Is the Mercedes-Benz S-Class your favourite automotive icon? Read what we think and cast your vote
11 March 2019

 

The Mercedes-Benz S-Class is in the running to be this year’s Autocar Awards Readers’ Champion. Each day a different member of the Autocar team will champion one of the 17 cars, but only one can be the Icon of Icons and it’s up to you to decide - vote here.

When it comes to to trickle-down automotive technology, the vehicle perched solidly at the pinnacle is the Mercedes-Benz S-Class

Look at the W126, which in 1981 had a driver’s airbag and a passenger-side seatbelt tensioner. Meanwhile, ABS brakes were an option but fitted as standard to the top-of-the-range 500s. These Mercedes were big on safety, with beefed-up passenger cells and clever touches like the door edges overlapping in their frames so that they would not jam solid in a crash. 

In 1965, Mercedes made a clean break from its ‘New Generation’ medium saloons and came up with a large, imposing and elegantly styled vehicle for the better off. The W108/109 was designed by Paul Bracq and, though not officially the S-Class, this is where it all began. 

Our Verdict

Mercedes-Benz S-Class

The self-proclaimed 'best car in the world' gets a touch more luxury, a heap of new technology and a mild hybrid electrical system, but is it enough to hold off the latest attempts from BMW and Audi?

Find an Autocar car review

Driven this week

  • Kia Proceed GT-Line 2019 road test review - hero front
    8 March 2019
    Car review
    After the acclaimed Stinger, Kia sneaks into ‘compact premium’ territory
  • Volkswagen T-Cross 2019 first drive review - hero front
    7 March 2019
    First Drive
    VW’s new smallest SUV has refinement, versatility, maturity and polish – all...
  • 7 March 2019
    First Drive
    Base version of AMG's take on the C-Class Estate is a compelling tourer...

What it had in abundance was presence and space. Convex side glass, and just more glass area overall, plus a lower rear floor meant that it seemed huge on the inside. I could bore you with S model designations, but the best bit of the early story was the creation of the 300 SEL 6.3. It was inspired lunacy to take the 6.3 V8 from the weighty 600 and put it into something almost svelte by comparison, creating the first luxury super-saloon. 

Whatever you call the original model, no one else could make a large number of upmarket saloons (it is the best-selling luxury car, after all) to such exacting quality standards. It certainly helped that any minor bodywork blemishes could result in a full respray before leaving the factory. This level of attention to detail offset by sky-high prices and justified by a perennial waiting list made them great. It was also this enduring reputation that helped the model survive the dim years from 1999-2005 with the W220, so we won’t even bother looking too closely at that blip. 

Before the mid-life crisis, there was the W140, which was a bit too much S-Class for some. Derided at the time for door-closing motors and being the size of a 747, it was actually a spectacular distillation of all that was great about Mercedes: quality, technology and bombast. Hindsight suggests it might well be the best Mercedes ever made, just not the prettiest. Meanwhile, the most recent models have proved that Mercedes got its huge saloon, advanced techno groove back with the W221-222. 

The S-Class has always been the first choice of plutocrats, dictators and corporate fat cats across the planet, which is actually a good thing. They know quality, style and luxury when they sit in the back of it. Refinement levels are very high and comfort is not at issue. Overall, the S brand has always been the quiet and sophisticated large car that you can rely on. They make brilliant used buys and peerless new purchases for the luxury car connoisseur. Most of all, they helped develop and finesse the technology you drive today. 

That’s why you should vote for the Mercedes-Benz S-Class. 

Click here to vote for the Mercedes-Benz S-Class to be named our icon of icons

Read more

Mercedes-Benz S-Class review

2020 Mercedes S-Class: first interior shots reveal tech revolution​

Mercedes-Benz S-Class S500L 2018 long-term review

Add your comment

Log in or register to post comments

Find an Autocar car review

Driven this week

  • Kia Proceed GT-Line 2019 road test review - hero front
    8 March 2019
    Car review
    After the acclaimed Stinger, Kia sneaks into ‘compact premium’ territory
  • Volkswagen T-Cross 2019 first drive review - hero front
    7 March 2019
    First Drive
    VW’s new smallest SUV has refinement, versatility, maturity and polish – all...
  • 7 March 2019
    First Drive
    Base version of AMG's take on the C-Class Estate is a compelling tourer...