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Tested: 2005 SUV Showdown

From the April 2005 issue of Car and Driver.

Mother Nature started her landscaping for this comparison test 275 million years ago, when she washed a bunch of quartz sand with rusty water until the grains took on a pretty red hue and then cemented them together to form sandstone bedrock. Over the ages since, she hoisted this one-time sand pile upward by 4600 feet and set about sculpting it into a lofty lump that today’s residents of Sedona, Arizona, call Chicken Point.

Not that most of them get to see this particular sample of her handiwork. Mother hid it well behind a spellbinding array of other rocks, all of which seem to have more appealing names.

Chicken Point is hidden but not forbidden. There’s a trail — Broken Arrow — barely wide enough for one vehicle over most of its 2.1-mile length. Thrill-seeking visitors buy a ride in the Jeeps of a local tour company. But if you have a 4×4 and are willing to risk ripping the bottom out of it, you can attempt the journey yourself.

Hmm. Could we urge a six-pack of grocery getters up to Chicken Point without leaving 5W-20 slicks from savaged oil pans or embarrassing ourselves with a call for helicopter evacuation? Only one way to find out.

Exactly which SUVs? First, the all-important qualifier: The vehicles must have low and high ranges. Broken Arrow is a slow-speed trek demanding plenty of ground clearance and driver expertise.

The spring season has two all-new mainstreamer SUVs: the Jeep Grand Cherokee, now with Hemi power, and a Nissan Pathfinder built on Titan bones. Both have the climber’s swagger. Toyota’s athletic 4Runner is certainly right for the mission. The optional V-8 won’t go breathless on us at altitude. The Mitsubishi Montero has intriguing off-road capability, too, including the ability to be shifted from rear drive to all-wheel drive on the fly at speeds up to 62 mph.

From VW, the agile Touareg might be pulled down to popular prices if we stay with the standard 237-hp, 3.2-liter V-6. We’re aiming for a base sticker in the $35,000-to-$40,000 range.

What about the most ubiquitous SUV ever, 14 years as an American bestseller: the Ford Explorer? With two-wheel drive, it’s as common as dandelions. Instead, we’ll opt for AdvanceTrac full-time all-wheel drive and Roll Stability Control. The price? Uh, a blur of incentives lets you buy an Explorer right. And if these rebates were as predictable as, say, lunar cycles, we could pull them into our as-tested calculation. They aren’t. We can’t. Let’s just say we welcome Mommy’s favorite ballet bus to the climb, and if it can do a demi-plié on Chicken Point, there’ll be high-fives in PTA meetings across the land.

At the risk of getting all Lewis-and-Clark on you, we hired a geologist to accompany us. Inquiring minds want to know why the rocks of Sedona are red, and why does that redness stop just beyond the edge of town?

AARON KILEY

Geologist Wayne Ranney explains rocks as if he had baked them himself. He helped us see that the red is really just a stack of layers about 1400 feet thick, situated partway up a much taller cliff. Look northeast of Sedona: The high ground is tan. Those lighter-colored layers above the red start about a mile above sea level; they covered Sedona thousands of years ago. Blame erosion? You could, or you could enjoy the carvings it leaves behind. From two fixed points just south of town — they happen to be old volcanoes — Ranney has calculated that Sedona’s cliffscape is migrating northeast at the rate of one foot every 625 years.

The relatively soft rock — mostly sandstone — doesn’t dissolve uniformly, however. Lumps and spires are left behind for our Kodak moments — the rock equivalent of slowly melting icebergs — and they are christened with fanciful names like Courthouse and Bell Rock.

Chicken Point is a formation still hidden in the background, biding its time as the rocks in front crumble away. In a few turns of geological time it, too, will be gone.

The rocks are melting, guys. Let’s roll.

Sixth Place: Ford Explorer

A cold, early-January wind is blowing at the top, and the open-air riders on their Pink Jeep tours shiver in their heavy jackets. Darn, no heated seats in the Explorer! But we have warmth, not to mention six cup holders, a CD changer in the dash, and two rows of back seats complete with DVD movies.

And we got there, on top of Chicken Point, amazed at the view and the achievement. Mom’s runabout has moves!

Highs: The $ incentives, roomy (relatively) three-row seating, no worries about overstimulating your cardiac condition.


On the road the Explorer always maintains a certain prudent reserve; it responds slowly to the pedals and steering. Translation: boring. But needs change on the trail. That reserve becomes your friend. You can squeeze on just the right amount of power to ease over rock steps. The brakes are never grabby. If you raise the seat fully, you can see out very well over the low beltline.

Too bad you can’t raise the step bars along the sills. Did we scrape some? Only a few hundred times. On the descent, the trail passes over what Ranney calls a “talus slope,” a cascade of rocks and boulders that have fallen from above over time. On trek day they are nicely lubricated with liquid mud from recent rains. Gravity brings everything down, especially if there’s feeble traction. There was no possibility of backing up to try a different route. Gravity made the call — down! Poor Explorer! It was naked beneath, no skid plates, the only one of the group lacking them.

Lows: All-bran brown interior, odd hounds-tooth printed metal on dash.

Rocks scraped and pummeled the bottom. Sledge-hammer dentistry, that’s what it sounded like.

Watch the oil pressure! Steer the wheels over the high spots! Along in here somewhere, our usually well-modulated technical director is heard to say, “This is some sick s**t.”

At the trailhead, the Explorer simply drove away, straight to the carwash, same as all the others. Inspecting the bottom later revealed scuffs but no wounds.

The Explorer finishes our trials having earned a great deal of respect. It has the best seating accommodations of the bunch; although the low third-row cushions are not great for adults, they’re tolerable. The driver’s bucket is firm, with good thigh support for those long of leg. Acceleration was middle of the pack, with 0-to-60 in 8.2 seconds. Fuel economy averaged 14 mpg over our evaluation trip, slightly above the mean for the group.

The Verdict: Anonymity on the rocks.

Respect, yes. But lust? Sorry, Mom.

2005 Ford Explorer XLT V-8
239-hp V-8, 5-speed automatic, 4815 lb
Base/as-tested price: $34,675/$39,765
C/D TEST RESULTS
60 mph: 8.2 sec
1/4 mile: 16.4 @ 83 mph
Braking, 70­–0 mph: 203 ft
Roadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.70 g
C/D observed fuel economy: 14 mpg

Fifth Place: Toyota 4Runner

This is not the expected rating for Toyota’s extremely capable SUV. Blame it on this truck’s people skills, and on the contrary packaging. The 4Runner has a high floor, not uncommon with body-on-frame construction. But why is the roof low, closer to the floor? And why the low seats, barely off the floor, down at sports-car elevation? Toyota thinks this arrangement adds sport to its sport UV.

The low roof doesn’t make entry to the second row easier, either. Once you’re seated, comfort is quite good. Hurray for cloth. It almost always feels better than leather. The result is an enveloping, no-sliding-around bench that earned our highest comfort marks for two passengers.

Highs: A dancer’s chassis muscles, well-calibrated throttle motions, disciplined V-8 noises.

The 4Runner has sophisticated machinery below. The 4.7-liter V-8 is exceptionally refined in its sounds and vibrations. The test truck had full-time four-wheel drive with a Torsen center differential that’s lockable by dash switch. Left to its own, it sends 40 percent of driving torque to the front, up to 53 percent if the rears spin, and reduces front drive to 29 percent during steering.

The suspension seems ready for every challenge. It has a surface plushness that impresses on the road, with no bouncing-bobbing in the rough. Good leg muscles. That’s the feel. And it’s there on the trail, too. The 4Runner flexes and extends over the eroded surfaces with a trained dancer’s control of motion.

Lows: Overboosted brakes, hood scoop blocks view, ugly climate controls, ridiculous location for fuel-filler door release.

Throttle calibration is perfectly ramped, too. It’s easy to get just the right torque for the task. Too bad about the nonfunctional hood scoop; as you ascend steep crests, the windshield fills with blue sky. What perils lie beyond? Dunno, the damn scoop blocks the view.

For our off-road tasks, we preferred to shut off the hill-descent control, which seemed annoyingly jerky in its interventions. The transfer-case control is a knob; your choices are H4 or L4. All very modern. Old-fashioned, however, is the way the system beeps in protest if a change is attempted in anything but neutral.

In acceleration the Toyota was second best at 15.7 seconds and 88 mph in the quarter. Braking was best of the bunch at 170 feet from 70 mph. Both on- and off-road, however, the brakes felt overboosted, particularly at low speeds.

The Verdict: Unique blend of the capable and the off-putting.

Toyota rarely flubs an assignment. But it happens.

2005 Toyota 4Runner 4WD Sport Edition
237-hp V-6, 6-speed automatic, 4650 lb
Base/as-tested price: $33,055/$36,771
C/D TEST RESULTS
60 mph: 7.2 sec
1/4 mile: 15.7 @ 88 mph
Braking, 70­–0 mph: 170 ft
Roadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.71 g
C/D observed fuel economy: 13 mpg

Fourth Place: Volkswagen Touareg

The torque-and-recoil guys among us didn’t enjoy the Touareg much. It doesn’t leap in response to your nudge of the pedal. They complained about all the transmission downshifting, too. Of course, that’s the whole reason for a six-speed. But never mind.

For the record, the six-speed shifts a lot because this mid-sizer weighs in at an astounding 5235 pounds, 300 more than the next-heaviest, the Mitsubishi; 585 more than the welterweight 4Runner. One more reason: The VW’s 3.2-liter V-6 is the smallest engine of the group, 0.6 liter less than the next-up Mitsubishi and a whopping 2.5 beneath the Jeep’s Hemi.

Any further questions?

Highs: Supple long-travel suspension, amazing ground clearance, smooth moves on- and off-road, Lexus-class interior.

Given the power-to-weight burden, the VW acquits itself well, accelerating to 60 in 9.8 seconds, just 0.2 behind the Montero. The two tie for last place in the quarter at 17.3 seconds and 80 mph.

Obviously, this VW is not about brawn. Indeed, it’s the antitruck, more like a really sweet mid-size sedan on stilts. The driver’s compartment — the high, wide, and handsome console between the seats reinforces the impression of “compartment” — is cushy in all the right places. The dash has real-looking wood and finely wrought chrome detailing. At night, illumination reminds of the jewelry counter at Tiffany & Co. Just from the interior appointments you might conclude that the Touareg price should be, oh, double that of the Explorer.

Lows: Four passengers is the comfort limit, not much motor for the money, amazingly heavy at 5235 pounds.

As good as the sitting-room hospitality is, it’s arguably not the VW’s best part. The suspension and drive systems are superb. An illuminated dash icon shows which diffs (rear and center) are locked in the full-time all-wheel-drive system. Knobs in the center console let you choose six different heights with the optional air suspension. At full lift, with lots of daylight showing over the tires in the fender wells, the Touareg slinks over the boulders of Broken Arrow rather like a great silver hyena.

Inside, the rocks below seem more like pillows — that’s how good the ride is. There is also less clunking and clattering from the drivetrain than in any of the others. Instead you get electronic ruckus — the optional electric parking assistance ($600) fills the interior with flashing idiot lights and frenetic beeping as it senses rocks looming close beyond the bumpers.

The Verdict: Forget the Phaeton—this is the VW to lust after.

Oddly conflicted, this VW.

2005 Volkswagen Touareg V-6
237-hp V-6, 6-speed automatic, 5235 lb
Base/as-tested price: $37,755/$46,595
C/D TEST RESULTS
60 mph: 9.8 sec
1/4 mile: 17.3 @ 80 mph
Braking, 70­–0 mph: 189 ft
Roadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.76 g
C/D observed fuel economy: 14 mpg

Third Place: Mitsubishi Montero

There’s something likable about this high-rider that’s not decipherable from the test numbers. Close finishes can be inscrutable. Surely the attraction can’t be the pug-nose front. Inside there’s a perfectly bizarre Tokyo-by-night display for HVAC — it’s blue. Nor can the appeal be caused by a tromp on the pedal; acceleration is nip and tuck with the slow-guy VW.

Highs: Sensational view forward, highchair seating, big-space mood of the cabin, easy shifting into AWD.

Subjectively, the high driving position is a winner, made even more appealing by the chair-height seats. An incredibly tall windshield gives a tour-bus view. The black leather trim of the test car produced a nicely formal mood as it contrasted with the wood-grain, most of it faux. Out of place, but appealing anyway, is the Jaguar-style wood-and-leather steering-wheel rim. Taken altogether, there’s a luxury-excursion mood playing here; one staffer sees it as a “poor man’s Land Cruiser.”

The four-wheel-drive choices seem more complex than they need to be, probably because of the curious labeling of the lever’s four positions. What you actually get is quite sensible. You can have the most-efficient-most-of-the-time rear-wheel drive, or you can send torque forward as well, through a limited-slip center differential, for all-wheel drive. For more serious going, you can also lock the center diff or change down to low range.

Lows: Overly sensitive throttle off-road, front-end styling doesn’t go with the back end, no Reebok space in row three.

Out on the rocks, the Montero took a major ratings hit with its jumpy throttle; there’s no easing it over Broken Arrow’s boulders. Questions are raised, too, by watching these SUVs perform over obstacles. The Montero spends more time with one or more wheels off the ground than the others, with the Pathfinder a close second. The Grand Cherokee and the 4Runner maintain the best contact with the ground.

From Chicken Point looking west, we had an up-close view of the two-spire formation known locally as “the nuns.” Sedona sandstone was deposited in successive layers, clearly visible. The coloring and the bonding happened underground as the soil subsided. Since then, Ranney says, the Sedona area has seen 70 million years of uplift. That makes these red rocks old compared with those at the top of Everest, which were formed by sea-level deposits 40-million years ago.

The Verdict: Oddly lovable, like the ugly mutt that keeps licking your face.

On the way down, the sound of old rocks scraping against young steel reminded that the Montero’s 8.6-inch ground clearance was only 0.1 more than the Explorer’s.

2005 Mitsubishi Montero V-6
215-hp V-6, 5-speed automatic, 4935 lb
Base/as-tested price: $36,424/$36,874
C/D TEST RESULTS
60 mph: 9.6 sec
1/4 mile: 17.3 @ 80 mph
Braking, 70­–0 mph: 191 ft
Roadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.67 g
C/D observed fuel economy: 14 mpg

Second Place: Nissan Pathfinder

This Nissan, complete with leather, sunroof, three rows of seats, and a darn good music player, checked in with the lowest as-tested price of the group, $34,160. The Pathfinder is a brash looker, all slab-sided and blunt in front. There’s a bluntness in the way it behaves, too. It’s straightforwardly trucky. It’s honest.

Highs: Feels satisfyingly trucky, good power, nicely calibrated throttle, all-day seat comfort.

The 4.0-liter V-6 makes power and roaring noises with equal vigor. Acceleration is strong, leaving just a short gap behind the V-8 Toyota — 7.5 seconds to 60 versus 7.2. For passing from 50 to 70 mph, the two are tied, and they fall behind only the Hemi Jeep. Fuel economy over the 400-mile test trip topped all others at 15 mpg using premium gas. Only the Explorer uses regular.

Although the parenting class puts great value on having a third row of seats, the Pathfinder’s has limited value. Adult space is nil, and installing child seats way back there would be a contortionist exercise. So this SUV will be fine for those few soccer-shuttle years, the ones when the players can scramble back there on their own, but before they get too tall.

Lows: Lots of interior roar at speed, too many interior textures and gestures, no adult space in row three.

The Pathfinder still uses an old-fashioned part-time four-wheel-drive system that is modernized by an electronic control knob on the dash and supplemented by hill-descent control (it checks speed downhill) and hill holder (prevents roll-back when starting up slopes). Both features performed well. Nissan, as is common these days, uses the ABS hardware for traction control off-road. On one particularly tricky upslope — a loose surface with craters just right for drooping the diagonal wheels — the individual brake applications to slipping wheels seemed a bit slow to come. However, stability was good, and the climb was completed without doubts.

At Chicken Point, your testers do the obvious: stretch their legs and look at the spectacular views. On the horizon, only about four miles southwest, Ranney points out House Mountain, a shield volcano active about 14 million years ago. It’s now dotted green with trees.

The Verdict: Does it all with no significant disappointments.

Nissan claims 9.2 inches of ground clearance, best of group except for the Touareg in tip-toe mode. That wasn’t enough to avoid rocky scraping noises down the talus slope, however. But this trucky machine didn’t seem to mind.

2005 Nissan Pathfinder SE Off-Road
270-hp V-6, 5-speed automatic, 4895 lb
Base/as-tested price: $31,030/$34,160
C/D TEST RESULTS
60 mph: 7.5 sec
1/4 mile: 15.9 @ 87 mph
Braking, 70­–0 mph: 192 ft
Roadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.68 g
C/D observed fuel economy: 15 mpg

First Place: Jeep Grand Cherokee

Lusty engines are big winners on these pages. The Jeep, propelled vigorously by the largest engine in the group, finished atop the ratings by a clear margin. Zero to 60 in 6.8 seconds puts this 4920-pound SUV at the front of the pack. Nothing else was close.

The Hemi makes an authoritative rumble, deep-voiced and fairly loud in a reassuring way when you crack open the throttle. The five-speed automatic also earned top marks for its smoothness and quick gear selection.

Highs: Haul-ass Hemi, superb Quadra-Drive II, carlike driving position.

The Grand Cherokee’s front seat and driving position are especially agreeable. You sit more “arms out” than in most trucks, a sharp contrast from the 4Runner and its bus-style angling of the wheel. The dash is also quite high, so your gaze needs to drop only a few degrees as it moves from road ahead to the instruments below. The hood ramps down, opening the view before you. The dash is shrewdly shaped to put the center-mounted radio and HVAC within easy reach. Taken altogether, the Jeep earned top marks for ergonomics.

Second-row passengers get a seat that feels plush at first, but the short cushion curves downward very early, as if created for short legs. The driveline tunnel is high, leaving less padding and footroom for an unfortunate center passenger.

The Jeep is the shortest of the group, one inch shorter than the Pathfinder, 3.6 inches shorter than the big-guy Montero.

Lows: We got 12 mpg, jumpy throttle off-road, Goodyear textures on dash-top and window sills.

The Grand Cherokee offers three different four-wheel-drive systems. The test sample had the top-level Quadra-Drive II with high and low ranges and electronic locking differentials at the front, center, and rear. Theoretically, at least, this is an unstoppable system, more than capable of anything we attempted.

Traction was never the limit in our going. We touched rocks against metal a lot, however, perhaps no surprise given the 8.0 inches of clearance, least of the group. Perhaps the relatively creamy on-road ride should have prepared us for the swishy, undisciplined suspension motions in the rough. Most bumps have a back side, too. Let down too fast coming off the back, and the suspension yo-yos downward farther than necessary. That risks banging something underneath.

The Verdict: Truck credibility without truck rudeness.

We see in this new Grand Cherokee a plush, fast, all-weather road car with the power and traction for incautious journeys—even to Chicken Point, if you don’t chicken out.

2005 Jeep Grand Cherokee Limited 4WD 5.7L
330-hp V-8, 5-speed automatic, 4920 lb
Base/as-tested price: $34,790/$40,280
C/D TEST RESULTS
60 mph: 6.8 sec
1/4 mile: 15.3 @ 90 mph
Braking, 70­–0 mph: 192 ft
Roadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.72 g
C/D observed fuel economy: 12 mpg

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Source: Reviews - aranddriver.com


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