Mercedes Benz A Class Tuning

"Thank you for reading my A Class tuning guide"

When Mercedes needed a compact family car to rival the Golf, A3 and BMW 3 series they came up with the A class.

Mercedes Benz A Classs are popular cars and with the ultimate uprated mods you can certainly enhance your driving opportunities.

The A Class is a good car modification project to carry out. If you do your research then you can create an awesome A Class but don't be fooled there are lots of sports upgrades out there that will simply not suit it read our unbiased guides first.

It has proved very popular and the latest 2013 revision style wise leaves it's competitors cowering in a dark corner.

  • W168; 1997–2004 First generation offered with 1.4, 1.6. 1.9 and 2.1 Petrol engines and a 1.7 Diesel in 2001 it was facelifted with new headlights and bumper revisions.
  • W169; 2004–2012 met the tight emissions regs but the performance model still hit 60mph in 8 seconds. Facelift in 2008 with revised front and rear bumpers and we saw stop start tech introduced.
  • W176; 2013–2018 A stunning design direction change for the A class, the A45 from AMG shows what is possible on this platform giving inspiration to all A Class owners.

The A Class is a good car tuning project to play with. If you do your planning then you can create an awesome A Class but don't be fooled there are lots of modifications out there that will simply not suit it read our unbiased guides first.

Tuning tips and articles

Engine tuning Transmission tuning Care care Intake & exhaust mods Improve handling Forums

Handling/Suspension upgrades

Improving the handling for car owners first priority in your A Class tuning project.

Adding some negative camber to the front and a degree or two of toe out, will usually improve your A Class in handling and cornering.

We suggest that you fit performance suspension and lower the car by 28mm - 37 mm. Larger drops require arch work - especially on models already equipped with motorsport suspension (ie AMG).

Improving the handling for car owners first priority in your A Class tuning project. Drop the car by as much as 35mm and fit uprated stiffer dampers, bigger drops will need other modifications in most instances.

Engine tuning mods.

Turning our attention to the A Class's engine we need to get a bit more power out of the top end.

Spending a little bit of money on the top engine and handling mods should transform your car into a high performance car.

Sadly with smaller engine sizes you are wasting your time spending money on modifications, so if this applies to you get yourself an engine swap then apply the following mods.

The following sports upgrades are usually carried out by our members, decide how far you wish to go in your tuning project before you get started.

Getting the right modified upgrade kits for your planned usage of the car is vital. Stage 3 motor sport mods just don't work well on the road difficult in stop start traffic.

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How to tune your car

  1. Improve the handling

    Focus on Suspension improvements, such as coilovers and make sure the bushings are in good order and that the alignment is correct. Then focus on improving the brakes, with a big disk brake conversion kit and fast road brake pads.

  2. Remove restrictions

    Focus on the intake and exhaust with filters being the common point of restriction in a tuned car. Intercoolers may also become restrictive on turbo engines so this may also need to be uprated.

  3. Burn more fuel & air

    Increase the fuelling so it matches the air coming into the engine. The ratio is important so you need to improve the fuel pump and injectors, so the head mods, big valve conversions, fast road camshafts and forced induction upgrades extra supply of air is adequately met.

  4. Test and replace any weak parts

    Weak areas are commonly the clutch, the turbocharger and pistons and crankshaft in a highly tuned engine. Makes sure these components will cope with your power aspirations.

  5. The Tune or Remap

    A cars ECU controls the fuel, timing, spark and even the turbo in some cases, so to fully extract your gains you should remap the car last and this will fully release the power. Some cars are easy to map, and others require piggyback ECU's or aftermarket ECU's but this is the most vital step of your tuning project.

Modifying to Stage 1:

 Alloy wheels, Sports exhaust, Suspension upgrade (drop 30-40mm), Panel air filter, Remap, Lighter flywheel.

Modifying to Stage 2:

 Power/Sport clutch, Fast road cam, Ported and polished head, high flow fuel injector, fuel pump upgrades.

Modifying to Stage 3:

 Competition cam, Sports gearbox, Internal engine upgrades (pistons/head/valves), Engine balancing, Adding or upgrading forced induction (turbo/supercharger).

Your aim when modding your car should be a nice flat torque range. You want to avoid sending all the torque to be at the top end of the rev range unless you are creating a motor sport car.

The whole point of our guides is to give a starting base of customizing mods and point you in the right direction, our forum is best place to go if you need more detailed advice and tips on your customized car project, the best performance kits and all aspects of modding cars.Fast road cams offer one of the biggest performance gains for your money as far as a single tuning parts goes on a NASP engine.

It improves the intake and exhaust durations and pushes up the power if done right. Ideally you'd add other mods and finish up with a reflashed ECU. TorqueCars would caution you not to go with a motor sport cam as this affects the engines idling and general town driving characteristics.When pushing up the power you will need to look at to the fuelling. More power needs more fuel.

Mercedes used a Supercharger on many engines throughout their range, and with a simple overdrive pulley you can boost the power output significantly. Add in twincharging, or a larger compressor and you can see some really impressive power gains.

Most power losses, flat spots and erratic idling after tuning mods are done can usually be traced to timing or fuelling issues.Uprating the injectors is another beneficial modification and will deliver sufficient fuel. If have increased your fuelling with bigger injectors you will also need to get a bigger fuel pump to supply it.

Intake and Exhaust Tuning.

Breathing mods are usually next up. Contrary to popular belief there is often very little if any power gain to be had by fitting an induction kit, they only work well and are recommended after you increase the engines power to the point where the standard air intake box cannot cope!

They may add a little peak power but down where you need it the most you get very little benefit if any on smaller engines.

Maximum power gains come from a full induction kit with a cold air feed on heavily tuned engines, this can be sited within an air box but a panel filter should suffice for most applications. TorqueCars suggest you use a panel air filter as these are easy to clean and maintain and generally perform better than paper ones.

Do not go with the widest exhaust you can buy this will reduce the exhaust flow rate - the best exhausts for power gains are usually between 1.5 to 2.5 inches. It is the shape and material more than the bore size.

Polishing and porting the head will allow you to maximise your air/fuel charge. Leave this to a professional though with a proper flow bench and machine tools A good triple plate fast road upgraded clutch will help to keep that power going where it should. Never make false economies or ask the standard OEM clutch to cope. Turbo engines are just pleading to be Remapped. You will see massive power gains on most modern turbochaged cars including diesels making a remap one of the most cost effective and massive modifications for your money.

We've also come across some owners experimenting with twincharging conversions and making some very high power gains.

Adding forced induction will see big power gains but this is usually too expensive to be cost effective. Turbos are generally harder to add than a supercharger. With a turbo the power curve is related exponentially to the engine speed making it more challenging to map.

It is easier to map a supercharger because the boost is proportional to engine speed on a linear curve. Alternatively you could fit water injection to cut down knock.

Alloy wheel upgrades.

Alloy wheels can help the brakes cool down and are generally less heavy than the steel ones. Large A Class alloys can decrease performance. If you get big alloys you will be changing your final drive ratio.

Although some people have installed larger rims without issues we would stick to a 17 inch rim size as the maximum. 18's and 19's look great on the AMG A45 version, but we wouldn't mind betting that you prefer the handling of 17's to the larger wheels as well as the lower tyre costs.

For more information on Tuning your car please join us in our friendly forum where you can discuss A Class options in more detail with our A Class owners. It would also be worth reading our unbiased Mercedes Benz tuning articles to get a full grasp of the benefits and drawbacks of each modification.

Please help us improve these tips by sending us your feedback in the comments box below. We love to hear what our visitors have got up to and which mods work best for them on each model of car. Comments are used to improve the accuracy of these articles which are continually updated.

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