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World Automotive Enthusiast and Cars News Update for Everyone

2017 Bentley Mulsanne Speed, Test Drive, Review, Specs

WHAT constitutes the Mulsanne Speed edition? I’m used to manufacturers taking equipment out of their cars to make them lighter and faster, but Bentley’s Speed programme stuffs the Mulsanne with even more goodies and upgrades the limo’s performance and suspension at the same time.



WHAT constitutes the Mulsanne Speed edition? I’m used to manufacturers taking equipment out of their cars to make them lighter and faster, but Bentley’s Speed programme stuffs the Mulsanne with even more goodies and upgrades the limo’s performance and suspension at the same time.

There are new Speed-specific exterior colours while inside the cabin is a collection of the most exquisite materials. It starts with a two-tone theme and continues with the addition of the Mulliner Driving Specification, which includes fancy diamond quilted stitch lines on the leather upholstery to create the right contrast between light and dark hues. Even the headliner is in the finest leather. There are also Bentley emblems embroidered on all the seats.

Every cabin item that looks like metal or wood is the real thing, such as the gear lever and air-con outlets/adjusters. Look closer and you’ll also notice the gleaming metal alloy of the door handles and drilled pedals. All these items are cool to the touch, unlike the chromed plastic bits found in less
“authentic” cabins. Inside the Mulsanne, my nasal passages pick up a whiff of the deluxe leather draped generously throughout the regal interior. I smell “tree”, too, courtesy of the wood veneers stretched across the dashboard and doors.

These are solid blocks of wood, milled down to the requisite shapes and sizes, then varnished
to perfection. These are not printed plastic inserts in disguise. It’s all a bit old-school, but it
works brilliantly, creating the traditional ambience of a British luxury saloon.

The Mulsanne’s opulence is matched by the performance of its Speed engine, a 6.75-litre twin-turbo V8 with 530bhp of horsepower and 1100Nm of majestic torque. This isn’t a high-revving 8-cylinder. It does its best work at low revs, pulling away from traffic effortlessly and without any drama. The massive motor hauls the 2685kg behemoth from zero to 100km/h in just 4.9 seconds.

With enough road, it can reach a scarcely believable 305km/h. In an indulgent limo like this, and in a place like the United Arab Emirates, where petrol is cheap, the Mulsanne Speed’s measures to improve effi ciency are perhaps redundant. But in any case, the Bentley has a respectable drag

ENGINE 6750cc, 32-valves, V8, turbocharged
MAX POWER 530bhp at 4200rpm
MAX TORQUE 1100Nm at 1750rpm
POWER TO WEIGHT 197.4bhp per tonne
GEARBOX 8-speed automatic
with manual select
0-100KM/H 4.9 seconds
TOP SPEED 305km/h
CONSUMPTION 6.8km/L (combined)
CO2 EMISSION 342g/km
PRICE EXCL. COE $1,400,000 (after
$30k CEVS surcharge)

the coefficient of 0.33 and a cylinder deactivation system that turns its V8 into a temporary V4 during
the light-load operation, such as cruising with minimal throttle input. The V8-V4-V8 switchover is undetectable. Thanks to its improved efficiency, the Bentley is 13 percent more economical (or to
be more accurate, less thirsty) than before, which translates into an additional 80km on the road
from a full tank of fuel. Even so, returning 6.8km/L on average and 4.4km/L in urban
conditions isn’t exactly fuel efficient, and spewing 342g of CO2 per kilometre isn’t exactly
saving the planet.

In my experience, driving the Mulsanne Speed in a suitably speedy fashion would result in
mileage of around 3km per litre. Talking or thinking about the fuel economy of a high-performance
limousine is probably pointless. The point here is, well, high performance and the Mulsanne Speed delivers. It’s a big, heavy saloon with luxuries aplenty, yet it’s surprisingly agile, seemingly
shrinking in size as it negotiates corners. The driving controls are lightweight, but not to the point
of “lightening” my sense of the tarmac, steering and chassis. It isn’t a sports car by any stretch of the imagination, and it’s a far cry from the Continental GT Speed, but this automobile provides enough feel and possesses enough zeal for the driver to enjoy the drive.

It’s a highly refined drive, too, with the cabin so quiet and well-cocooned that 150km/h on the highway “sounds” like 100km/h. Bentley’s Mulsanne Speed is not a mindless Luxo-barge on steroids, and it’s not meant to be a chauffeur-driven ride for Mr Big on the backseat. It’s a speedy superluxury
saloon for Mr Quick in the driver’s seat.










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