MERCEDES-Benz has revealed a wild fuel cell concept vehicle called the Ener-G-Force said to preview a rugged G-Class successor of the distant future.
Set to be unveiled in the metal at the Los Angeles motor show this month, the Ener-G-Force is a design study aimed at answering the question: Will the G-Class still be around in 2025? Despite being thoroughly modern underneath, the boxy visage of the current G-Class has gone largely unchanged since 1979.
Mercedes-Benz claims this concept “demonstrates how the genes of the classic off-roader may still assert themselves in the far future”.
As Mercedes’ entrant in this year’s LA Design Challenge, which centres around penning a Highway Patrol vehicle for the year 2025, the Ener-G-Force is also how the company envisions the future of police squad cars.
Benz claims the notion of penning the off-roader of tomorrow “fascinated” its designers so much that they took the original contest entry – penned at its studio is Carlsbad, California – and turned it into the 1:1 model set to appear at the LA motor show from November 28.
Overseas reports indicate the fanciful design also previews a wider array of possible future SUV models from Mercedes, including a direct rival to the Range Rover that would sit above the current hardcore GL-Class and target a different customer.
Mercedes-Benz Cars director of design Gorden Wagener called the concept a “vision of an off-roader that, while reflecting tomorrow’s adventures, also invokes the genes of the Mercedes-Benz off-road icon, the G model”.
“Modern and cool, it could also be a clue about a new beginning for the off-road design idiom of Mercedes-Benz,” he said.
The car’s proposed drivetrain features a quartet of wheel-hub motors driven by hydrogen fuel cells. Power for these cells is created by a prototype ‘hydro-tech converter’ using recycled water stored in roof-mounted tanks.
The storage units for electricity generated in this process are stored in the flamboyant side skirts, and, as a fuel-cell vehicle, the only emission is water.
Mercedes believes the prototype system is capable of providing an operating range of 800km.
Styling highlights include the tiny glass area – a “cocoon” for police, apparently – enormous tyres on chunky five-spoke 20-inch rims, an imposing four-bar grille with G-shaped front LED lights, and a tailgate-mounted pull-out compartment reminiscent of the G-Class’s spare-wheel housing.
A ‘Terra-Scan’ topograghy scanner on the roof gives 360-degree views of the surroundings, and is said to be capable of controlling a system that would adjust the spring and damping rates – plus other suspension parameters – for maximum traction on a given surface.