With 0-60mph in 7.2 secs and 128mph, the Riviera GS was among the fastest four-seaters in the world.
The Mercedes-Benz 250SE Coupé’s 2496cc straight-six needs revs for its 148bhp, but it’s creamily smooth
Yes, the Benz feels much less lively – it could hardly be otherwise – but even here the performance figures don’t tell the full story.
The 250SE may have been 15mph and many seconds adrift of the Riviera’s tyre-smoking accelerative abilities, yet its tolerance of sustained high revs meant it could cruise as fast as the Buick (say 110mph, all day long) and use a lot less fuel doing so.
Consider also that the 20mpg Mercedes could extract well over 300 miles from its 18-gallon capacity; the Riviera, averaging 11mpg, had to stop every 170 miles or so to replenish its absurdly small 16-gallon tank.
But perhaps none of the above matters all that much for a 60-year-old car.
Buick’s three-shield logo on the Riviera
What we can say is that both are directionally stable and you would not overtly criticise the light, numb control offered by the over-boosted Riviera without having the 250SE on hand for direct comparison.
Mercedes’ recirculating-ball system set the standard for power steering for many years, allowing the driver to guide the car with a true feel for what the front wheels were doing.
In other words, because you can sense the build-up of understeer, you can drive the Benz briskly, with confidence, almost at once.
Over and above the superb finish and the beautiful materials, it was this sense of completeness that the 250SE Coupé owner was paying for, even if they couldn’t quite put it into words themselves.
Buick’s Riviera has a 2+2 layout
Superficially sedate but more expensively engineered, a Mercedes-Benz gave its drivers a sense of command and detail satisfaction that no American cars have even pretended to emulate.
The Riviera is not all bad news on the road; far from it. It does not roll all that much more than the German – it is quite a squat, low-slung car – and if there is a hint of transitional wallow, it was probably considered a fair compromise for the soft ride.
On its low-pivot swing axles, the Mercedes has a more controlled, equally comfortable but more of-a-piece feel than the American.
It is set up to understeer gently and, unlike the Buick, offers roadholding way in excess of its power.
The Mercedes-Benz 250SE Coupé drives with willing precision, if less outright pace than the Buick
Such limits as it has are not easily found but, as is the wont of swing axles, a little unforgiving when encountered, which is almost never on the public road.
You tend to guide the Buick visually rather than by messages through the wheel, while treating the throttle with respect and taking care not to jab too abruptly on the sensitive brakes.
In the end, the lightweight, minimum-effort character of the Riviera is intrinsic to its louche appeal – you either embrace or reject its shortcomings.
It is a handsome but flawed hero from the last great era of American car design: such an unashamed Madison Avenue fantasy that the advertising agency McCann Erickson, rather than the Buick division, presented the original concept to GM management.
Quality details abound in the Mercedes-Benz 250SE Coupé’s cabin
In contrast, there was no requirement to create an image for the prestigious 250SE.
The price-tag assured the car’s boutique status even in the realm of exclusive big coupés of the ’60s.
And it was, in the end, a Mercedes-Benz – and a hand-finished Mercedes-Benz coupé at that, with a status in the Stuttgart hierarchy second only to the mighty 600.
I like it. I admire it. Its beauty, engineering values and all-round Teutonic wholesomeness make it the obvious choice for any right-thinking enthusiast who dons the imaginary cravat of connoisseurship.
The Mercedes-Benz 250SE Coupé’s rear quarters are cramped
And yet there remains an 18- or 19-year-old version of myself who fell in love with the Buick Riviera upon reading that Motor road test, swiftly followed by exposure to a black-and-white 1964 Michael Winner flick called The System, featuring Oliver Reed and… a Riviera.
Reed was one of a bunch of dissolute characters residing at an English seaside resort, suddenly enlivened by the arrival of a new potential conquest (Jane Merrow) in her father’s Buick.
I can only remember one line: “Which would you have, the girl or the Riviera?” asks a fellow layabout of Ollie. “Both.”
Images: Pawel Litwinksi
Factfiles
Buick Riviera
- Sold/number built 1965/34,586
- Construction steel chassis, steel body
- Engine all-iron, ohv 6970cc V8, single Carter four-barrel carburettor
- Max power 340bhp @ 4400rpm
- Max torque 465lb ft @ 2800rpm
- Transmission three-speed Super Turbine automatic, RWD via limited-slip diff
- Suspension: front independent, by double wishbones, anti-roll bar rear live axle, radius arms, Panhard rod; coil springs, telescopic dampers f/r
- Steering power-assisted recirculating ball
- Brakes drums, with servo
- Length 17ft 6in (5334mm)
- Width 6ft 4in (1930mm)
- Height 4ft 7in (1397mm)
- Wheelbase 9ft 9in (2972mm)
- Weight 4369lb (1982kg)
- 0-60mph 8 secs
- Top speed 122mph
- Mpg 11
- Price new £3639
- Price now £15-45,000*
Mercedes-Benz 250SE Coupé
- Sold/number built 1965-’67/6213
- Construction steel monocoque
- Engine iron-block, alloy-head, sohc 2496cc straight-six, Bosch mechanical fuel injection
- Max power 148bhp @ 5500rpm
- Max torque 159lb ft @ 4200rpm
- Transmission four-speed manual or automatic, RWD, optional limited-slip diff
- Suspension independent, at front by double wishbones, anti-roll bar rear swing axles, hydropneumatic self-levelling; coil springs, telescopic dampers f/r
- Steering recirculating ball, optional power assistance
- Brakes discs, with servo
- Length 16ft ⅕in (4882mm)
- Width 6ft ⅔in (1847mm)
- Height 4ft 9in (1448mm)
- Wheelbase 9ft ¼in (2750mm)
- Weight 3285lb (1490kg)
- 0-60mph 12 secs
- Top speed 112mph
- Mpg 20.2
- Price new £4484
- Price now £25-60,000*
*Prices correct at date of original publication
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