Michael: I was a little disappointed in the brakes, which don't quite have the bite I was looking for. Coming down from high speeds, they felt a little bit numb, not really reacting as soon as my foot hit the pedal. When driving a performance car, especially on difficult roads at higher speeds (within the boundaries of the law, of course), the expectation is for the car to feel like an extension of your body. I simply don't think the brakes deliver on this. Nitpicky? Perhaps a little, but when you're paying over $100,000 you have to be.
Autoblog: The SL's nose is fussy, with a pair of eagle-eye bi-xenon cornering headlamps and a massive upright grille giving way to the obligatory long hood. We can't quite put our finger on it, but there's something aesthetically uncomfortable about the front end's proportions and multiplicity of lines. The schnoz looks particularly awkward when viewed in profile, as the grille and front fascia stand uncomfortably proud of the swept-back headlamps. We're inclined to blame toughening pedestrian crash test standards for all of this, but somehow, other automakers have done a better job.
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