2020 Mercedes-Benz EQC 400 Prototype Review: Driving Mercedes' EV SUV
Mercedes dives into the electric poolCircle back to six years ago when 11MotorTrendjudges unanimously voted the then-brand-new Tesla Model S our 2013 Car of the Year. Were we nervous? Yeah, sure, of course. Tesla what? Elon who? I remember asking the group if anyone had publicly or privately ever said that the Model S was vaporware. Ten hands shot up, with the other judge stating that his mother taught him to say nothing when he had nothing nice to say.
Tesla has had many ups and downs since then, with CEO-Mascot Elon Musk's Trumpian Tweets piling on the damage that "manufacturing hell" has wrought. Still, paraphrasing what I said back in September 2012, I'll never bet against a billionaire who docked his rocket ship with the International Space Station the week before his electric luxury sedan won Car of the Year. Consider that Tesla has accounted for 4.6 percent of all vehicles sold in California during Q3 of 2018—and California has more citizens than Canada.
The rest of the industry is finally waking up to Tesla's success and waking up quick. Chevrolet did an incredible job with the Bolt EV (our 2017 Car of the Year), but sales are down significantly this year—GM blames that on a shift to overseas production, but cheap gas also has most folks shopping Tahoes instead of Bolts.
I also believe that people (currently) interested in electric cars aren't interested in Chevy badges. Premium vehicles that come across as premium—like all three Teslas but unlike the slow-selling BMW i3—are what these customers want. To wit, Jaguar just launched the handsome I-Pace while Audi is gearing up to deliver two EVs—the E-Tron SUV and E-Tron GT. Porsche's gorgeous though unfortunately named Taycan is right around the corner. As is the first of 10 offerings from Mercedes-Benz's new subbrand EQ—the EQC 400. Europe will be able to buy the electric Benz come June. Americans will have to wait until January 2020.
To break down the nomenclature a bit, for the time being, all fully electric Mercedes will be known as EQs. I predict this convention won't last long, as it gets in the way of the brand's other names. For instance, the EQC 400 is clearly an SUV. In fact, it's built on the same production line as the GLC. Now, GL is Mercedes-speak for SUV (GL being an abbreviation of Gelandewagen, or "cross-country vehicle"), and the GLC is the SUV that's roughly analogous in shape and price to the C-Class. That's where the C in GLC comes from. So what happens when Mercedes launches an electric C-Class? EQC is already taken. Anyhow, for now, the first all-electric SUV from Mercedes will be known as the EQC 400. The 400 stands for a 400-kilometer battery range (back to that in a minute).
The 400 could (almost) stand for horsepower, as together the front and rear electric motors generate 408 of them. The front motor is slightly smaller, has five windings, and is slightly less powerful than the rear, which features seven windings. That's how Mercedes EQ is doing rear-wheel bias. Torque is pretty healthy, too, at 564 lb-ft.






