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Mercedes' 2008 CLK63 Black Series Is Capable Of Great Violence, But Subtler Than You'd Think

A red 2008 Mercedes Benz CLK63 Black Series is parked near the ocean
A red 2008 Mercedes Benz CLK63 Black Series is parked near the ocean

Some numbers in the car world bear special significance. Whether it’s 426 for the Hemi or 4.0 for the 911 GT3 RS, when you start talking about them as an enthusiast, there’s usually a sense of hushed reverence. For Mercedes-Benz, this number is 6.3. This is a reference to the 300SEL 6.3 that Mercedes built in the 1960s, which was an all-conquering sedan that shattered speed records in unimpeachable style.

Fast forward 50 years or so, and that number has made a comeback, this time as a signifier for AMG performance models equipped with the high-revving, 6.2-liter naturally aspirated M156 V8 and its almost-American soundtrack. This engine saw duty in the C63, E63 and S63 models, and, in my personal favorite, the CLK63 Black Series – a car I’ve always loved but never driven until Mercedes offered me an hour with one during Monterey Car Week.

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That expansive rev range and its naturally aspirated character mean that the Black Series is a car that likes to be worked. Revving the engine out elicits less overall noise than you’d expect from something as special and limited as this, but it’s all good sound and all real, with no tuned-in bangs or pops from the exhaust.

500 hp isn’t that much by today’s standards, but today as in 2008, it’s not the end of the world. Even when you consider that the CLK Black with its carbon fiber and rear seat delete was still tipping the scales at a positively porcine 3,920 pounds, it’s still an experience, even if it doesn’t feel as quick as something with the modern 4.0-liter Biturbo motor.

The rear of a 2008 Mercedes Benz CLK63 Black Series in red
The rear of a 2008 Mercedes Benz CLK63 Black Series in red

By 2008, Mercedes had long since bailed on the manual transmission as a concept, and so it shoved a seven-speed auto in the CLK. On the surface, this is a bummer, as a manual would have been more engaging and probably helped to shave some weight, but this auto is a good one – by 2008 standards. Shifts are reasonably quick, if not immediate, and it mostly shifts when you want it to, and, hey, it could be a lot worse; it could be an automated manual like BMW’s SMG transmissions.

The Black Series’ bespoke suspension setup is decent for road use. The little streets around Monterey aren’t exactly brutal and broken, but the car felt compliant enough for daily use. It’s not necessarily plush or even something I’d want to daily, but you’re not going to rattle any fillings loose. The car’s AMG-branded Brembo brakes are awesome and feel unflappable, thanks to their big six-piston calipers and two-piece rotors up front.

The early-to-mid aughts weren’t a great time for Mercedes’ interior design or quality, and despite its whopper of an as-new price tag ($138,000 in 2008 or around $197,000 in today’s money), this thing is still mostly a C-Class. The seats are nice but not overly supportive, and the materials generally suck — Europe got fixed-back bucket seats, but they weren’t legal for the US at the time. The car also definitely smells like crayons, which is a plus for me, someone who has owned a bunch of late-90s and early-2000s German cars, but it could be a bummer for someone else.

While the Black Series was initially envisioned as a sort of tribute to the then-contemporary F1 safety car, it made the journey to the road pretty well. My driving experience was limited, but I imagine it as a car that would happily hustle up a canyon road, provided it wasn’t too tight, and it would look epic cruising around LA with all four windows down. It’s been eclipsed by AMG cars many times over in performance terms, but it’s hard to argue that the first-generation CLK Black Series doesn’t have style to match its still-nearly-six-figure price tag if and when you find one for sale.

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