New 2021 Mercedes SL: high-tech interior revealed

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Stuart Milne

Guest
The new Mercedes SL will feature a “hyperanalogue” cockpit, inspired by the original 300 SL Roadster of the 1950s. Unveiling the new SL roadster’s interior in a series of pictures, we can already see the latest Mercedes will feature a “driver focused” interior that will centre around a large, adjustable display in the centre console, plus the brand’s MBUX infotainment system.

Mercedes describes the hyperanalogue concept as a mix of “analogue geometry and digital work”, highlighted in the SL’s fully digital instrument cluster, which is integrated into a three-dimensional, aviation-inspired panel alongside air vents referred to as galvanised turbine nozzles.


Despite this, Mercedes’ designers say the cockpit design is driver-focused. The 12.3-inch instrument display is not freestanding, but integrated into a visor to prevent sunlight reflections when the car’s roof is down.

A large 11.9-inch touchscreen sits in the centre console ahead of the NACA-duct inspired design as found in the AMG GT and GT 4-Door. The screen angle can be adjusted electrically, allowing a more vertical position, again to avoid the driver being distracted by sunlight reflections.

The SL’s MBUX system is a version of that found in the Mercedes S-Class, but with a number of AMG-specific features, including the more overtly sporting Performance and Track Pack modes.

An optional head-up display can show information in three dimensions on the screen in a range of styles that can match the format of the configurable views shown on the car’s main screen. The car’s audio system comes from Burmester.

Mercedes SL interior - dash

The seats are designed in such a way that they appear more compact, and have headrests integrated into the backrests for a sleeker look. They can be trimmed in a range of finishes, including two-tone nappa leather, nappa leather with diamond stitching, or a combination of nappa and Dinamica fabric.

Mercedes design boss Gordon Wagener said: “The SL is an icon of the brand with the three-pointed star: this roadster has stood for automotive fascination and desire for decades. A great opportunity and challenge for design, because every designer wants to create icons. The result is a revolutionary interior experience caught between digital and analogue luxury. We created the most iconic SL ever since, the luxury icon of the 20s.”

The new SL will be even more versatile, Mercedes says, and it is the first SL with a 2+2 seating layout since the R129, launched in 1989. The rear seats offer space for passengers up to 150cm tall, or a wind deflector can be installed to prevent buffeting at speed.

Mercedes-AMG boss Philipp Schiemer said: "The interior of the new Mercedes-AMG SL pampers driver and passengers with sophisticated luxury. The new SL combines the highest levels of comfort and quality in its interior, coupled with just the right amount of sportiness. The high-quality combination of analogue world and state-of-the-art digital equipment makes one thing clear: the new SL is the rebirth of an icon for the modern era."

New 2021 Mercedes SL: engines, chassis and performance​


The seventh-generation Mercedes SL’s chassis will use a blend of aluminium, steel, magnesium and fibre composites to help keep weight to a minimum; its central skeleton weighs just 270kg.

Mercedes is also keen to stress that there’s nothing in the SL’s chassis carried over from any of its existing models – not even the AMG GT Roadster. However, there are rumours that the new architecture will also be used to underpin AMG’s replacement for the GT.

The new SL’s body is 50 per cent more rigid than the AMG GT Roadster across its width and 40 per cent stronger over its length. Mercedes says these improvements will translate into more precise handling and better agility, as the body will deform less under heavy cornering.

Mercedes SL aluminium chassis

To further benefit the car’s road manners, Mercedes has also lowered the SL’s centre of gravity. The pick-up points for the subframes and axles are as low down as possible, while the engine will be mounted low, and close to the cabin.

Mercedes has also confirm that the new SL will be exclusively sold under the AMG banner. It’ll also be available with four-wheel drive for the first time, using the same 4MATIC+ system as the AMG E 63 S sports saloon.

That means the range will likely open with a 43-badged SL powered by a 3.0-litre straight-six petrol unit. It’s likely that the SL 63 will use AMG’s 604bhp twin-turbocharged 4.0-litre V8.

Former AMG boss Tobias Moers (now Aston Martin CEO) previously told Auto Express that AMG will look to offer a hybrid version of every model Mercedes sends its way. He also hinted that the SL, as a heavier sports car focussed on touring, could be a natural fit for a heavier electrified powertrain with an enormous power output.

Mercedes is already developing such a powertrain for the upcoming range-topping AMG S 73 e PHEV, which is set to have an output of more than 800bhp. AMG will also give the SL’s suspension a thorough overhaul in an effort to increase its appeal to keen drivers, although it will still act as a more comfortable alternative to the AMG GT sports car.

New 2021 Mercedes SL: design and styling​


Over the past few months, we’ve spied numerous Mercedes SL prototypes tackling handling tests and cold weather assessments. Our most recent shots showed the brand’s engineers pushing the convertible in development at the Nurburging.

The images show how Mercedes has reinvented its flagship roadster. Its design language has a strong AMG influence, sharing the same Panamericana radiator grille and square exhaust tips as the Mercedes-AMG GT. This is unsurprising, though, considering Mercedes’s performance division has taken responsibility for the car’s development.

Mercedes SL spy 2021 -

The seventh-generation Mercedes SL will boast a 2+2 seating arrangement. The previous model’s long bonnet and relatively short tail is reflected in the new car’s proportions, although Mercedes has swapped its folding metal hardtop for a new fabric roof, which should shave a few kilos off its kerb weight.

Gorden Wagner, chief design officer for Daimler AG, told us: “Each SL is a mirror of its decade. If you think of the fifties and you think of the beauty ideal during that time, it was opulence. Then you move into the sixties, models got skinny, skirts got shorter, and when you look at the Pagoda this is a super-light car, and again represents the taste of the time.”

Despite the car’s AMG-inspired proportions, Robert Lesnik, Mercedes’s director of exterior design, assured us it will still retain the original car’s DNA. He said: “Gorden mentioned all those models through decades, but they keep something in common, that is a typical proportion – a front mid-engined car, with a long bonnet, small cabin, cab backward design.

“The last SL was designed for a certain trend at the time, which was a retractable hard-top. That was, at the time, state of the art, and everyone wanted to have one. It’s something that we will not do with the next one,” Lesnik explained.

New 2021 Mercedes SL: a set-up for the next AMG GT​


In 2019, sports cars contributed to slightly more than one per cent of Mercedes’s total sales worldwide, with around 28,400 cars sold. That’s a rise of 48 per cent over 2018 but, by the firm’s own admission, the AMG GT line-up accounts for most of that, with the compact SLC roadster now banished from the line-up and full-size SL dwindling in importance.

While the SLC now has no future, the brand’s decision to build the new SL with AMG hinges on the shared use of a new lightweight, aluminium-intensive platform that will eventually underpin the next AMG GT.

Speaking to Auto Express before his switch to Aston Martin, former AMG boss Tobias Moers explained how the project was developing: “This is a programme that’s really intense,” he said. “The new SL aligned with maybe the next generation of GT.

“I think it’s time to change the attitude of SL a little bit and bring back a bit of the history of this touring DNA of SL – make it sportier, and other things.”

Timeline: six generations of Mercedes SL​

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W198 (1954-63): Iconic Gullwing lasted for three years before Roadster replaced it. Four-cylinder 190 SL was the affordable alternative.

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W113 (1963-1971): ‘Pagoda’ model came with a removable hard-top. 230, 250 and 280 models all came with six-cylinder engines.

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R107 (1971-1989): As well as a roadster, Mercedes produced the four-seat SLC coupé up until 1981. This was the first SL with a V8.

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R129 (1989-2001): SL moved into the nineties with V12 power introduced for the first time. AMG versions also appear.

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R230 (2001-2011): Introduced folding hard-top roof first seen on the SLK, as well as adaptive body control and other hi-tech aids.

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R231 (2012-2020): Outgoing SL was a heavily updated version of the R230 that used an all-aluminium body for the first time.

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