RE: Mercedes-AMG GT Roadster spied testing

RE: Mercedes-AMG GT Roadster spied testing

Thursday 25th August 2016

Mercedes-AMG GT Roadster spied testing (new pics)

Fresh Nurburgring images show off a canvas roof; it looks quick too!



So, as expected, the drop-top AMG GT will use a canvas roof and not a folding hard top like the larger SL. Fabric roofs are common in the segment of course, with the Audi R8 Spyder and Jaguar F-Type SVR also using them.

Committed!
Committed!
Aside from the confirming what we had thought about the roof - a significant update, granted - there's little else to reveal right now. The styling is familiar AMG GT but with a reprofiled rear to accommodate the roof. Even when disguised, the profile appears to work well, a more compact fabric roof preventing any unsightly bulges around the roof or boot. A pop-up spoiler is still integrated as well.

You can read more below on what to expect from the AMG GT C, with a full reveal due later this year. Prices and specs to follow nearer the time. Can it successfully combine the coupe's driver focus with some open-air theatre? It could make quite the sports car if so.

 








Mercedes-AMG will finally satisfy those longing to hear the raw bellow of the loud 'n' proud GT coupe later this year with the launch of the GT Roadster. And, just to remind us the curiously overdue open-top variant is still a real living thing, the engineers have been out completing final sign-off duties on a US version of the soft-top Merc.

Can we see it roof down soon please?
Can we see it roof down soon please?
Yes, soft-top. No folding hard-top here, something that seemed like a good idea for all of five minutes in the noughties before common sense dawned. And because it's a nice compact fabric roof, it means the AMG GT Roadster's going to have a balanced look with the roof up and a nicely substantial flat rear deck a la classic 190 SL and pre-R129-era SL.

Whereas the coop goes all the way to Lewis-Hamilton-approved, R-branded aggression, the Roadster should take a more refined approach, befitting its likely cruiser status. But, yes, with all of the AMG V8's roar still in place. Needless to say, both 462hp and 510hp S iterations of the 4.0-litre Affalterbach motor will feature, and needless to say most will default to the S, certainly until Merc rolls out the 585hp AMG GT R-engined version next year. Said to be called GT C, maybe it'll be newly-contracted Nico that gets to launch that one.

Our eye's been caught by something, though: that big gap between the rear lights, complete with seemingly-shapely innards. Now, the Coupe gets a monster deployable rear wing, but such a thing would spoil the lines of this elegant soft-top. Cue Aston Martin, in which Daimler has a five per cent shareholding. On the imminent DB11, it's installed a clever 'AeroBlade' that draws air from the sides and shoots it out in a jet from the rear - a virtual spoiler, if you like. The tech transfer has been one-way up to now; is this Aston giving something back to its new German colleagues?

Expect the same choice of V8s as the coupe
Expect the same choice of V8s as the coupe
The fact that the front wing vents now appear to be enclosed, directional air outlets, rather than the open items on the Coupe, is also intriguing. This could just be the wrap guy getting carried away, but it could, just as Aston's done with the DB11, also point to more hidden aero work beneath to keep the lines as pure as possible - and we know AMG boss Tobias Moers has told us in the past he likes to keep the lines of his cars simple and clean. Decidedly anti-spoiler, is Moers.

No prizes for guessing it'll be heavier than the Coupe, although as that itself isn't too lardy at 1,645kg, maybe the similarly aluminium-intensive AMG GT Roadster will be on the acceptable end of substantial as well.

Prices? Ballpark £110,000 and £120,000, with the usual average UK wage or two on top for options and personalisation. And, as this is a US-spec car, shall we put bets on it being revealed at the LA Auto Show in November?

 

 

   

[Photos: S. Baldauf/SB-Medien]

 

Author
Discussion

sidesauce

Original Poster:

2,470 posts

218 months

Tuesday 26th July 2016
quotequote all
I expect the hood will be a variation/development of the one used in the S-Class Cabriolet (that car has great refinement with the roof up apparently).

I'm sure I remember reading somewhere that Daimler want to return the SL to a fabric roof but there's concern that doing may spoil the already reduced sales of that model as it's the USP of that class of car at that price point...?

richardaucock

204 posts

163 months

Tuesday 26th July 2016
quotequote all
sidesauce said:
I expect the hood will be a variation/development of the one used in the S-Class Cabriolet (that car has great refinement with the roof up apparently).

I'm sure I remember reading somewhere that Daimler want to return the SL to a fabric roof but there's concern that doing may spoil the already reduced sales of that model as it's the USP of that class of car at that price point...?
I dearly wish they would. Or, come up with a smarter solution to today's inelegant-for-an-SL setup.

Generally, for those who don't like rattles, steer well clear of a well-secondhand coop-con. No, I'm not a fan...

mikEsprit

827 posts

186 months

Tuesday 26th July 2016
quotequote all
That looks like an SL to me.

Ozzie Osmond

21,189 posts

246 months

Tuesday 26th July 2016
quotequote all
mikEsprit said:
That looks like an SL to me.
Looks like a Lexus SC430 to me!!

swisstoni

16,949 posts

279 months

Tuesday 26th July 2016
quotequote all
I'd say that was an SL too. These were to have a fabric top.
I suppose they could do a GT roadster but that would just about kill off the SL so I cant see it myself.

Edited by swisstoni on Friday 26th August 08:05

only1ian

687 posts

194 months

Wednesday 27th July 2016
quotequote all
Interesting power figures... My SL63 performance pack is 525bhp and obviously a drop top!

Does this mean the AMG GT S sits behind my car in the current range line up?

Ed Straker

221 posts

143 months

Wednesday 27th July 2016
quotequote all
The Cab AMG would have to ride with a whole lot more compliance to "replace" the SL.
To say nothing of it being almost twice the price.
Apples and Pears for anyone who actually knows and drives Mercedes.....

Ozzie Osmond

21,189 posts

246 months

Wednesday 27th July 2016
quotequote all
Merc have done convertibles of SLR and SLS so a convertible GT is probably inevitable.

AMG GT is a very different drive from SL, even though the top of SL pricing gets perilously close. I quite like the AMG GT (it's better than SLS in my opinion, as well as cheaper) but suspect it's a car more suited to the German and American markets than UK.

sidesauce

Original Poster:

2,470 posts

218 months

Wednesday 27th July 2016
quotequote all
Ozzie Osmond said:
Looks like a Lexus SC430 to me!!

Hmmm...

In terms of general proportion (even from that angle it's obvious the AMG is significantly wider), glasshouse silhouette, front end, back end, no, not really.

ZesPak

24,427 posts

196 months

Friday 26th August 2016
quotequote all
richardaucock said:
sidesauce said:
I expect the hood will be a variation/development of the one used in the S-Class Cabriolet (that car has great refinement with the roof up apparently).

I'm sure I remember reading somewhere that Daimler want to return the SL to a fabric roof but there's concern that doing may spoil the already reduced sales of that model as it's the USP of that class of car at that price point...?
I dearly wish they would. Or, come up with a smarter solution to today's inelegant-for-an-SL setup.

Generally, for those who don't like rattles, steer well clear of a well-secondhand coop-con. No, I'm not a fan...
Plus, iirc they now only have one model that is, by definition, both the coupé and convertible?

They'd have to make one of each which, as you say, pidgeonholes the buyers straight away.