Mercedes CL600: Spotted
Somebody once spent an awful lot of money on this V12 CL so you don't have to - nice of them
Nope, if you really had a temporal portal - and it would have to be quite a sizeable one - think how easily you could make money by shipping almost immaculate luxo-barges like this CL600 into the recent past.
Because back in 2003 the CL600 sat at the very top of the Mercedes tree. Walk into a dealer back in 2003 and order one without haggling and you would be writing a cheque for £90,720 before options. And this particular example seems to have had every extra-cost box ticked, too. These days it's possible to spec diesel Audi estates past £100,000. But in the early noughties six-figure pricetags were the exclusive preserve of genuine exotica.
Add a decade and the same car, in what looks to be pristine condition, is just under £10,000. Even with the anvil-through-a-greenhouse depreciation these things suffered from new, imagine the profit if you could send it back to 2005 or 2006 - just far enough from new to explain its 89,000 miles.
Mostly, of course, the first buyer was investing in the engine. The CL600 had a 5.5-litre twin-turbocharged V12 that produced 500hp. That was exactly the same output as very slightly less posh CL55 AMG produced from its 5.5-litre supercharged V8, and although the 600 had more torque, Mercedes claimed identical acceleration figures for both cars (a brisk 4.8-second 0-62mph.) But of course, in the minds of most potential buyers the CL600 was better - because it had more cylinders.
And this was, and almost certainly still is, an almighty engine. Very refined low down but with a keenness for revs and a surprisingly snarly top end when worked hard. And, of course, the sort of cruising pace to shorten the longest Autobahn; those hoary old lines about 120mph feeling like 75mph really do come true sitting behind the wheel of a C215 CL, although faster use comes at the cost of truly scary fuel consumption.
Even after 10 years the kitchen sink spec of this one means it still looks well equipped, with keyless entry, Distronic active cruise control, heated and cooled seats, a power-operated boot and the full-spec BOSE audio system (albeit driven by an in-dash cassette deck as well as a boot-mounted CD changer.) Of course, Mercs from this era are not exactly famed for the bombproof reliability of their forebears, and it's fair to say that there's lots and lots on a fully loaded CL600 to go wrong - faults in the myriad electrical systems can be very expensive to fix and the ABC active suspension has a well-deserved reputation for wallet-shredding meltdowns.
But look on the bright side - full history, two owners from new and the sort of provenance that suggests few corners have been cut keeping it in its tip-top condition. As risks go, it's what the financial types would call a hugely attractive one.
MERCEDES-BENZ CL600
Engine: 5,513cc V12, twin turbocharged
Transmission: Five-speed automatic, rear-wheel drive.
Power (hp): 500@5,000rpm
Torque (lb ft): 590@3,500
MPG: 19.1 (with a very stiff tailwind)
CO2: 355g/km
First registered: 2003
Recorded mileage: 89,000
Price new: £90,720, before options
Yours for: £9,995
Wasn't it a CL that Clarkson bought on Top Gear that needed a bit of work done to it after he'd been singing it's praises?
http://carbuying.jalopnik.com/how-to-make-a-used-m...
How to make a used mercedes sound like a zonda.
I got a chance to take spin in one last year, my first in a v12 (bar an absolute dose of an xjs going for £1500 one time) was fantastic. Turbine smooth with an uncanny ability to pile on speed.
Both units are good. The NA sounds colossal with some of the mufflers removed and the BiTurbo has aweomse torque (as mentioned)
http://carbuying.jalopnik.com/how-to-make-a-used-m...
How to make a used mercedes sound like a zonda.
Just off to check the bank balance. I think I need some of this in my life. If only for a month!
Cooler than a polar bear eating an ice cream on an iceberg!
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