
Super Clean, off lease from MB Credit with a Clean CARFAX. This coupe is in great condition. Just serviced by our experienced Mercedes technicians. Integrated ipod, 6 disc changer, H-K Logic 7 surround, Bi-xenon headlamps with active curve illumination and cornering fog lamps. You will not find a nicer example of this low production car. Great mileage and great perfomance all in one car. See our website www.jandesale.com or call 704-484-9900
We have been supplying fine, European automobiles to descriminating customers for over 25 years. Every car is hand picked and then serviced by our team of technicians.
See this car and other similar vehicles at www.jandesales.com
Call Bob Still at 704-473-9900 |
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Price:
$25,405.00
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- Year: 2006
- Make: Mercedes-Benz
- Model: CLK-Class
- Trim: CLK350
- Body style: Coupe
- Mileage:
36848
- Engine: 6 Cyl.
- Trans: Automatic
- Exterior Color: Iridium Silver
- Interior Color: Charcoal
- Stock: 6F172404
- VIN: WDBTJ56JX6F172404
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| Media Reviews |
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The Mercedes-Benz CLK is automotive elegance, restrained and sophisticated, reeking of European class. The three-pointed star sits low, but proudly, in the redesigned nose, which for 2006 sports the wider grille look of other Mercedes coupes and roadsters. That emblem long has been a hallmark of Mercedes coupes, making them immediately identifiable on the Autobahn, and suggesting that drivers of lesser cars skedaddle into the right-hand lane. The coupe dispenses entirely of the B-pillar, an attractive touch reminiscent of an earlier age of sporty coupes. The rear windows slide all the way down into the body, creating an exceptionally open environment. With its fabric top up, the cabriolet is nearly indistinguishable in silhouette from the coupe, with only the barest hint of a break in the roofline where it meets the trunk lid. The fabric top is fully lined and insulated and tucks neatly into the boot, where it fills up about a third of the trunk's limited space, which already gives up almost 2 cubic feet to the coupe's. Rearward vision is impressive for a convertible, although not the equal of the coupe. In the event of an imminent collision or rollover in the cabriolet, two roll bars deploy and lock in place within 0.3 seconds. Until needed, they are stylistically integrated into the rear-seat head-restraints. A nice touch is the absence of any visible antenna for radio, cellular telephone or navigation system. This is made possible by replacing the conventional steel trunk lid with a composite design that allows the integration of the antennae into the lid's structure. It's a tribute to the CLK's design that the car looks smaller than it actually is. The CLK shares its platform with the C-Class, and despite its compact appearance it's actually longer than the C-Class sedan. Details distinguish the models: The CLK350 has neutral-tinted glass and gray vanes on its grille; the CLK500 gets blue-tinted glass, high-gloss black vanes with chrome trim on its grille, and an AMG rear spoiler; the CLK55 AMG is distinguished by a styling package that includes a front valance with three separate sections and mesh grillwork, and unique rocker panels, rear valance and alloy wheels. The CLK350 and CLK500 are equipped with 17-inch wheels, 7.5-inch wide in front and 8.5-inch wide rear, with 225/45ZR17 tires front and 245/40ZR17 rear. The wheels on the CLK350 are a light-alloy five-spoke design and on the CLK500 are AMG-styled monoblock design. The CLK55 AMG has 18-inch front wheels, 7.5-inch wide in front and 8.5-inch wide rear, in a high-polished double-spoke AMG design, with lower profile 225/40ZR18 tires front and 255/35ZR18 rear.
The Mercedes-Benz CLK is among the best of its class, a rolling statement of style and taste, and a design that's likely to age well. The CLK350 will satisfy most owners, while the CLK500 is a superb automobile in every respect, kicking everything up another notch. The CLK55 AMG is strictly for enthusiasts. As driving enthusiasts, we can certainly understand the desire for more performance, but the CLK500 delivers more than plenty. NewCarTestDrive.com correspondent Tom Lankard filed this report from Santa Barbara, California; with Mitch McCullough reporting from Los Angeles.
The Mercedes-Benz CLK offers generous room even for tall drivers. The back seat actually has enough room for two adults to travel comfortably. You might not want to take a couple friends for a daylong jaunt, but no one is going to get out of the back seat looking like the Hunchback of Notre Dame. Mercedes made access to the rear seat easier with handy quick-release front seats that slide forward and up. Seatbelt presenters automatically extend forward from behind the door opening to make the seatbelts handy for front-seat occupants, then retract. The coupe's rear seats are split 60/40, and fold down to add to the cargo capacity of the coupe's 10.4 cubic-foot trunk. Interior materials are among the finest in any recent Mercedes. Soft polyurethane sprayed onto the dashboard provides an attractive appearance and a luxurious feel. While there have been complaints about the use of plastic in the M-Class and C-Class, it's hard to imagine anyone not being seduced by the look and feel of the CLK interior. Nice touches of wood and gathered leather on the doors panels make for a very attractive cabin. The cup holder on the passenger side is attractive but cantankerous, and was the only thing negative we could find in the interior. The cabriolet has a beautifully lined top. The instrument panel is a departure for Mercedes, but it works admirably. A large round speedometer and tachometer dominate the center of the gauge cluster. Small thermometer-like gauges for the fuel level and coolant temperature flank them, harking back to a Mercedes design of the 1950s. While they take some getting used to in a brief test drive, the design has the look of something so intuitive for daily use that it's a wonder nobody else uses it.
New engine brings more power.
The Mercedes CLK is a luxury two-door you can drive hard without even realizing it. The chassis has the kind of stiffness with which Mercedes has only in recent years endowed its upscale SL roadsters. In mixed driving along a stretch of Detroit's Woodward Avenue that varied from 1900-style brick to pool-table smooth asphalt, the coupe's suspension swallowed unpleasant bumps without complaint while communicating steering input fluently back to the steering wheel. A few miles north of downtown Detroit, on the winding lakeside roads of Oakland County, the coupe handled curves at speed with the easy grace of a thoroughbred horse stretching out in the home stretch. A spirited romp in a cabriolet along the California coast and through the Golden State's coastal range was similarly impressive and more enjoyable. Unlike many convertibles, the CLK feels solid, like it's carved from one thick piece of rigid material. Extensive use of high-strength steel alloys of varying thickness in the cabriolet's unit-body panels and structure combine with liberal reinforcements of transmission tunnel, cross struts and rear bulkhead to add torsional stiffness and bending resistance and minimize vibration. Mercedes claims that the stiffness of the cabriolet's body is equal to that of the coupe. All of this contributes to its precise handling and taut but comfortable ride quality. The front suspension combines two low-mass lower control arms with a strut, coil springs, dual-tube shocks and a stabilizer bar. Mercedes chose to use the two lower control arms to improve impact absorption for better wheel control and damping. The rear suspension is the latest refinement of Mercedes proven multi-link design. It has been tuned for improved absorption of vibration and more predictable handling when driven hard. The CLK has very little squat or dive during hard acceleration or braking. Mercedes continues to improve its electronic stability program, which can help the driver maintain control by reducing skidding. In the CLK, the system is virtually transparent, intervening unobtrusively to prevent wheel spin, but without the heavy-handed reduction in power that marred some of its early applications. The brakes on the CLK are superb. They're easy to modulate for smooth stops in normal, everyday driving, and respond very linearly. The Mercedes V6 and V8 engines perform admirably and both benefit from a five-speed automatic transmission. The 268-horsepower CLK350 has all the power most drivers need, accelerating ably from a stoplight and driving the car smoothly through the gears. The 302-horsepower CLK500 is a refined German muscle car, delivering thrilling acceleration performance with barely any deterioration in handling in spite of its greater weight. The CLK500 cabriolet can accelerate from 0 to 60 mph in about 6 seconds, according to Mercedes. The automatic transmission is very responsive. The engine exhaust makes a pleasant sound. The coupe, with its smooth aerodynamics and quiet manners is an excellent car for all seasons, but the convertible may be your preference if you enjoy top-down driving. Buffeting from the wind when the top down is fairly low with the windblocker in place. Put the top up and there's very little wind noise.
(Show more reviews)
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Actual rating will vary with options, driving conditions, habits and vehicle condition.
City MPG: 19
Hwy MPG: 28
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