The compact exec has always been the first choice of company car drivers looking to cut a dash, but the tax-slashing benefits of going electric mean that corporate tastes have changed.
The Tesla Model 3 has become the user-chooser's first choice, its blend of tech, range, fast charging and rock-bottom tax bills making it a perennial sales chart fixture since it arrived here in 2018. Moreover, it has been joined in the past year or so by a growing number of upstart EV rivals keen to take a slice of this profitable pie.
One of the latest to land is the MG IM5, which actually isn't an MG at all. (You will search in vain for any sign of an octagonal Morris Garages logo.) Instead, it's a rebadged Intelligence in Motion L6, a slick executive saloon that's the product of a joint venture with MG owner SAIC. No matter what it's called, it's hard to ignore the car's sleek lines, massive 100kWh battery, 441-mile range and £44,995 price, plus a tech spec that runs to four-wheel steer and 800V architecture.

The old guard aren't giving up without a fight, though. Like many European brands, Mercedes-Benz has been hampered by legislative flip-flopping and shackled by the need to deliver both battery-powered and combustion-engined models, often offering two totally bespoke machines in effectively the same class (the E-Class and EQE, for example).
With the new CLA, however, it's taking a more joined-up approach. The first car to be built on the brand's new MMA architecture, it's engineered to seamlessly accept any powertrain. For this CLA 250+, that means a highly efficient 85kWh nickel-manganese-cobalt battery and a clever, rear-mounted 268bhp motor with a silicon-carbide inverter that offers lower weight and a more compact size.










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Interesting to finally see -- updated Model 3 tested for the first time. Evidently the revised Model 3 has taken another leap in efficiency; ahead of the now obsolete older variant. Thus, Mercedes has to resign itself to only making the second most efficient EV in the world. Still, that's a good place to be -- as it means, the Mercedes is still better than anything else out there, bar the new heavily reviced: Model 3.
Worth mention -- tested here is the AMG variant of the CLA. The bigger wheels of the AMG variant -- increase energy consumtion to a small degree, they also render the suspension a little bit more firm. The cheaper standard variant - would stand better up to the Tesla in terms of measured efficiency.
It is remarkable that MB have thrown their engineering might behind a clean sheet EV design and come up with something that's only almost as good as the venerable Tesla 3, albeit 150kg heavier.
Tesla could have shined brightly and rested on their laurels, but credit where it's due, they continue to finely hone their product, partly thanks to the analysis of the many Tb of data their cars have generated, enabling them to further optimise their product. Impressive, whoever the shareholders might be.
Erm, it's the up-dated Tesla 3 being tested for the first time. The up-date is quite serious, i.e. new motors - new battery; in other words the innards are largely new however the metal is largely the same as before. I suspect - the innards are now more important - than the metal in deciding whether the car is new or old. Model 3 in other words, is effectively a new car given the scale of change inside. The CLA is probably the -- second most efficient car in the world now, with only the significantly refreshed Model 3 being better in that respect.
Erm ... good point, well made :-)
So placate your consciences and look at Hyundai or Kia instead.....