that they don't obstruct forward vision, and it is easier to see out of the SLS than many other supercars.If there's a let-down, it's the dreary centre console arrangement of buttons, the same layout as in every Merc. It looks cheap. The car wasn't free of creaks and groans either, and while these are common enough in super-rigid supercars, one or two pieces of loose insulation rubber suggest Mercedes was still finessing production when the launch examples were built. The doors would certainly present special difficulties to an assembly line.Thanks to those doors, the 300SL also had a reputation for being difficult to get into, with wide sills and low seats compounding the awkwardness. Happily, the SLS presented no such problem to this average-height driver. It's a slight stretch to reach a door handle when it's open, but the action is light and I quickly got used to stepping out without banging my head.The doors need less space alongside the car to open than the long doors on most coupes, although I did wonder about low garage ceilings.Read more about prestige motoring at The Australian.
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