The Accidental Comparison
By Kim Reynolds
Recently, race drivers Tommy Kendall (representing Mercedes-Benz) and Bill Auberlen (for BMW) demonstrated their car-handling skills to the press at the Motor Press Guild's "Track Days" at Willow Springs Raceway. What were they driving? The CLS55 and M5, of course. Our alert Neil Chirico seized the opportunity to equip each pairing with our Racepak GPS system to record what happened. Below is each driver and car's single best laps presented as a virtual head-to-head comparison.
• The visual depiction of results like these is challenging to present. The first graphic below is a perfect example, where speed differences of a few percent become virtually invisible. So to better capture the CLS55 and M5's performance, we've indulged in two, more elaborate presentations; one shows their difference in speed; the third, an illustration of how far the M5 would pull ahead of the CLS55 over the course of one lap.
• The three illustrations below are called "curtain graphs"; the base of the curtain demarks the course map, its height represents the magnitude of the result. In the first instance, the height is speed; in the second, it's speed differential; in the third, car-lengths ahead. Obviously, the M5 is quicker--but how and by how much? Read on.
The M5's 2.55-second quicker lap means a big gap on a fast track. The CLS55's brief gains in the transitions and during low-speed cornering logically reflect its better skidpad skills; the M5's gains during braking are likewise consistent with our test-track numbers. What's illuminating are the BMW's cornering and acceleration at high speeds. Our dragstrip measurements from a stop tend to obscure this.
::01:: Here you see the rise and fall of the cars' speeds over one lap. Did we say "speeds"? The two cars perform so similarly, their plots look like one. Nevertheless, it's fun to note the graph's shape and top speeds.
::02:: This is a more dramatic visualization. Here we see each car's mph advantage (the difference in their above speeds). Note that the CLS55's few gains seem restricted to the lower-speed transitions.
::03:: This third depiction really gets to the nitty-gritty. With the two cars starting together on their flying laps, the height of the "curtain" represents how the BMW gradually draws away from the MB.