1st of compact vehicles to go on sale here in 2013
FRANKFURT AUTO SHOW

U.S. may get 5 new M-B models

1st of compact vehicles to go on sale here in 2013

Mercedes said the B-class four-door unveiled in Frankfurt would be sold in the United States.
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FRANKFURT -- Daimler AG is considering selling all five variants of the new Mercedes-Benz compact A and B class family in the United States, said CEO Dieter Zetsche. The first U.S. model will go on sale in 2013.

Mercedes-Benz unveiled the first member of the range -- the next-generation B-class four-door -- at the Frankfurt auto show and said that model will be sold in the United States. U.S. prices were not announced; in Germany, the four-door will cost 26,000 euros, or about $35,500, when it goes on sale this year.

The new platform also is being used for a B-class four-door with coupe styling similar to that of the large CLS. The platform also will be used for a station wagon, an SUV and the smaller A-class five-door, said Joerg Prigl, vice president for Mercedes-Benz and Smart front-wheel and electric vehicles.

All of the compact cars will have four-cylinder gasoline and diesel engines ranging in size from 1.6 liters to 2.0 liters, said Prigl. The 1.6-liter powerplant could be adapted for the United States, but the United States won't get diesel engines, he said.

The United States also won't get a plug-in hybrid version of the B-class shown in concept form as the E-Cell Plus, which has a three-cylinder engine and an electric motor, Prigl said.

Four-wheel drive is likely, especially for models with the larger 2.0-liter engines, Prigl said. Horsepower could be boosted to more than 300 with supercharging, making a six-cylinder engine unnecessary, he said.

The A and B class will borrow technology from the larger C- and E-class cars, such as warning systems when the vehicle leaves its lane, Prigl said.

"The A- and B-class cars start now," he said. "We will fire an attack in this segment beginning now and for the next two to three years. Every year we will push at least one model onto the market."

You can reach Diana T. Kurylko at dkurylko@crain.com. -- Follow Diana on Twitter


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