2027 Mercedes-Benz EQS First Look: It Finally Gets the Hardware It Always Needed
After a lukewarm start, Mercedes retools its flagship EV with faster charging, smarter tech, and a bold steer-by-wire gamble.
Mercedes-Benz’s first volley in the electric car wars, the ovoid EQS-Class sedan, didn’t exactly inspire rapturous praise from the MotorTrend team. While its driving range was solid enough, the car’s 400-volt electrical architecture hindered its charging speeds. We also didn’t love the soap-bar suppository styling that allowed it to slip cleanly through the air with a 0.20 drag coefficient, and a minor face-lift in late 2024 didn’t help matters much. Mercedes is addressing those downsides through a serious “running-gear lift” of the 2027 EQS, featuring the addition of an 800-volt system, new battery chemistry, new motors, and more.
MEA With MB.EA Inside
Technically, the V297 EQS still rides on its original MEA electric vehicle architecture, but for 2027 it utilizes some of the best tech developed for the company’s all new MB.EA platform making its debut in the electric 2027 GLC SUV and the coming electric-powered version of the C-Class sedan. That starts with newer, more efficient electric drive units, the rear one of which now gets a two-speed transaxle. This affords a big 11:1 torque multiplication at launch, switching to more economical 5:1 gearing at nearly any speed up to 70-ish mph. The second ratio provides an additional peak-efficiency “island” operating zone on a plot of speed versus torque demand, and it helps the motor sustain its peak power rating all the way to its 130-mph top speed.
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Denser Battery Pack
New silicon-oxide/graphite anodes in a chemistry using less cobalt improves energy density enough to squeeze 122 kWh of energy into a package that could formerly only accommodate 118 kWh. One of the benefits exclusive to the EQS setup is that its battery can be subdivided into two 400-volt packs when charging at legacy Tesla chargers (the GLC and C-Class need a DC-DC converter to achieve 400 V). Hence, peak charging speeds will now be up to 350 kW at the best charging towers and 175 kW when hooked up to 400-volt equipment, according to Mercedes. Even better, braking energy can now be recuperated a third faster, at up to 385 kW.



