Tag Archives: Sporty/Performance Cars

2020 Mercedes-Benz CLA250 4Matic

2020 Mercedes-Benz CLA250 4Matic in Jupiter Red

Car Stuff Podcast2020 Mercedes-Benz CLA250 4Matic

Class: Premium Compact Car

Miles driven: 155

Fuel used: 5.5 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 28.1 mpg

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort C+
Power and Performance B+
Fit and Finish A-
Fuel Economy A-
Value B-
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide's impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy B-
Tall Guy B
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. "Big" rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, "Tall" rating based on 6'6"-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 221-hp 2.0-liter
Engine Type Turbo 4-cyl
Transmission 7-speed automated manual
Drive Wheels AWD

Driving mix: 55% city, 45% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 23/33/27 (city, highway, combined)

Fuel type: Premium gas recommended

Base price: $38,650 (not including $995 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Multifunction sports leather steering wheel ($360), SiriusXM Radio ($460), lowered comfort suspension ($290), heated front seats ($580), 64-color interior ambient lighting ($310), wireless charging ($200), Driver Assistance Package ($2250), Multimedia Package ($1150), AMG Line package ($1950), Premium Package ($1100)

Price as tested: $48,295

More CLA-Class price and availability information

Quick Hits

The great: Excellent ride/handling balance; classy cabin

The good: Crisp acceleration; cutting-edge infotainment system; distinctive styling

The not so good: Stingy interior room, especially in the back seat; small rear door openings complicate entry and exit; some tedious controls

John Biel

For something called “compact,” the premium-compact-car class isn’t. By Consumer Guide’s reckoning, the count for 2020 is up to 16 entries now that the BMW 2-Series Gran Coupe has joined the party. Three of the vehicle lines in the group wear the Mercedes-Benz star, and one of them—the CLA-Class—is fully redesigned for the current model year.

Test Drive: 2020 Mercedes-Benz CLA250

The Mercedes-Benz CLA-Class is redesigned for 2020 on the same platform as the entry-level A-Class sedan, which debuted for 2019. The CLA-Class is essentially a swoopier “sedan coupe” version of the A-Class.

The CLA is a 4-door not-a-sedan, one of the luxury-brand inner circle of so-called coupes that trade interior room for a cool-looking profile. (The 2-Series Gran Coupe is another.) It fits between the front-wheel-drive A-Class, a 2019 newcomer, and the veteran rear-drive C-Class—though all are available with 4MATIC all-wheel drive. Indeed, the 2020 CLA finds itself on the same core platform as the A-Class sedan, albeit with some different packaging. They have the same 107.4-inch wheelbase, but the CLA is 5.5 inches longer—which no doubt helps it gain a 3-cubic-foot advantage in trunk space. The CLA sits 0.3 inch wider and, not surprising for its coupe pretentions, 0.6 inch lower from road to roof.

First Look: 2021 Lexus IS

Test Drive: 2020 Mercedes-Benz CLA250

The CLA’s cabin is sleek and sophisticated. The $1100 Premium Package adds an impressive, 10.25-inch all-digital gauge cluster/infotainment screen. The center console includes a touchpad controller with a wrist support.

Consumer Guide tested a Jupiter Red CLA250 with 4MATIC, a car that starts at $39,645 with delivery, but reached $48,295 as equipped. The front-drive version starts at $2000 less. Aside from fresh sheetmetal, the second-generation CLA incorporates M-B’s latest MBUX infotainment system, as well as standard digital instrumentation. Though the CLA250 carries over a 2.0-liter turbocharged 4-cylinder engine from the previous model, that powerplant now puts out 221 horsepower, a gain of 13 from 2019. A similarly configured engine that powers the A-Class is rated at 188 horses.

Test Drive: 2020 BMW 228i xDrive Gran Coupe

Test Drive: 2020 Mercedes-Benz CLA250

The CLA’s front seats offer excellent comfort and support, and the MB-Tex leatherette upholstery with DINAMICA suedelike inserts look and feel great. Front-seat room is cozy for large occupants, and the rear seat is cramped for adults–legroom is stingy, headroom is tight due to the sloping roofline, and the lower door openings are small.

Like any turbo four, the real strength of the one in the CLA250 lies in its ability to generate torque. It squeezes out its full 258 lb-ft as early as 1800 rpm. There’s little dawdling from a standing start, and Mercedes claims a 0-60-mph charge of 6.3 seconds. Move off the 7-speed dual-clutch automatic transmission (DCT) default “Comfort” mode—either to “ECO” or to “Sport”—and performance character clearly changes. ECO tears through the gears in a short-shifting frenzy to hurriedly reach the higher ranges, while Sport predictably hangs on longer, effectively pulling what power there is to be had from each gear range. Need an extra burst of speed on the highway? Just tap the pedal and, in Sport, the DCT drops down three gears just like that. Folks who think they know better than any electromechanical thingamabob can prove it with shifter paddles on the steering wheel.

Quick Spin: 2020 Genesis G70 3.3T Sport

Test Drive: 2020 Mercedes-Benz CLA250

The CLA’s trunk is on the stingy side as well–there’s only 11.6 cu. ft. of volume, but the opening is fairly large and the rear seatbacks fold for more space.

EPA fuel-economy projections are 23 mpg in the city, 33 mpg on the highway, and 27 combined. In a concentrated 59.7-mile test with a period of sustained speedy expressway running (just 24 percent of miles were under city conditions), this driver averaged 40.07 mpg. The CLA has a tolerable stop/start function to help save a little premium gas.

Out on the road, the CLA250 is a nimble and alert handler. Drive modes also modify steering and damping behaviors that get a little sharper in Sport, but going up against surface imperfections was never overly loud or uncomfortable.

The CLA250 is an aggressive-looking little bauble, especially when, like the test car, it is equipped with the extra-cost AMG Line package of appearance features and lowered suspension. The low, racy look will best be appreciated by passengers who don’t stray too far beyond average human dimensions. Headroom is severely limited in back, and not even all that generous in the front seat. While the platform switch made way for more rear-seat space in the CLA, legroom is modest for two adult passengers, and narrow openings at the bottom of the doors complicate entry and exit.

The 11.6-cubic-foot trunk extends far forward to the 40/20/40 split-folding rear seats, and sidewalls are widened out at the back just ahead of the bumper. For larger cargo, the seat backs fold nearly flat and in a smooth transition from the trunk floor. For personal-item storage, the glove box, front-door pockets, and rear-seat net pouches are big and handy, but the console box and rear door pockets are small.

Test Drive: 2020 Jaguar XE P250 S

Test Drive: 2020 Mercedes-Benz CLA250

The CLA250’s turbocharged 2.0-liter engine puts out a sprightly 221 horsepower. Eighteen-inch AMG twin 5-spoke wheels are a no-cost option, but the perforated brake discs are part of the $1950 AMG Line package, which also includes AMG body-styling elements and an AMG diamond-block grille.

There’s a plush look and feel to the quiet cabin. The test car had supportive and grippy seats in black leatherette with suedelike DINAMICA inserts in the backs and cushions, and red stitching. (This is a no-cost choice, albeit only available in conjunction with an AMG package.) Controls are another facet of the interior experience, one that Mercedes is really hanging its hat on this year. MBUX allows users to access the system via a touchscreen, touch-control buttons, a console touchpad, or voice control with natural-language understanding. Seven-inch instrument and multimedia touchscreens are standard, but CG’s tester had the optional 10.25-inch instrument and display screens so big that they seem to form one continuous horizontal command center. This reviewer can’t say a good thing about the finicky touchpad that made audio-preset selection a frustrating and tedious exercise. The touchscreen keeps “80 percent of commonly used functions . . . just a few swipes away,” M-B says, but those functions are parceled out to lots of menus. Meanwhile, the colorful and legible digital driving controls have their own bevy of displays through which to scroll, but apparently the humble trip odometer reset isn’t deemed a “commonly used” function. It’s summoned somehow by the steering-wheel button controls—when I needed it, it appeared quite randomly. However, a prompt on the screen asked if I wanted to reset trip odometer, but there was no obvious means to change the choices from “No” to “Yes.” Hey Mercedes . . . what gives?

For cost, equipment, room, and performance, the CLA250 is well matched with its closest competitor, the 2-Series Gran Coupe. There are some tradeoffs between them, but if you spend about the same money you’ll wind up with a lot of the same convenience and tech features. That’s what happens sometimes when things get crowded.

Test Drive: 2019 Volvo S60 T6

Test Drive: 2020 Mercedes-Benz CLA250

The Mercedes-Benz CLA250 4Matic offers swoopy styling, satisfying performance, and luxurious trimmings in a small (maybe too small, depending on your needs), relatively affordable package.

Check out the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2020 Mercedes-Benz CLA250 4Matic Gallery

2020 Mercedes-Benz CLA250 4Matic

2021 Lexus IS

2021 Lexus IS

The COVID-19 pandemic may have put the kibosh on traditional auto shows for the near future, but automakers still have new and redesigned products poised to hit the market, and those manufacturers are increasingly turning to the Internet to debut their soon-to-arrive new vehicles. Today there were two online unveilings, in fact—Nissan took the wraps off its redesigned 2021 Rogue compact SUV this morning, and this evening Lexus debuted a revamped version of its rear-drive-based compact sport sedan via a Facebook Live webcast.

2021 Lexus IS

More Lexus news and reviews

The 2021 Lexus IS soldiers on its existing platform, but gets freshened styling, increased structural rigidity, updated suspension components, and some new tech features. Save for minor increases of a little over an inch in overall length and width, and a fractional decrease in height, the car’s dimensions are unchanged. The new bodywork sports crisper lines all around, a dramatic full-width taillight, and slimmer headlights that integrate the signature checkmark-shaped daytime running lights, which were previously separate. Chassis updates were aimed at reducing unsprung weight, and include 20-percent-lighter coil springs and forged-aluminum A-arms in place of the previous steel units.

2021 Lexus IS

2021 Lexus IS

The IS’s powertrains and model-naming structure carry over from the 2020 model. The rear-drive IS 300 is powered by a turbocharged 2.0-liter 4-cylinder paired with an 8-speed automatic transmission, while the all-wheel-drive IS 300 gets a 260-hp 3.5-liter V6 paired with a 6-speed automatic. The IS 350 is powered by a 311-hp version of the same 3.5-liter V6, paired with an 8-speed automatic in rear-drive form and a 6-speed automatic with AWD.

The performance-oriented F Sport trim level will now be available only on the IS 350; it had previously been offered on the IS 300 as well. F Sports get unique bodywork elements such as a front bumper with functional aerodynamic enhancements, distinctive grille, rear bumper, rear lip spoiler and rocker-panel moldings. Other F Sport exclusives include 19-inch wheels, cool-air intake with sound generator, sport pedals, and F Sport exhaust and diffuser.

Test Drive: 2020 BMW 228i xDrive Gran Coupe

2021 Lexus IS

2021 Lexus IS

A Dynamic Handling Package for F Sport models adds a Torsen limited-slip differential, Adaptive Variable Suspension, unique carbon-fiber rear spoiler and rearview mirror caps, and a unique BBS-brand 19-inch wheel. (Eighteen-inch wheels replace the previous 17s on non-F-Sport IS models.)

Quick Spin: 2020 Genesis G70 3.3T Sport

2021 Lexus IS

2021 Lexus IS

The interior is freshened with trim updates and a new infotainment system that features Apple CarPlay, Android Auto, and Amazon Alexa compatibility, as well an available 10.3-inch touchscreen. The available Mark Levinson Premium Surround Sound Audio System is upgraded from 17 speakers from 15, and gets a substantial boost in wattage—to 1800 watts from 835. The Lexus Safety System+ suite of active safety features is upgraded to version 2.5, which means it gets enhanced radar and camera capabilities, and an updated adaptive cruise control system that can accelerate automatically when the turn signal is activated to overtake a vehicle moving slower than the preset speed.

The 2021 Lexus IS is scheduled to go on sale late this fall. Pricing info will be released closer to that time; we expect those numbers to stay close to the 2020 IS’s base-MSRP range of $39,000-$45,000.

Test Drive: 2020 BMW M340i

2021 Lexus IS

2021 Lexus IS

CG Says:

Hmmm. Not a whole lot new here, but perhaps that’s to be expected. Premium compact sport sedans aren’t the hottest category in the market right now, so it makes sense that Lexus would take a conservative approach to the IS’s re-do. The IS’s basic platform dates back to the 2014 model year, and the 3.5-liter V6 goes back even further. Even though it doesn’t bring any substantial revisions, the 2021 revamp should keep the IS fresh in Lexus’s lineup for at least a couple more years.

Test Drive: 2020 Jaguar XE P250 S

2021 Lexus IS

2021 Lexus IS

Listen to the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2021 Lexus IS

2020 Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrifoglio

2020 Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrifoglio in Misano Blue Metallic (a $600 option)

2015 Audi Q52020 Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrifoglio

Class: Premium Compact Crossover

Miles driven: 165

Fuel used: 9.7 gallons

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B-
Power and Performance A
Fit and Finish B-
Fuel Economy C
Value C
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide's impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy B-
Tall Guy B+
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. "Big" rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, "Tall" rating based on 6'6"-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 505-hp 2.9L
Engine Type Turbo V6
Transmission 8-speed automatic
Drive Wheels AWD

Real-world fuel economy: 17.0 mpg

Driving mix: 60% city, 40% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 17/23/19 (city, highway, combined)

Fuel type: Premium gas required

Base price: $80,445 (not including $1595 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Misano Blue Metallic paint ($600), Active Driver Assistance Package ($2000), Security and Convenience Pack ($400), Nero Edizione Quadrifoglio ($850), Brembo-brand carbon-ceramic brakes ($8000), dual-pane sunroof ($1350), heated second-row seats ($350), wireless charging pad ($200), Quadrifoglio carbon-fiber steering wheel ($400), yellow brake calipers ($350)

Price as tested: $96,540

Quick Hits

The great: Ferocious acceleration; agile handling

The good: Distinctive styling with Italian flair

The not so good: Steep pricing; iffy reliability record; some quirky controls; limited passenger and cargo space

More Stelvio price and availability information

John Biel

When evaluating the Alfa Romeo Stelvio, a plus factor that Consumer Guide editors find with the premium compact-crossover SUV is its spirited driving character delivered at competitive prices for the class. If we thought that in 2019, nothing has happened to the 2020 model that can shake that conviction.

Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrifoglio

Wider rear fender flares help contain the Quadrifoglio’s extra-wide rear tires. Muscular-looking quad exhaust tips and unique four-leaf-clover badges on the front fenders are other Quadrifoglio exclusives.

In what has to rank as a pretty amazing coincidence, the high-performance Stelvio Quadrifoglio that CG tested in 2020 had the exact same final price—$96,540—as the one it sampled in 2019. That was despite a fairly different options load, and a $200 rise in starting price for ’20. What’s more, that starting tab now covers Alfa Connect telematics, satellite radio, and forward-collision warning with full-stop capability.

Alfa updates the Stelvio for its third season on the U.S. market with a more flexible (but no less complicated) infotainment system and a revised center-console layout. Plus, there now is an Active Driver Assist Package option that provides “level II” autonomous driving.

First Look: 2021 Toyota Venza

Test Drive: 2020 Lexus NX 300 F Sport

The Stelvio’s sporty dashboard design looks great, but overall assembly and materials quality isn’t quite up to the level of similarly priced rivals. The unorthodox location of the engine start/stop button–on the lower left of the steering wheel hub–becomes second nature fairly quickly. The center console houses the optional wireless charging pad.

The console shuffle is relatively slight. The lever for the electronic parking brake has been moved forward to a place next to the transmission shifter, and a bright bezel now frames the shifter. The same drive-mode selector and remote-control dial and buttons for the infotainment system employed during the Stelvio’s first two years continue to be used.

The Infotainment system has a new look and all sorts of functionality. The 8.8-inch central display is now a touchscreen that can be tapped and swiped to access and activate things like audio, navigation, apps, and more—though the console controls remain. Whether this driver twirled and twisted the controller or tapped the screen, he found making audio inputs less than intuitive. Going the console-dial route diverts driver attention. Also, response to commands seemed a little slow.

Test Drive: 2020 Lexus NX 300 F Sport

Stelvio

The Quadrifoglio’s bolstered front seats provide good support in aggressive cornering but are comfortable in everyday driving. Rear-seat headroom is compromised by the sloping roofline, and legroom isn’t particularly generous either.

Active Driver Assist, a $2000 add-on, bundles highway-driving-assist technology with traffic-jam assist, lane-keep assist, active blind-spot assist, traffic-sign recognition, a driver-attention alert, active cruise control with full-stop capability, and automatic high-beam-headlight control. In street driving, the traffic-jam component works pretty well at automatically slowing, stopping, and resuming forward movement—when the system is active. Drivers have to always be at the ready for times when it quits because of insufficient data. Without driver intervention, start-ups from behind a stopped vehicle that has moved on seemed a little tentative. The whole business is activated by a thumb button on the steering wheel.

Meanwhile, if the thought of a slick-handling small SUV that can go from zero to 60 mph in 3.6 seconds (per the manufacturer) still excites you, you’ll be happy to know that Alfa Romeo has left the rest of the Stelvio Quadrifoglio alone. Possessed of 505 horsepower and 443 lb-ft of torque, the twin-turbocharged 2.9-liter V6—working through an 8-speed automatic transmission—gets the “Quad” up to speed in a trice, and that’s true in urban traffic or in highway passing. Big, hard-to-miss steering-wheel shifter paddles are included for those who want to take a more-active role in their vehicle’s performance.

Test Drive: 2020 BMW X3 M Competition

Stevlvio Cargo Area

The Stelvio’s cargo area is on the narrow side, and its overall capacity (18.5 cubic feet behind the rear seats, 56.5 cubic feet with the rear seats folded down) is middling for the premium compact SUV class.

The EPA fuel-economy estimates for the vehicle are 17 mpg in city driving, 23 mpg on the highway, and 19 combined. When this tester put 52.8 miles on the ’20 model, it returned 16.9 mpg, that with 53 percent city-style driving. (A longer stint by the same driver in the 2019 Quadrifoglio resulted in almost identical performance.) The fast and the frugal can take advantage of a standard stop/start feature, and dialing in “Advanced Efficiency” mode—the “A” on the DNA Pro menu—enables cylinder deactivation when driving conditions allow.

Finely tuned handling; quick, direct steering; and able body control around corners make this most stirring of Stelvios a kick to drive. Ride is firm to begin with and gets a little less forgiving in Dynamic mode that alters steering and damping characteristics. The 20-inch alloy wheels with their distinctive and open 5-hole design are wrapped in standard “summer” tires that are wider in back than they are in front. Available only with all-wheel drive, the Quadrifoglio packs a torque-vectoring differential to maximize power delivery. If you’re planning to track-run a Quad, you may find the $8000 asked for a set of Brembo CCM carbon-ceramic disc-brake rotors money well spent. They were on our 2019 and 2020 test vehicles, and stopped both with complete surety.

Quick Spin: 2020 Acura RDX A-Spec

Stelvio Engine

The Quadrifoglio’s twin-turbo 2.9-liter V6 pumps out 505 horsepower–enough to enable 0-60-mph runs of less than 4 seconds. Our tester’s “Nero Edizione Quadrifoglio” package added dark-finish 20-inch 5-hole wheels (9 inches wide in front, 10 inches at the rear). Brembo carbon ceramic brakes and yellow brake calipers added another $8300.

Stelvios, particularly the Quadrifoglio, do performance somewhat better than passenger accommodation. A lowish, sloping roofline shaves some headroom from both seating rows and cuts into driver vision to the rear corners and directly back through the tailgate. Legroom is better in front than in back, where it gets more restricted. In contrast to the complication of the infotainment system, dual-zone climate controls are more convenient. Rotary dials set temperature and fan speed, and buttons located between the dials handle other functions.

None of the usual personal-item storage spaces—the glove box, console box, and door map pockets—are especially big. There is a bin that drops down from the left side of the dash and net pouches on the backs of the front seats. The console has a handy slot for the optional wireless charger, as well as covered cup holders. Additional cup holders are found in the pull-down armrest in the middle of the back seat. Cargo loads onto a good-sized flat floor, and when more load space is needed, the 40/20/40-split rear seats fold just about level with the floor.

Passengers settle into standard leather-and-Alcantara seats with multicolor contrast stitching (when all-black upholstery is selected). There’s additional leather on the dash, upper doors, flat-bottom steering wheel, and shifter knob, and carbon-fiber trim is laid down around the interior. What else does 82 large buy? Eight-way power front seats with 4-way lumbar adjustment, heated front seats and steering wheel, aluminum-faced pedals, 7-inch thin-film transistor driver-information display, Harman Kardon audio, Apple CarPlay/Android Auto smartphone integration, blind-spot and rear cross-traffic alerts, keyless access and starting, remote start, auto-dimming exterior mirrors, adaptive bi-xenon headlights, LED taillights, and a power liftgate.

For 2020, the Alfa Romeo Stelvio isn’t standing still. Neither, though, is it running away from what it is.

Test Drive: 2019 Jaguar F-Pace SVR

Stelvio Profile

The Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrifoglio gets a few minor updates for 2020, but none of them change its essential character: a super-pricey, super-performance crossover SUV with a distinctly Italian character.

Listen to the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2020 Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrifoglio Gallery

2020 Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrifoglio