Took delivery of my All terrain.




BTW, how do you now raise the headrest?
The warranty on my 2019 E450 runs out this year and I was in my local Mercedes dealership and spent time in the new E class. From my point of view, I think the dash with the polished walnut and the integration of the screen in my car is classier than the two screens that seem to be pasted onto the dash. Seat wise not much difference. Rear seats felt similar with the seats in the new one slightly more legroom and the trunk a bit bigger. There are no additional safety features on the 2025 that I do not already have on my car. The auto start because of the 48 volt battery in the 2025 is much, much smoother. (I personally like auto/stop start because of the fuel it saves and the reduction on pollution, although I realize that many do not). Pop out door handles I think is a gimmick and an answer to a question no one asked and in the cold, they will freeze. So to me this is a step backward.
I am avoiding driving one because from all I have read, and all I have seen posted, the new E450's ride and quietness is leaps ahead of my car with almost 55,000 miles on it. I am afraid that if I drive a new 2025 E450 I will want it!
Last edited by JTK44; Mar 2, 2025 at 03:58 PM.
Last edited by L1Wolf; Mar 2, 2025 at 05:17 PM.




We understand that a coding, when you use the screen, is much, much cheaper than buttons and under Elon Musk, he tried to convince us that it is better: see Hans Christin Andersen's "The Emperor new Clothes"
I have been reading that VW, Hyundai and Kia and other manufacturers on new models are bringing back buttons.
Mercedes: it is never to late to admit a mistake and re-introduce buttons: no reason to try to "reinvent the wheel."
Just my $.02
BTW, how do you now raise the headrest?
The warranty on my 2019 E450 runs out this year and I was in my local Mercedes dealership and spent time in the new E class. From my point of view, I think the dash with the polished walnut and the integration of the screen in my car is classier than the two screens that seem to be pasted onto the dash. Seat wise not much difference. Rear seats felt similar with the seats in the new one slightly more legroom and the trunk a bit bigger. There are no additional safety features on the 2025 that I do not already have on my car. The auto start because of the 48 volt battery in the 2025 is much, much smoother. (I personally like auto/stop start because of the fuel it saves and the reduction on pollution, although I realize that many do not). Pop out door handles I think is a gimmick and an answer to a question no one asked and in the cold, they will freeze. So to me this is a step backward.
I am avoiding driving one because from all I have read, and all I have seen posted, the new E450's ride and quietness is leaps ahead of my car with almost 55,000 miles on it. I am afraid that if I drive a new 2025 E450 I will want it!
We understand that a coding, when you use the screen, is much, much cheaper than buttons and under Elon Musk, he tried to convince us that it is better: see Hans Christin Andersen's "The Emperor new Clothes"
I have been reading that VW, Hyundai and Kia and other manufacturers on new models are bringing back buttons.
Mercedes: it is never to late to admit a mistake and re-introduce buttons: no reason to try to "reinvent the wheel."
Just my $.02
The Best of Mercedes & AMG




From what I am reading, you cannot do that with the touch screen: you must be careful and pay attention. Any attention given the touch screen, is attention taken from driving:




BTW, how do you now raise the headrest?
The warranty on my 2019 E450 runs out this year and I was in my local Mercedes dealership and spent time in the new E class. From my point of view, I think the dash with the polished walnut and the integration of the screen in my car is classier than the two screens that seem to be pasted onto the dash. Seat wise not much difference. Rear seats felt similar with the seats in the new one slightly more legroom and the trunk a bit bigger. There are no additional safety features on the 2025 that I do not already have on my car. The auto start because of the 48 volt battery in the 2025 is much, much smoother. (I personally like auto/stop start because of the fuel it saves and the reduction on pollution, although I realize that many do not). Pop out door handles I think is a gimmick and an answer to a question no one asked and in the cold, they will freeze. So to me this is a step backward.
I am avoiding driving one because from all I have read, and all I have seen posted, the new E450's ride and quietness is leaps ahead of my car with almost 55,000 miles on it. I am afraid that if I drive a new 2025 E450 I will want it!
I agree that the wood dash lookes classier than the screens, but do not agree with your inference that they are pasted into the dash. They are well integrated and look great IMO and do not at all look cheep.
The auto start/stop is smoother due to the ISG and the 48V electric motor. Not the 48V battery, however that does power the system responsible for the smoothness.
The pop out handles are indeed not necessary but I've had the car in single digits and have not had them freeze and not pop out. I do like them, but could live without them. It is kind of cool to have them pop out as you approach the car, and is kind of like an acknowledgement that the car recognizes your key.
Your older car may have all the same safety features but it's likely not as advanced and therefore not as effective as the newer model. Still, not going to be a giant leap in 5-6 years.
The car does drive very nice and is noticeably better than the W212 I drove for 10 years. I wouldn't characterize it as leaps ahead. I only bought a new model because I totaled my W212. I would have kept it another 5 years before buying a new one otherwise.
Last edited by L1Wolf; Mar 2, 2025 at 05:13 PM.
https://mbworld.org/forums/s-class-w...ml#post8683173
On the Nannie front, anyone know what the car looks at when signaling that your hands are off the steering wheel. I thought it was the moving of the steering wheel, so something sensing the steering shaft perhaps. But yesterday, in Cruise, I was getting repeated red steering wheel icons. The road was fairly straight and jiggling the wheel would make it disappear but only briefly. I was driving with my normal winter gloves on. Took the gloves off and no more steering warnings. Are there some kind of touch sensors in the rim of the wheel??




On the Nannie front, anyone know what the car looks at when signaling that your hands are off the steering wheel. I thought it was the moving of the steering wheel, so something sensing the steering shaft perhaps. But yesterday, in Cruise, I was getting repeated red steering wheel icons. The road was fairly straight and jiggling the wheel would make it disappear but only briefly. I was driving with my normal winter gloves on. Took the gloves off and no more steering warnings. Are there some kind of touch sensors in the rim of the wheel??



