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    Tested: 1999 Cadillac Escalade Charges More For a Dressed-Up Chevy Tahoe

    View Photos Bill DelaneyCar and Driver From the January 1999 issue of Car and Driver. If you accept the proposition that desperate men do desperate things, you will understand why Cadillac’s Escalade­-cum-GMC Yukon Denali has been thrust into the swirling high-dollar-SUV market. Quite simply, the people who run the Cadillac Motor Car Division of General […] More

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    2001 BMW X5 Le Mans Concept Had the V-12 Heart of a McLaren F1

    From the January 2001 issue of Car and Driver. At Schwalbenschwanz, a horseshoe-shaped left-hander on the Nürburgring Nordschleife, probably named for a machine that suctions vomit off upholstery, it begins to rain. Hans Stuck just stomps the accelerator. Most Powerful Crossovers and SUVs on Sale Today 2020 BMW X5 M BMW has hired the stringy-haired, […] More

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    Tested: 2020 Volkswagen Passat Still Trails the Family Sedan Pack

    View Photos Marc UrbanoCar and Driver There’s an anodyne unpretentiousness to the updated 2020 Volkswagen Passat. It looks more distinctive than before yet doesn’t call attention to itself or announce much of anything about the person who owns it. It’s a plainly wrapped family sedan with modest performance and generous interior and cargo space. While […] More

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    Tested: 1993 Volkswagen Passat GLX Pairs Stealth with Speed

    From the February 1993 issue of Car and Driver. The sport of rapid propulsion requires the proper equipment: a good radar detector, knowledge of local gendarmerie methods, and, most important, a stealthy accomplice. Which, if you look around, is no longer easy to find. The Best Sedans of 2020 20 Best Cheap Performance Cars, Trucks, […] More

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    Tested: 1996 Ford Explorer XLT V-8

    Dick KelleyCar and Driver

    From the October 1995 issue of Car and Driver.
    Ford’s Explorer has been gobbling the lion’s share of sport-utility sales for several years now, moving off dealer lots in numbers far greater than those of the second- and third-place offer­ings. That’s a fairly convincing display of marketing primacy, but check out this follow-up shot. It’s a V-8-powered Explorer, using a modified version of the pushrod 4.9-liter engine we know so well from the Mustang and other Ford vehicles.

    Off-Road Test: We Take 8 SUVs and Get Dirty

    Best SUVs and Crossovers of 2020

    The reasons a V-8 is now possible for the Explorer are, according to Ford offi­cials, threefold. First, the Explorer got a new control-arm front suspension with its facelift for ’94, which made space for a huskier powerplant. Second, the adoption of the “Romeo” overhead-cam engine by the Mustang freed up production of the pushrod 4.9-liter V-8 at Ford’s Cleveland engine plant. Finally, there’s Ford 2000: a company reorganization intended to empower product planners and engineers to press on with projects without having to go through five vice-presidents for approval.
    With the engine bay opened up fore-and-aft as well as side to side, the V-8 was shoehorned into a lower position than the V-6, allowing straighter driveshaft angles than with the 4.0-liter. To get enough clearance between the front of the engine and the Explorer’s radiator, Ford con­tracted Eaton to supply a “pancake” fan clutch to save space. Because the V-8 makes too much torque for the usual Explorer transmission, the automatic over­drive unit found in the T-Bird and Cougar was pressed into the role. And that required some modifications to the dash-panel tunnel for adequate clearance.
    Having found a place for the V-8 in the engine bay, Ford engineers discovered a few packaging problems regarding induc­tion and exhaust systems. The exhaust clearance problem was dealt with by having tubular exhaust manifolding sweep upward from the ports before diving down below the dash panel. The manifolding is wrapped in a ceramic bandage to protect nearby lines and fluids from heat damage.
    A GT40 inlet manifold was found to fit quite tidily on top of the V-8 and was adapted for the purpose, along with the basic GT40 cylinder-head pattern. Because of the peculiar exhaust layout, the sparkplug location was changed. Also, says Paul Guaresimo, chief product engineer, the new plug position helps stabilize engine idling.
    Explorers are not sports cars, so various truck camshafts were tried in an effort to achieve the horsepower/torque relation­ship appropriate to the vehicle type. The figures came out as 210 horsepower and 280 pound-feet of torque.
    The new engine-transmission added about 170 pounds to the front end of the vehicle, but the new power easily over­came that disadvantage. A little balancing of suspension values has produced an Explorer that feels no more nose-heavy than its six-cylinder sibling. In fact, Ford engineers found that the highest-rated springs for Explorer worked just fine when teamed with revalved shocks and thicker stabilizers.
    The Explorer V-8 also gets Ford’s new C3 steering pump, which is quieter and more efficient than the previous unit. To cope with the extra torque being spun to the rear axle (the V-8 is available only in rear-drive vehicles for the moment), two pairs of rods anchor the rear axle to the frame to prevent axle windup. The result, according to Guaresimo, is a noticeable reduction in vibration.
    As we discovered on a short preview drive, the V-8—powered Explorer has the easygoing responses that good torque provides. The V-8 burble during hard acceleration is very pleasing, and it dials back to an unobtrusive hum when cruising. You never have to get as deep into the throttle during normal driving as you do with the V-6, and the powertrain feels altogether effortless. There has been no discernible loss of maneuverability brought on by the 225-pound overall weight increase over the rear-drive six-cylinder Explorer.
    In general, the Explorer has a more convincing upscale feel. Adding only about $1400 to the price, the V-8 model looks set to cash in on its V-6 partner’s success.

    Specifications

    SPECIFICATIONS
    1996 FORD EXPLORER XLT V-8
    VEHICLE TYPE: front-engine, rear-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 5-door wagon
    PRICE AS TESTED: $26,140
    ENGINE TYPE: pushrod 16-valve V-8, iron block and aluminum heads, EEC-IV engine-control system with port fuel injectionDisplacement: 302 cu in, 4942ccPower: 210 hp @ 4500 rpmTorque: 280 lb-ft @ 3500 rpm
    TRANSMISSION: 4-speed automatic
    DIMENSIONS:Wheelbase: 111.5 inLength: 188.5 inWidth: 70.2 inHeight: 67.0 inCurb weight: 4450 lb
    PERFORMANCE (C/D EST):Zero to 60 mph: 9.4 secZero to 100 mph: 40.0 secStanding ¼-mile: 16.8 sec @ 82 mph
    FUEL ECONOMY (C/D EST):EPA city/highway: 14/19 mpg

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    Tested: Top SUVs of 1991 Compared

    From the April 1990 issue of Car and Driver.
    Sport-utility vehicles are nothing like Brussels sprouts, except in one respect: either you just naturally love the little beasties or you can’t quite grasp what other people see in them. Both of these views, as matters of personal taste, are entirely valid. And each, it turns out, is well represented within the ranks of the Car and Driver editorial staff. That’s a good thing, because it meant that a three-day, seven-vehicle expedition in the deserts and mountains of central Arizona would lead to spirited discussion, conscientious judgment, and clear-cut conclusions about today’s highly competitive crop of mid-size, four-door, all-wheel-drive sport-utility machines.
    Fans of these truck/station-wagon hybrids applaud the vehicles for their ruggedness, their go-anywhere capability, and especially their wide-ranging versatility. You can load these machines with anything from mothers-in-law to mining gear and head off for the corner store or the Continental Divide. Three-quarters of a million new sport-utility vehicles (SUVs) found homes in 1988, and the buyers were a diverse lot that included hard-core truck guys and family types looking for a safe and roomy sedan alternative. The category shows every indication of continued growth too, with more buyers, more models, and more marques (even Oldsmobile, for heaven’s sake) flooding into the marketplace.
    At the same time, skeptics are absolutely right when they observe that almost all SUV drivers spend most of their time on perfectly good paved roads. Many modern four-wheel-drive trucks never see a mud bog or a rocky stream bed in their lives. And if it’s just snow you’re worried about, well, there are four-wheel-drive passenger cars at almost every price level. So in a real sense, these do-anything SUVs have compromised their on-road ride and handling in favor of a task they perform only rarely. Maybe never. Is that a sound approach to engineering personal transportation? Is it a reasonable concession to make in purchasing a family car?

    View Photos

    DAVID DEWHURST

    Those inclined to like SUVs will say, sure, it can be a good trade-off—if the engineering is carried out skillfully enough. Those unenlightened to SUVs’ innate appeal will say, I dunno, these things still have to function as automobiles.
    And that gives us the makings of a revealing comparison test. How do SUVs function? How well have they been engineered? How effectively have various manufacturers handled the compromises? In short, how do the players in this league really stack up, by hard-nosed road testers’ standards?
    We put seven editors in seven SUVs and sent them out over 350 miles of freeway, back road, dirt track, and creek bed to get the answers.
    Our field comprised the seven SUVs that fit between the lightweight Sidekick-class funmobiles and the prestigious Range Rover-class heavy hitters. We specified four doors, six-cylinder engines, and automatic transmissions across the board. In alphabetical order, here’s the group: the Ford Explorer Eddie Bauer, the GMC S-15 Jimmy SLX, the Isuzu Trooper LS, the Jeep Cherokee Laredo, the Mitsubishi Montero LS, the Nissan Pathfinder SE, and the Toyota 4Runner SRS. And here they are again, in the order that emerged after our editors had their way with them and scored them on their overall goodness.

    Seventh Place: GMC S15 Jimmy
    For the 1991 model year, General Motors’ popular SUV has grown a second pair of doors, and it comes in your choice of badges: GMC, Chevrolet, or Oldsmobile. Obviously, it offers increased space and versatility over the two-door version, but it still doesn’t feel finished to us. The 4.3-liter Vortec V-6 puts out good power (160 hp, the second-highest rating of this bunch), but it’s a rough son of a gun that manages to be unobtrusive only at light-throttle cruise. Any other time, from idle to full grunt, it feels and sounds like a V-8 with two plug wires pulled—not surprising, considering that it was created by slicing a pair of cylinders off GM’s 350 V-8. The Vortec V-6 is also one of only two engines in this group (the other being the Trooper’s GM-supplied 2.8-liter six) that still have their fuel injectors up in a throttle-body instead of right down in the intake ports.
    Compared with its two-door siblings, the four-door Jimmy’s 6.5-inch-longer wheelbase (to 107.0 inches, the longest in our group after the new Ford Explorer) gives it a much smoother, calmer highway ride—one that compares well with the other SUVs in this test. But that’s the easy part. As soon as the surface turns rough, rutted, or rocky, the S-15’s chassis behavior gets ragged, with more leaping and banging than we’d like.

    View Photos

    DAVID DEWHURST

    Most of us judged the Jimmy’s basic driving position to be very good, but we were also in agreement on two negative scores: the seats are too flat and uncushioned, and the instrument cluster should have simple, readable dials instead of swoopy video displays.
    To its credit, GM has blessed its four-door SUV with anti-lock control for all four brakes (the ABS works in two-wheel-drive mode only). In this group, the Cherokee is the only other vehicle to offer four-wheel ABS (its system is able to work in full-time four-wheel-drive mode); the Explorer and the 4Runner have rear anti-lock brakes, the others no ABS. And GM has still held the Jimmy’s price, at just over $20,000 as tested, solidly in the bottom half of this field.
    So, yes, there is something to like about the bigger Jimmy: it fulfills the SUV’s basic promise of versatility. But even a brief look around this competitive market makes you wish the world’s largest automaker had focused its vast engineering resources on engine and chassis refinement instead of on gas-gauge graphics.
    1991 GMC S15 Jimmy SLX160-hp V-6, 4-speed automatic, 3938 lbBase/as-tested price: $17,291/$20,500 (C/D est.)C/D TEST RESULTS60 mph: 12.6 sec1/4 mile: 18.8 @ 71 mphTop speed: 102 mphBraking, 70­–0 mph: 223 ftRoadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.66 gC/D observed fuel economy: 17 mpg

    Sixth Place: Isuzu Trooper
    One of the first SUVs to offer four doors and one of two—along with the Montero—of the “high boy” utilitarian school, the true-blue Trooper goes about its chores diligently and puts smiles on the faces of its many loyal supporters. But as other, newer players have entered this game and pulled the standards for the class toward more carlike comfort and refinement, the Trooper has begun to look a little agricultural.

    DAVID DEWHURST

    On the upside, the Trooper’s tall, boxy shape is highly efficient—it has lots of capacity in relation to its footprint on the road—and is especially generous in the headroom department (though its tight 65.0-inch width is less considerate of elbows). With its emphasis on the utility side of SUV talents, the Trooper is a tough and capable off-roader that seems more and more at home as the terrain grows rougher. Also, everyone liked its silky, variable-assist power steering and the smoothness of its 60-degree V-6 engine (though more sheer urge would be nice). And the Trooper is obviously well put together and neatly—if somewhat simply—finished.
    Unfortunately, the pavement ride is a little stiff, the tall profile gets to heeling in the corners, and there’s just no pretending this is anything but a truck. With the second-lowest sticker price of the bunch (undercut only by the remarkable Explorer), the Trooper represents fine value, particularly to those buyers who actually envision a significant amount of off-pavement duty for their SUV. For most others, however, something more carlike probably looks better, and Isuzu agrees: the Trooper will shortly be retired in favor of a wider line of more modern sport-utility wagons.
    1991 Isuzu Trooper LS160-hp V-6, 4-speed automatic, 3938 lbBase/as-tested price: $17,291/$20,500 (C/D est.)C/D TEST RESULTS60 mph: 15.6 sec1/4 mile: 20.8 @ 66 mphTop speed: 92 mphBraking, 70­–0 mph: 235 ftRoadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.65 gC/D observed fuel economy: 15 mpg

    Fifth Place: Mitsubishi Montero
    The Mitsu and the Trooper have nearly identical box scores, and for good reason. They are kindred souls, both taking the “civilized farm implement” approach, accepting the aesthetic minuses along with the space-utilization pluses that entails. Thus many of the Trooper’s general comments also apply here. A markedly stronger engine (with no sacrifice in smoothness) raises the Montero’s daily livability, though, and allowed it to nose ahead of the Trooper.

    View Photos

    DAVID DEWHURST

    Almost every driver commented on how comfortable and quiet the Montero was in freeway cruising, and everyone found it sure-footed off the pavement as well. A few nits were picked, though: the driver’s seat (a controversial suspended unit that gets to pumping up and down on certain rolling bumps) should slide back a bit farther to accommodate long legs, the truck-style manual-adjust outside mirrors seem rather retro, and dirt-road running set up a fair old ruckus, between interior rattles and suspension racket. Then there were the expected concerns over the bolt-upright seating and tippy cornering that are part of the deal in the tallest vehicle of the bunch.
    The Montero still has its inclinometer, which most of us find either amusing or bemusing. It also has the largest sunroof in this universe, allowing back-seat passengers to stand up on a whim and give the crowd a regal wave.
    1991 Mitsubishi Montero LS160-hp V-6, 4-speed automatic, 3938 lbBase/as-tested price: $17,291/$20,500 (C/D est.)C/D TEST RESULTS60 mph: 13.4 sec1/4 mile: 19.2 @ 71 mphTop speed: 94 mphBraking, 70­–0 mph: 216 ftRoadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.68 gC/D observed fuel economy: 16 mpg

    Fourth Place: Jeep Cherokee
    When the masses want to apply a term—generically and lower case—to what they consider an off-road vehicle, “jeep” is the name they use. And that tells you something. By acclaim, the Cherokee is a tough, do-it-all wagon, and the whole world recognizes its heritage. But this has become a tough battlefield, and the tactics are changing quickly. So even if the Jeep is in some way the standard-bearer for this class, the charge is now running well ahead of the colors.
    On paper, the Cherokee has a lot going for it: the strongest engine (177 hp), the lightest overall weight (3652 pounds), and four-wheel ABS. Its transfer case is also the only one in the group with an interaxle differential, which permits running in four-wheel drive on hard, grippy surfaces without disengaging the ABS or straining the driveline (useful when conditions are changeable between wet and dry or clean and dusty). And most of the Jeep’s logbook entries praised its ride and handling, its structural integrity, its ability to put power to the ground whatever the surface, and its general comfort. Apparently, its reliance on a solid axle up front, the only nonindependent front end left in this group, did not handicap the Cherokee. Instrumented testing confirmed our impressions: the Jeep took a bunch of top honors-0 to 60 mph in 10.5 seconds, a 107-mph top speed, 17.7 seconds at 76 mph in the quarter-mile—and a solid second-place 0.70 g on the skidpad.

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    DAVID DEWHURST

    But we had some reservations, too. The overassisted, zero-effort, zero-feedback steering comes out of another era—and should go back there as soon as possible. The front seats, reminders of the Franco-American Renault Alliance, are really only comfortable for passengers who fit within their snuggish shape. The Cherokee’s back seat is cramped and particularly hard to climb into because of the intrusive rear wheel wells (a result of the very short wheelbase). The instrument panel has started looking awfully old. Our Cherokee avoided being the most expensive vehicle in the group by a mere 164 bucks (thanks, Toyota). And the old fears about the small bits’ reliability have not been put to rest: our driver’s-seat recline lever came off, and the spare-tire fixing nut continually backed off.
    It seems proper that the venerable Cherokee finished dead center in our ratings. From there, it anchors the field, pulling the stragglers along as it keeps the leaders in sight.
    1991 Jeep Cherokee Laredo177-hp inline-6, 4-speed automatic, 3652 lbBase/as-tested price: $19,601/$25,615C/D TEST RESULTS60 mph: 10.5 sec1/4 mile: 17.7 @ 76 mphTop speed: 107 mphBraking, 70­–0 mph: 213 ftRoadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.70C/D observed fuel economy: 16 mpg

    Third Place: Toyota 4Runner
    Here we’ve moved into the subgroup of modern sophisticates, and the talent deepens as the competition intensifies. Imagine a comfortable, fully equipped sedan that has been given compact-station-wagon proportions and then been jacked up in the air to take a “tough truck” stance. That’s Toyota’s 4Runner.
    One liability of the layout is an unnaturally high floor, which demands an athletic climb into the cab and provides a low-seat, feet-straight-out driving position that feels odd at first. The look, too, doesn’t please everyone. Toyota may have correctly identified its customers’ preferences, and certainly we have no quibble with the rounded and cleanly contoured sheetmetal, but the sky-high image just isn’t us. We seriously doubt that a two-inch drop would rob much real ground clearance, and we think it would greatly improve the 4Runner’s appearance and convenience.

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    DAVID DEWHURST

    A back seat that cramps adults was all anyone found to complain about inside. Otherwise, the Toyota’s gracefully styled and supremely readable instrument panel, its fine quality of materials and assembly, and its high level of equipment (a CD player, even) made this the most attractive interior of the bunch.
    For chassis performance, the 4Runner earned a high B-plus. Wheel motion seems well damped over washboard surfaces, flexible enough to walk through deep ruts and reasonably well isolated on the highway, but the 4Runner clearly falls a bit short of the high ride-and-handling standards set by our winner.
    Everyone wished for more engine power, too, and the 4Runner’s highest of the high as-tested price of $25,779 hurt it in the value judging. But all our drivers enjoyed being at its wheel, and most commented they could live with the tall Toyota quite happily—but for the presence here of two other vehicles.
    1991 Toyota 4Runner SR5150-hp V-6, 4-speed automatic, 4187 lbBase/as-tested price: $19,518/$25,779C/D TEST RESULTS60 mph: 15.7 sec1/4 mile: 20.7 @ 66 mphTop speed: 95 mphBraking, 70­–0 mph: 220 ftRoadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.63C/D observed fuel economy: 16 mpg

    Second Place: Ford Explorer
    Being new doesn’t always mean being best, but Ford’s Explorer is the only truly new vehicle in this class, and it does claim several key distinctions: it has the longest wheelbase (111.9 inches), the heaviest curb weight (4336 pounds), the most spacious seating, and—get this—the lowest sticker price here (a carefully estimated $19,400). True, it has a lot of Bronco II pieces under its skin, but the Explorer is so fresh and so good in ways the Bronco II never was that you don’t care where Ford got the hardware.
    A new 4.0-liter version of the old Cologne-built 2.9-liter V-6 powers the Explorer—and moves the hefty machine very effectively, with a touch of vibration now and then but plenty of response. The transmission feeds torque through the neatest-to-operate transfer case we’ve ever seen, which simply has two soft-touch buttons on the dash: one to engage four-wheel drive, the other to select the 2.48:1 low range.

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    DAVID DEWHURST

    Suspension bits recognizable from the Bronco II provide a soft, luxurious on-road ride, which still manages not to go completely to hell off the pavement. The Explorer does feel weighty and can float around a little on dirt roads, but the chassis swallows impacts well and maintains good poise. Steering that borders on being too light and too isolated nevertheless works just fine.
    To a man, our test crew raved about the Explorer’s spacious, well-designed, and neatly trimmed cabin. You sit low behind a high dash panel, but a very low beltline and tall windows keep you from feeling that you’re in the bottom of a bucket. And that panel carries a cluster of legible instruments right where you want them. Perhaps best of all, everywhere you touch the thing—seats, controls, door panels—you’re rewarded with a quality feel, thanks in some part to the leather-lined luxury of our Explorer’s Eddie Bauer trim package.
    This handsome new Ford fun wagon almost looks as if it should run with the big boys in Range Rover Land, yet it drives easily and lightly to the touch. Think of it as an SUV limousine, an up-to-the-minute interpretation of what these machines are supposed to be good for. Particularly at the price, Ford appears to have nailed one here.
    We learned a few things out there in the Arizona desert. The SUV sympathizers on the staff were reminded that, attractive as the general concept may be, execution still makes the difference. Even if all these SUVs offer ruggedness, versatility, and incredible off-road abilities, some of them still flat embarrass the mud flaps off the others.
    Those among us less predisposed to appreciate the SUV experience found out something, too: that some of these compact wagons can indeed be pretty neat to drive. Again, however, engineering counts: if you don’t intend to go driving off road, some of these vehicles will feel grossly compromised to you—but others may not.

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    DAVID DEWHURST

    The good news is, with competition improving the breed even as we watch, there is real engineering excellence to be found in the hot sport-utility market. For proof, go take a drive in a Nissan Pathfinder, over every kind of road, near-road, and non-road you can drum up. If you haven’t driven a modern SUV lately, you will be surprised.
    You may also be surprised if you’re a sport-utility manufacturer who hasn’t been paying close enough attention or moving rapidly enough. And you know who you are. Buyers in this market may be dedicated to the unique SUV formula, but don’t push your luck. Even die-hard Brussels-sprouts eaters will walk away from last week’s servings.
    1991 Ford Explorer Eddie Bauer155-hp V-6, 4-speed automatic, 4336 lbBase/as-tested price: $17,000/$19,400 (C/D est.)C/D TEST RESULTS60 mph: 11.7 sec1/4 mile: 18.2 @ 75 mphTop speed: 106 mphBraking, 70­–0 mph: 206 ftRoadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.64C/D observed fuel economy: 16 mpg

    First Place: Nissan Pathfinder
    No one in this test hit the mark the way Nissan did. The original two-door Pathfinder set new standards for style and drivability among SUVs, and now this one paces the four-door field.
    The new Pathfinder perhaps looks less striking than its two-door sibling, if only because it lacks the two-door’s distinctive triangular rear-quarter windows. But we still like the crisp, folded-paper contours, especially the way they hunker down on the big General Grabbers. Inside, the similar rectangular forms of the dash panel are no longer as modern as when they first appeared, but we can live with that, especially because the instruments are so readable and the small controls so silky in their action.
    Chassis refinement, though, is where the Pathfinder really racks up its points, delivering an astoundingly high level of grip and maneuverability on pavement and then proving to be almost perfectly dialed in for fast scrabbling on fire roads or bounding over rocks and stutter-bumps. Its logbook filled with praise for its ride and handling, no matter the surface or speed, and then the Pathfinder went and aced the skidpad test with a class-leading 0.74 g. So Nissan’s little marvel straddles barriers—between car behavior and truck behavior, between highway handling and rough-road aplomb—better than anything else we can think of. There is real brilliance evident here, and someone, probably the guy in charge of shock damping, deserves a medal.

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    DAVID DEWHURST

    In other areas, the Pathfinder scores a solid “good” or better. Its mildly tuned 3.0 V-6 keeps the vehicle at least mid-pack in our performance tests, and it runs smoothly and economically on the road. The steering requires a little more effort than most of the others’ but feels much more positive for it. And Nissan’s body structure sounds as solid as any here. The whole package exudes quality.
    At $23,354, the Pathfinder is hardly inexpensive, but it’s only the third-most-costly SUV in our test. And anyway, the best always costs. In our scoring, the Pathfinder won more categories than any other vehicle—in addition to squeezing past the impressive Explorer in the all-important Overall Rating. (See Editors’ Ratings chart for an explanation of our scoring procedure.) The Pathfinder really can do it all, without the compromises we generally expect. It almost takes the notion of SUV versatility to an absurd extreme: most anyone could live happily with the thing in daily running on public roads, then be surprised to find—one day when the main road to town washes out—that their machine can practically climb a tree if they ask it to.
    1991 Nissan Pathfinder SE153-hp V-6, 4-speed automatic, 4209 lbBase/as-tested price: $21,079/$23,354C/D TEST RESULTS60 mph: 12.0 sec1/4 mile: 18.7 @ 72 mphTop speed: 99 mphBraking, 70­–0 mph: 211 ftRoadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.74C/D observed fuel economy: 17 mpg
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    Tested: 1977 Honda Accord Changes the Game

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    Taylor-ConstantineCar and Driver

    From the May 1977 issue of Car and Driver.
    Everybody likes the Honda Accord. Each cynical road-tester we set adrift with the car returned a hopeless Accord fanatic. Even now, legions of Honda Accord zealots are touting it as everything from the ultimate urban-car to the super-est super coupe. So let’s cut loose and admit that the Accord is both a stunning achievement and, at a sticker price just over $4000, a stupefying value. Why, the Accord is the very thing we’ve been looking for.

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    At first, the Accord might seem like just an­other transportation module cast in the famil­iar mold of front-wheel drive and hatchback, a Honda Civic with a thyroid condition. But a long list of standard features belies its heri­tage. Indeed, the long list of equipment fea­tured on the Accord might have been pinched from a far more elaborate and expensive automobile: five-speed transmission, rack-and-pinion steering, radial tires, AM/FM radio, tricky side-window defrosters and a hatch­back window wiper.

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    Taylor-ConstantineCar and Driver

    This grab bag of obligatory standard equip­ment may merely be some wily Honda sales strategy, but it seems to demonstrate an eminently sensible approach to automobile construction. In one mad stroke, Honda has invented an automobile that appeals not only to the vast middle ground of car-buyers, but to both extremes of the spectrum as well, the rationalists and the sports. Stripped-down, base-price cars, though the most rational of items, tend to attract a limited audience will­ing to endure bare-metal interior finishes and rubber floor mats. While the Accord’s size and gas mileage are wholeheartedly rational, Honda refused to cripple the Accord’s list of standard features in order to provide an affordable price. Building only one Accord mod­el simplifies the firm’s task, just as it did Henry Ford’s, but Honda then broadened the car’s appeal by installing all the luxuries.

    In a Teutonic spirit of effi­ciency, every cranny of this Honda is functional, from the most informative of instrument panels to the tiny change tray installed in the dash.

    The Accord marshals every desirable trend in small-car design. In a Teutonic spirit of efficiency, every cranny of this Honda is functional, from the most informative of instrument panels to the tiny change tray installed in the dash. The car’s 15,000-mile tune-up in­tervals suggest the ultimate in Japanese reliability. Responsive controls snap it around with the zest of an Italian sport coupe. And underneath it all, the comfort quotient is pure American: lots of interior space and seats with enough fore-and-aft travel to accommodate even really gross people.

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    Taylor-ConstantineCar and Driver

    Some dealers have reportedly taken advantage of the Accord’s popularity and bumped up their profit margins with outrageous preparation costs and other strategies, but Honda hopes that the 60,000 Accords it will bring into the U.S. in 1977 will solve the scarcity problem, reduce the waiting time (currently about three months) and bring the dealers into line. Evidently, the Accord’s success caught Honda without a reserve of production capacity, and the firm has been hurriedly converting Civic assembly lines to meet the demand.

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    Taylor-ConstantineCar and Driver

    Scuttling around in the Accord is guaranteed to bring a maniacal grin to the face of even the most hidebound rationalist. Darting past mail trucks and shutting the door on taxis is never a problem, thanks to the agile handling and hard-hitting brakes. You can even indulge in a little heavy yelling with Team­sters, backed up by the assurance that the Accord’s five-speed box permits a flashy getaway and shifts as positive as a ratchet from Snap-on Tools.
    Perhaps more important than the Accord’s grins-per-mile and mechanical harmony, however, is the way in which it captures the thinking of Japanese automakers. Real value, Honda suggests, is more than merely a cheap price, and transportation is far more than a econobox. It’s the Honda Accord—the very thing we’ve been looking for.

    Specifications

    SPECIFICATIONS
    1977 Honda Accord
    VEHICLE TYPEFront-engine, front-wheel-drive, 4-passenger hatchback coupe
    PRICE AS TESTED $4195 (base price: $4145)
    ENGINE TYPE 4-in-line, water-cooled, cast-iron block and aluminum head, 1×3-bbl Keihin carburetorDisplacement: 97.6 cu in, 1600ccPower: 68 hp @ 5000 rpm
    TRANSMISSION 5-speed manual
    DIMENSIONSWheelbase: 93.7 inLength: 162.8 inCurb weight: 1980 lb
    C/D TEST RESULTSStanding ¼-mile: 18.9 sec @ 70.0 mphTop speed (observed): 91 mphBraking, 70-0 mph: 208 ft
    FUEL ECONOMYC/D observed city/highway: 28/34 mpg

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    Tested: 2002 Honda CR-V EX

    From the November 2001 issue of Car and Driver.
    In May 1996, I drove a prototype CR-V to the U.S. 500 Indy-car race at Michigan International Speedway. This particular Honda had come straight from Japan, with right-side steering and a dash littered with the sort of symbols a large chicken might inadvertently peck in the dirt. It drew gawkers – including CART aces Bobby Rahal and Jimmy Vasser.
    “I’m thinking of getting one just like this,” gushed Vasser of my little CR-V.
    “Me, too,” informed Rahal. “Except mine will be quite a lot nicer.”
    “Yours is gonna be, what, red with a five-speed manual?” asked Vasser.
    “No, no,” corrected Rahal, pointing at the steering wheel. “I’m getting one that doesn’t belong to the post office.”

    2015 Honda CR-V EX FWD Tested

    2008 Honda CR-V EX-L 4WD

    As it worked out, the CR-V would figure in both drivers’ lives, though not mailmen’s. It enriched Rahal, who owns a Honda dealership, and it annoyed Vasser, who owns a Toyota dealership. Since then, the CR-V has evolved into a gold mine on wheels – the bestseller among entry-level SUVs in ’98, ’99, and ’00. That dominance might have continued, too, were it not for the arrival of Ford’s pesky Escape, which recently whupped the CR-V right out of first place by a heady margin. The Escape, you may recall, also won our dwarf-SUV comparo last March – in which, alas, the CR-V finished fifth. Honda knew this was coming, of course, and has thus been readying a second-generation version, different in detail if not in substance and execution.

    Honda

    For starters, the 2002 CR-V’s four-cylinder engine generates 160 horsepower versus the ’97 CR-V’s wimpy 126 and the ’99 CR-V’s 146. Plus, it now bats out 162 pound-feet of torque – more torque than horses, you’ll notice – at a relatively low 3600 rpm. How? More displacement, up from 2.0 liters to a pot-walloping 2.4. It’s now among the largest of modern four-bangers and possessed of a reciprocating mass commonly known to do three things: (1) shake the car on startup, when one of those largish slugs fails briefly to fire; (2) shake the car at idle, especially with the air-conditioning compressor at max drag; and (3) shake the car at all other times.
    Honda has somehow avoided all three, in part due to a pair of balance shafts that are integrated within the oil pump; in part due to four beefy engine mounts, two of them liquid-filled; and in part due to engineers who spend their spare time hanging around guys like Rahal and Vasser.

    Highs: Honda steering, Honda shifter, Honda fit and finish.

    Step-off is no longer a high-rev, clutch-slipping affair. In fact, you can launch in second gear with only 1500 rpm on the clock. Shift from first to second at six grand and you’ll bark the tires. There were plenty of 90-degree city turns that, taken in second gear, caused the old engine to lug. Now there’s enough torque to negotiate about half of those turns in third. Course, Jimmy Vasser wouldn’t.
    The second-gen CR-V scoots to 60 mph in 8.4 seconds. That’s a second quicker than its forebear and comfortably below the 9.9-second average we logged among those 11 automatic Lilliputian utes last March. It’s also 1.8 seconds quicker than an automatic Toyota RAV4, the vehicle that 28.3 percent of CR-V buyers “cross-shop” first. Still, the major payoff is this Honda’s newfound perkiness for the first couple of seconds in each of the lower gears, where it’s now way happier to lunge and squirt its way into holes in traffic.
    It’s also bigger, though not by much—an inch longer and 1.3 inches wider. That’s still enough to induce noticeable new roominess inside—2.7 extra inches of rear legroom, 3.6 inches of front shoulder room, and a cargo volume up 4.8 cubic feet. The pewlike rear bench is now a contemplative perch for three. It’s slightly raised so that you can see over the front riders’ noggins, and the middle man can stretch his legs between the front seats, at least when the flip-down coffee table is at half-mast. Throughout the cabin, the floor is as flat as a telemarketer’s pitch. What’s more, the 60/40 rear seatbacks can be folded flat without removing their headrests — an engineering feat for which a Nobel category should be created. With the rear seats folded, the cargo bay is 55 inches deep and 38 inches at its narrowest, seven cubic feet beyond what a Ford Escape offers and sufficient to swallow my hugely desirable Univega Land Rover One.

    Lows: Bicep-building hand brake, limited off-road potential, as fragile as a car.

    One advantage of diminutive SUVs is their acceptable handling, and this revised CR-V is no exception. For one thing, the classic Honda shifter offers the sort of short, light throws you’d praise in a Prelude. Beyond 50 mph, the newly relocated steering rack now locks onto straight-ahead like Thor gripping lightning bolts. There’s surprisingly little roll for a vehicle nearly as tall as a Toyota Sienna, such that the pilot begins making odd pronouncements: “good pedals for heel-and-toeing,” for instance, which isn’t a phrase commonly associated with SUVs. The ride is firm but rarely choppy. And with its new rear discs, this CR-V can stop from 70 mph in 192 feet.
    The radio is mounted high—two inches above the dash, in fact—so that it’s always in your line of sight. The glass in the cargo door now pops open independently. A liberal load of sound-deadening “melt sheets” has mitigated wide-open-throttle roar by 6 dBA. There’s again that damnably cute fold-out picnic table capable of serving a hungry family of one. And there’s a new pistol-grip hand brake that pulls out of the center stack like some sort of railroad siding switch. It frees up floor space, but it’s a high-effort device that sometimes requires both hands. It’ll be hell to explain to teenage parking valets, who’ll think it’s part of a lavish video game.
    Prices aren’t firm, but Honda’s best guess is $19,440 for a front-drive LX; $21,440 for an automatic four-wheel-drive LX; and $22,940 for the manual EX tested here. The latter includes four-wheel drive, ABS, side airbags, a sunroof, alloy wheels, and a CD changer.

    The Verdict: A lean, thoughtfully engineered errand hopper that won’t bankrupt you at the pumps.

    This round-two CR-V may not exactly drip with personality—it’s still a tad more functional than fun—but it’s improved in all areas that matter, and it certainly represents guilt-free SUV ownership. It is the anti-truck: a unibody passenger car on stilts, an errand hopper with a kind of lean quick-wittedness, great visibility, 23-mpg observed fuel economy, and 8.1 inches of ground clearance in case you attempt that treacherous trek onto a baseball diamond to retrieve Jimmy’s catcher’s mitt.
    Plus—did we mention this?—it’s built by Honda.
    Counterpoints
    I had two problems with the original CR-V: its wimpy motor and its goofy, gawky styling. Problem one is duly resolved, with sufficient torque to chirp the front tires in third gear and to generate a tiny bit of torque steer, even in this four-wheel-drive version. Remarkable. The restyle is less convincing. Oh, there are butch bull-bar cues molded into the plastic bumper; the plastic grille’s shape suggests it was welded of robust chrome steel tubing; and the continuous swath of A-pillar, roof-rail, and taillamp plastic suggests a Land Rover Defenderish exoskeleton. I just don’t buy any of it. The look still says veggie burger when I’m in the mood for a Brawny Lad. —Frank Markus
    So how much power is enough in the cute-ute biz? The new CR-V delivers useful gains in horsepower and torque, and even though the second generation is a smidge heavier, the gains are tangible when the driver tramps on the throttle. Other upgrades: more room, more refinement, more clever storage touches, better access to the rear cargo area, better handling. And the integration of the emergency brake into the center of the dashboard is one of those why-didn’t-anyone-think-of-this-before design innovations that are uniquely Honda. Still, with 200-hp hot rods such as the Ford Escape charging around out there, the question persists: Will 160 horses be enough? —Tony Swan
    Everybody thinks of the Honda CR-V as a compact SUV — one of the first that popularized that category. And it quickly became the class sales leader because the CR-V is not that small. In its original form, for example, the CR-V had a bigger back seat than did a three-door Chevy, a Jeep Grand Cherokee, or a Toyota 4Runner. With this newest version, Honda has slightly expanded the CR-V’s excellent package, slipped a far more muscular engine under its hood, and tightened up its ride and handling. All of this has been accomplished without losing even a single mpg, which should be enough to keep the CR-V near the top of the sales heap. —Csaba Csere

    Specifications

    SPECIFICATIONS
    2002 Honda CR-V EX
    VEHICLE TYPEFront-engine, all-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 4-door wagon
    PRICE AS TESTED (C/D EST)$22,940
    ENGINE TYPEDOHC 16-valve inline-4, aluminum block and head, port/direct/port and direct fuel injectionDisplacement: 144 in3, 2354 cm3Power: 160 hp @ 6000 rpmTorque: 162 lb-ft @ 3600 rpm
    TRANSMISSION5-speed manual
    CHASSISSuspension (F/R): struts/semi-trailing armsBrakes (F/R): 11.1-in vented disc/11.1-in discTires: Bridgestone Dueler H/T, P205/70SR-15
    DIMENSIONSWheelbase: 103.2 inLength: 178.6 inWidth: 70.2 inHeight: 66.2 inPassenger volume: 103 ft3Cargo volume: 34 ft3Curb weight: 3367 lb
    C/D TEST RESULTS60 mph: 8.4 sec100 mph: 26.7secRolling start, 5–60 mph: 8.6secTop gear, 30–50 mph: 9.8 secTop gear, 50–70 mph: 10.1 sec1/4 mile: 16.6 sec @ 84 mphTop speed (governor limited): 109 mphBraking, 70–0 mph: 192 ftRoadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.72 g
    C/D FUEL ECONOMYObserved: 23 mpg
    EPA FUEL ECONOMYCombined/city/highway: 23/21/25 mpg

    This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io More