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    1996 Ford Taurus SHO Grows Up

    From the October 1995 issue of Car and Driver.If there was anything wrong with the first SHO Taurus, it was that it lacked refinement. It certainly did not lack performance. Even with the automatic transmission that was introduced for 1993 to bolster sales, the SHO ran to 60 mph in 7.6 seconds and tripped the quarter-mile lights in 15.7 seconds. That put it in the company of the BMW 325i and the Acura Legend. Along with such sprightly accel­eration came marvelous midrange flexi­bility and rip-snorting throttle response. Somehow, this failed to impress the sports-sedan clique, who refrained from purchasing SHO Tauruses in even the modest numbers Ford had hoped for. It’s a risky wager, but we bet the new Ford Taurus SHO does not suffer the same fate. Why? Because the car has moved into a new niche, its focus has altered, and its image has shifted upmarket. And the car will cost a lot more—about $33,000, Ford tells us. The new SHO is more a four-door Lincoln Mark VIII than it is a souped-up family sedan. The choice of a V-8 under­lines that fact as much as it fulfills the prophecy we heard from Ford officials a few years ago that all Fords would soon be powered by engines from their own drawing boards. The new SHO’s engine shares the basic architecture of the Duratec 2.5-liter V-6 found in the smaller Contour, with exactly the same bore, stroke, and cylinder spac­ing. Development time decreases when all of an engine’s dimensions and parameters have already been explored. This com­monality endows the 3.4-liter V-8 with a 60-degree angle between cylinder banks, relinquishing the usual 90-degree V-8’s inherent equilibrium and making the installation of a balance shaft necessary.Although this is a Ford engine, devel­opment was shared by Yamaha, which machines and assembles the engines in Japan after receiving castings produced, using a patented Cosworth process, by Ford’s plant in Windsor, Ontario. The fin­ished engines are shipped back to Ford’s Atlanta assembly plant for installation in the SHO Taurus. It is the only Ford engine with direct ignition, reverse-flow cooling, and aluminum bucket tappets in the valve­train. And what a civilized engine it is. Producing just a satisfying purr at cruising speeds—and a mellow snarl when spurred to greater effort—the four-cam V-8 sounds and feels more expensive than the V-6 it replaces. But it doesn’t have the immediacy that the old V-6 flaunted, nor the enthu­siastic midrange pickup. Although the V-8 produces more torque (225 pound-feet versus 215 at the same 4800 rpm), it seems to lack the V-6’s instant midrange throttle response. The early prototype SHO we tested was also less capable in every performance cat­egory except braking, where it equaled the old car’s 197-foot stopping distance from 70 mph. Its 8.0-second 0-to-60 time makes it 0.4 second slower than the previous SHO automatic we tested. It was also a half-­second slower in the quarter-mile. The impression of having less midrange response is heightened by the fact that the new SHO comes only with an automatic transmission; it downshifts obediently at any generous measure of throttle increase, choosing to rev rather than to lug. And this impression is also reinforced by the some­what distant nature of the well-isolated powerplant. In the old SHO, a dig at the throttle pro­duced an exuberant snarl from the engine, a distinct tug of torque steer at the wheel, and a surge of power. In the new car, such things are handled much more circum­spectly, the sensations diluted by the improved body structure, the well-behaved steering, the seamless transmission, and the thick layer of refinement that coats all of the car’s mechanical exploits.The only part of the new SHO’s reper­toire that is uncharacteristically rude is the ride quality across abrupt breaks in the pavement. Over tar patches and bad expan­sion strips, the suspension thumps like a buckboard—this despite automatic dual-­level damping, which is informed by ride­-height sensors and initiated by electronics. Over less sudden undulations, the ride is nice and flat, with little roll or pitch to dis­turb its attitude. The SHO is also very quiet on pave­ment that lacks the sharp breaks needed to set up that disturbing percussion, and it covers ground with a tempo understated by the car’s good composure and quiet ride. Helping keep the act together is a remarkably smooth and precise variably assisted steering gear, along with handling that keeps the car faithfully on your chosen line without any of the deviations you usually expect from changes in surface camber or texture. Here again, the quality of the new SHO’s steering and handling is subtle, engineered to keep the occupants isolated from the action rather than involved in it. You have to detect the tiny bit of road feel through the damped steering mechanism and to acknowledge the good off-center response visually rather than as a tactile change of wheel effort. Consequently, the new SHO is less of an overt driver’s car, even though it exhibits much better poise than its prede­cessor. Most of the torque steer is gone, but the new car still swivels slightly off­-course under full throttle, at the same time revealing a mild locked-up steering effect. Squeeze in a degree of correction and the car locks onto a heading slightly off-course in the other direction, if you’re still accel­erating hard. Mainly, though, the new SHO just goes obediently about its business. The elec­tronically controlled AX4N transmission is among the least intrusive mechanisms of its kind, producing upshifts (just above 6000 rpm, despite the 7000-rpm redline) that are a perfect blend of speed and smoothness, and downshifts that are more apparent on the tach than they are through the seat of the pants. Squeeze the overdrive button off while cruising and you can watch the tach needle swing to a new posi­tion without any discernible driveline surge. It’s that smooth. Along with the creamy driveline, the new SHO has a roomy interior filled with sculpted forms, organic moldings, and swoopy panels. When you slide inside it, any expectations of a sporty persona dis­solve. The accommodations are generous and comfortable. The switches are clear and easy to use, with decent tactile quali­ties, but the surfaces are as impersonal as the control interfaces. The oval center con­sole, in particular, is an art-deco affecta­tion that feels as if it will not grow friendlier with time. More on the Taurus SHOStill, the only part of the SHO’s pol­ished new upscale personality that does not work is the jittery, clumpy ride on high-frequency pavement breaks. The rest of it—questionable styling aside—is gen­teel enough to lure luxury-car aspirants who wouldn’t have considered the pre­vious Taurus SHO. As for the fans of the previous car . . . Ford must be hoping that they have matured, too. SpecificationsSpecifications
    1996 Ford Taurus SHOVehicle Type: front-engine, front-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 4-door sedan
    PRICE
    Base: $33,000 (est.)
    ENGINEDOHC 32-valve V-8, aluminum block and heads, port fuel injectionDisplacement: 207 in3, 3392 cm3Power: 225 hp @ 6000 rpmTorque: 225 lb-ft @ 4800 rpm 
    TRANSMISSION4-speed automatic
    CHASSIS
    Suspension, F/R: control arms/multilinkBrakes, F/R: 11.5-in vented disc/10.0-in discTires: Goodyear Eagle RS-AF: 225/55VR-16
    DIMENSIONS
    Wheelbase: 108.5 inLength: 198.3 inWidth: 73.1 inHeight: 55.7 inPassenger Volume, F/R: 56/47 ft3Trunk Volume: 18 ft3Curb Weight: 3574 lb
    C/D TEST RESULTS
    60 mph: 8.0 sec100 mph: 22.4 sec1/4-Mile: 16.2 sec @ 86 mph120 mph: 39.2 secRolling Start, 5–60 mph: 8.0 secTop Gear, 30–50 mph: 4.1 secTop Gear, 50–70 mph: 5.1 secTop Speed (drag ltd): 136 mphBraking, 70–0 mph: 197 ftRoadholding, 300-ft Skidpad: 0.79 g  
    EPA FUEL ECONOMY (ESTIMATED)City/Highway: 18/26 mpg 
    C/D TESTING EXPLAINED More

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    Tested: 2024 Dodge Hornet R/T Is the Face of a New Dodge

    From the November 2023 issue of Car and Driver.The Dodge Hornet R/T is freighted with expectations. In the post-Challenger world, we’re all looking for a sign that Dodge can find its way without supercharged V-8s and red key fobs. The Hornet is a vision of that future, infusing a dreary yet marketable form—the small crossover—with trademark lovable Dodge dumbness. The car has functional hood scoops, an ornery exhaust burble, and the hybrid version of temporary overboost, which Dodge modestly calls PowerShot. The Hornet hits 60 mph in 5.5 seconds, not too far in arrears of the 5.1 seconds required by a manual Hemi Challenger R/T. On paper, this vehicle fits neatly into the Dodge pocket-rocket succession, joining rowdy former luminaries such as the Omni GLH and the Neon SRT-4. In reality, the story is a little more complicated. Don’t break out your yellow splitter guards just yet.HIGHS: Punchy acceleration, useful EV range, flashes of Dodge whimsy. For one thing, the Hornet achieves that Nissan Rogue–demolishing 60-mph time only after you pull both paddle shifters to engage PowerShot mode. According to Dodge, PowerShot unlocks an additional 30 horsepower from the rear electric motor for 15 seconds and knocks 1.5 seconds off the 60-mph time. We found that it trimmed a mere 0.2 second from the 60-mph and quarter-mile runs and a slightly more noticeable 0.3 second from the 5-to-60-mph time. PowerShot’s 15-second duration neatly covers a quarter-mile, which is dispatched in 14.2 seconds at 96 mph. The Hornet makes 288 horsepower and 383 pound-feet of torque, figures that require engaging PowerShot, but it seems the unboosted output can’t be too far off. And all of that torque makes the R/T feel strong even when you’re not lined up at a drag-strip Christmas tree.As for Dodge’s other performance claims, we had a hard time matching a few of them. The company says the R/T is good for 0.90 g on the skidpad, but we managed only 0.87 g, even though our test car included the Track Pack, which brings Michelin Pilot Sport All Season 4 tires and electronically controlled dampers. The Track Pack’s Brembo four-piston fixed front brake calipers contributed to a tidy 164-foot stop from 70 mph, with no fade even after multiple stops from 100 mph (which required 334 feet). That performance is even more impressive considering the R/T’s weight, which checked in at 4205 pounds. A quote often attributed to Albert Einstein seems fitting: “The wing structure of the hornet, in relation to its weight, is not suitable for flight, but he does not know this and flies anyway.”LOWS: Middling fuel economy, max power limited to 15-second bursts, $10K-plus upsell over the GT.Part of the R/T’s chunkiness is due to its 12.0-kWh battery, which the EPA figures is good for 32 miles of electric range. We nearly matched that number at 75 mph too, logging 31 miles and 74 MPGe. With the battery depleted, we averaged 27 mpg overall, which is definitely better than you’d see from a wide-body Hellcat Charger. In electric mode, the Hornet—now rear-wheel drive—musters a mere 121 horses, but that’s enough to push it as high as 84 mph before the gas engine awakens. The electric side of the powertrain can go AWOL at higher speeds, depending on the battery’s state of charge and the temperature of the battery and motor, as evidenced by the Hornet’s 118-mph peak speed on our 1.5-mile straightaway. Dodge claims a 128-mph top speed, but attaining that might require the Bonneville Salt Flats and a nice tailwind. The base GT model, Dodge says, is good for 140 mph.But we’ve got strong acceleration, respectable EV range, and an artfully crafted interior, so what’s not to like? Well, there’s the oddly jacked-up ride height, which makes the Hornet look like a wagon that’s in the process of being raised skyward on a four-post lift, but that could be easily rectified with the upcoming Direct Connection factory lowering springs. The bigger issue is right there on the window sticker. The $48,465 as-tested price poignantly reminds you that the Italian-built Hornet is a twin to the Alfa Romeo Tonale. We don’t envy the Dodge salespeople tasked with selling a $48,000 Hornet when there are cheaper all-wheel-drive three-row Durangos sitting on the same lot. VERDICT: Dodge studies abroad and returns with an unconvincing accent.If you think the Hornet might make a lot more sense at a price closer to $30,000, you’re right, and it does. The base GT model brings a 268-hp turbocharged 2.0-liter four-cylinder hooked to a nine-speed automatic and all-wheel drive for $32,330. With that transmission and significantly less weight, the Hornet GT should post numbers awfully close to the R/T’s. If there’s a true heir to affordable Dodge performance, it probably shouldn’t surprise us that it’s the one without a plug.More on the HornetSpecificationsSpecifications
    2024 Dodge Hornet R/TVehicle Type: front-engine, rear-motor, all-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 4-door wagon
    PRICE
    Base/As Tested: $42,530/$48,465Options: Customer Preferred Package 28B (Tech Pack: Intelligent Speed Assist [ISA], Active Driving Assist, park-assist system, drowsy-driver detection, $2345; R/T Blacktop and Track Pack Bundle: black Alcantara non-vented seats with red accents, Inox steel door sills, gloss-black painted mirror caps, dark badges, gloss-black painted side mirror moldings, leather steering wheel, dual mode suspension, 235/40-R20 all-season tires, Abyss finish aluminum wheels, bright pedals, red painted Dodge calipers, 4-way power lumbar driver and front passenger seat, 8-way power adjustable driver and front passenger seat, driver seat memory, $3590)
    POWERTRAINTurbocharged and intercooled SOHC 16-valve 1.3-liter inline-4, 177 hp, 199 lb-ft + 2 AC motors, 44 and 121 hp, 39 and 184 lb-ft (combined output: 288 hp, 383 lb-ft; 12.0-kWh lithium-ion battery pack; 7.4-kW onboard charger)Transmissions: 6-speed automatic/direct-drive
    CHASSIS
    Suspension, F/R: struts/strutsBrakes, F/R: 13.5-in vented disc/12.0-in vented discTires: Michelin Pilot Sport All Season 4F: 235/40ZR-20 (96Y) Extra Load
    DIMENSIONS
    Wheelbase: 103.8 inLength: 178.3 inWidth: 72.5 inHeight: 63.0 inCargo Volume, Behind F/R: 51/23 ft3Curb Weight: 4205 lb
    C/D TEST RESULTS
    60 mph: 5.5 sec1/4-Mile: 14.2 sec @ 96 mph100 mph: 15.4 sec110 mph: 20.7 secResults above omit 1-ft rollout of 0.3 sec.Rolling Start, 5–60 mph: 6.2 secTop Gear, 30–50 mph: 3.4 secTop Gear, 50–70 mph: 4.6 secTop Speed (mfr’s claim): 128 mphBraking, 70–0 mph: 164 ftBraking, 100–0 mph: 334 ftRoadholding, 300-ft Skidpad: 0.87 g 
    C/D FUEL ECONOMY
    Observed: 24 MPGe75-mph Highway Driving, EV/Hybrid Mode: 74 MPGe/27 mpg75-mph Highway Range, EV/Hybrid mode: 31/300 mi
    EPA FUEL ECONOMY
    Combined: 29 mpgCombined Gasoline + Electricity: 77 MPGeEV Range: 32 mi
    C/D TESTING EXPLAINEDSenior EditorEzra Dyer is a Car and Driver senior editor and columnist. He’s now based in North Carolina but still remembers how to turn right. He owns a 2009 GEM e4 and once drove 206 mph. Those facts are mutually exclusive. More

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    2024 Alfa Romeo Stelvio Competizione Adds Luxury, Not Sportiness

    We’re in something of a golden age of high-performance and luxury SUVs and crossovers. If you’re in the market for a two-ton people mover that corners harder than your dad’s old Corvette, you’re spoiled for choice. Alfa Romeo entered the conversation with the power-rich Stelvio Quadrifoglio for the 2018 model year. Now the 2024 Stelvio Competizione—with an active suspension and a host of luxury items—arrives as a stepping stone between the more humdrum models and the pricier 505-hp Quadrifoglio. Like the Veloce trim it is based upon, the Competizione’s main focus is luxury. From the outside, this Alfa fully looks the part. The Comp-exclusive matte Moonlight Gray paint option gives the car a more premium feel, and the Stelvio follows in lockstep with its Giulia sedan partner by getting new LED matrix headlights that glare menacingly out of the darkness with three half-rings on each side. An updated version of the V-Scudetto grille rounds out the front-end highlights, while the rear features new taillights. Step inside the Stelvio Comp, and you find that the double-humped upper dash is covered in leather (the real stuff), ditching the coarse-grain finish found on lesser versions. There’s a 14-speaker Harman/Kardon audio system, though the infotainment system’s laggy software muddled our experience. Switching to Apple CarPlay seemed to solve that particular issue. The Comp’s leather seats are finished with red stitching and special “Competizione” badging on the sides and headrests. Unfortunately, the Alfa also suffers with some parts-bin switchgear, resulting in a sort of teeth-grating grimace every time you go to change the climate setting. The leather-wrapped shifter is nice enough, though dare to lower your forearm to the surrounding transmission tunnel, and you’re met with a cheap grooved-plastic finish. Fortunately, the Competizione is more or less redeemed through Alfa’s ability to build an emotional powertrain. At the Competizione’s $58,520 starting price, you might be expecting something closer to the deliciously enticing 505-hp twin-turbo V-6 from the Quadrifoglio, but no dice. Still, the standard 2.0-liter turbo four is no slouch, generating 280 horsepower. Those ponies are shipped to all four wheels through an eight-speed automatic transmission. The last Stelvio we tested with this powertrain managed an adequately speedy 60-mph time of 5.3 seconds. Power delivery is swift, and the exhaust is pleasantly gruff in spirited driving. Stomping on the accelerator from a stop results in a quick chirp of distress before the tires hook up and spring the Alfa forward with vigor. Even with the mode selector in the default Natural setting, the Stelvio is a shockingly engaging drive for the segment. The steering is quick and direct, though it could offer more feedback. Twisting the mode selector over to Dynamic brings more fun. Like the QF, the Competizione is equipped with Alfa’s adaptive-damper setup, allowing you to swap between a softer setting for the daily commute and a stiffer mode for spirited drives. In its mellower mode, the suspension mutes all but the sharpest bumps, while the sportier setting sends more minor reverberations through the seat bottoms. In either setting, the chassis feels lithe and agile. The Stelvio’s athleticism silently urges you to grab the massive shift paddles on the steering column and overtake slower traffic. More on the StelvioThe Competizione is all Alfa, but its high price tag leaves us wanting something a bit closer to what the Quadrifoglio has on offer. Like with a curry missing key spices, we’re left feeling full but wanting something more. SpecificationsSpecifications
    2024 Alfa Romeo Stelvio Competizione AWDVehicle Type: front-engine, all-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 4-door wagon
    PRICE
    Base: $58,520
    ENGINE
    turbocharged and intercooled SOHC 16-valve inline-4, aluminum block and head, direct fuel injectionDisplacement: 122 in3, 1993 cm3Power: 280 hp @ 5200 rpmTorque: 306 lb-ft @ 2000 rpm
    TRANSMISSION
    8-speed automatic
    DIMENSIONS
    Wheelbase: 110.9 inLength: 184.6 inWidth: 74.9 inHeight: 66.0 inPassenger Volume, F/R: 49/40 ft3Cargo Volume, Behind F/R: 57/19 ft3Curb Weight (C/D est): 4100 lb
    PERFORMANCE (C/D EST)
    60 mph: 5.3 sec1/4-Mile: 14.0 secTop Speed: 145 mph
    EPA FUEL ECONOMY
    Combined/City/Highway: 24/22/28 mpgAssociate News EditorJack Fitzgerald’s love for cars stems from his as yet unshakable addiction to Formula 1. After a brief stint as a detailer for a local dealership group in college, he knew he needed a more permanent way to drive all the new cars he couldn’t afford and decided to pursue a career in auto writing. By hounding his college professors at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, he was able to travel Wisconsin seeking out stories in the auto world before landing his dream job at Car and Driver. His new goal is to delay the inevitable demise of his 2010 Volkswagen Golf. More

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    Factory Five XTF Reframes the Truck Conversation

    From the November 2023 issue of Car and Driver.Say, are you handy with a wrench? Do you think the Ford F-150 Raptor would be a great truck if only it had a better suspension? Got about $25,000 of extra cash and a late-model Ford F-150? Well then, Factory Five Racing has the perfect project for you. The XTF, its newest kit, transforms a stock F-150 into something you could drive down to Ensenada and enter in the next Baja 1000. We’re not sure which class it would land in, but you’ll have plenty of time to research that while you’re figuring out what to do with a stock F-150 frame. Because you won’t be needing that anymore.HIGHS: Looks badass, trophy-truck suspension travel, satisfaction of building it yourself.Prior Factory Five offerings hewed to the time-honored kit-car practice of scavenging donor hardware from a production car to build something entirely different—like using Subaru WRX guts to create the 818 or Corvette parts to animate the GTM supercar. The XTF is different in that you start with an F-150 and end up with an F-150, albeit one with newly acquired off-road superpowers. This requires building the truck from the frame up.When your idea of a proper suspension means 16 inches of travel up front and 20 inches at the rear, the stock Ford frame isn’t wide enough or strong enough (for reference, a Raptor R manages 13.0 inches of front travel and 14.1 inches at the rear). Thus, the centerpiece of the XTF kit is an entirely new tube frame that replaces the stock ladder frame. Factory Five claims its frame weighs 100 pounds more than the Ford item but is nearly twice as strong, using 327 total feet of tubing. Installing it might not be as daunting as you’d expect, given that the 2015 and later F-150’s cab is a self-contained unit—unbolt it, unplug the wiring harnesses, and pluck it out of the way with an engine hoist or lift. The cab is watertight, so an XTF intender who’s short on space could leave it outside while working on the frame and suspension in the garage.The $24,990 kit is intended for 2015–20 F-150 four-by-fours with the 5.0-liter V-8 or the turbocharged 3.5-liter V-6 (newer trucks have changes that make Factory Five’s kit incompatible). You’ll need the crew cab with the 5.5-foot bed and 26-gallon fuel tank. And yes, the ideal prerunner truck would likely be a two-wheel-drive regular cab with the V-8, but Factory Five wanted to design the kit around a truck people actually buy. Indeed, this first finished XTF is based on an everyday 3.5-liter EcoBoost Lariat, which once upon a time left the line in Dearborn as a nice family truck. It’s a little different now.At a glance, you could mistake the XTF for a Raptor R, with its flared fenders and 37-inch tires. But after anything more than a cursory look, that tube frame gives away the game, its welded latticework peeking out from below the rocker panels and leading back to the four-link, coil-spring rear suspension with its towering remote-reservoir Fox dampers. The bed is aluminum and, on this truck, mostly filled by the optional spare tire (the mount goes for $199). Those fiberglass fenders are part of the kit and inflate the XTF to a yawning 90-inch width, three inches wider than a Raptor R. Consequently, the hood, grille, and tailgate all are Factory Five items as well.For $6990, the body components are available in clear-coat carbon fiber, which, if left unpainted, might not be that far off the cost of paint-matching the fiberglass panels to the cab. (The nose panel is carbon fiber, no matter what.) Other options include a rear anti-roll bar for $465 and a tow package for $675. The latter includes more than a hitch, bringing axle-limiting straps and a Panhard rod into the equation to tame the contortionist rear suspension during towing.LOWS: Unwieldy width, added weight, tribulations of building it yourself.The carbon-fiber parts trim 34 pounds from the build, helping offset the 388-pound weight gain we recorded versus a similarly optioned 2017 F-150 crew cab with the same powertrain. The Factory Five truck weighs in at 5862 pounds, 130 of which are accounted for by the massive spare-tire assembly and its bed mount. So it’s not surprising that the XTF was a little bit in arrears of the stock truck at the drag strip—even with a mild tune that added about 60 horsepower—recording a 5.9-second 60-mph time, 0.2 second behind the grocery getter. The Factory Five’s stadium-size frontal area comes into play at higher speeds, with the quarter-mile requiring 14.8 seconds at 88 mph versus the stock truck’s 14.3 seconds at 97 mph. But the XTF had no problem bulldozing enough atmosphere to get to the 110-mph top-speed limiter. We should note that we do not conduct our acceleration tests across fields strewn with loose cinder blocks, but if we did, we’re pretty sure the XTF would be at a distinct advantage.To give the XTF an actual off-road workout, we headed from Factory Five’s headquarters in Wareham, Massachusetts, up to the Team O’Neil rally school in Dalton, New Hampshire. Over 200-plus miles of highway driving, the truck proved itself a competent pavement cruiser in the vein of a Raptor. Lots of tire sidewall and suspension travel make for a cushy ride, and the stock interior retains its factory fripperies (ventilated seats, panoramic roof) and refinement. With the rear anti-roll bar installed, the truck is civil on pavement, though the all-terrain 37-inch Toyo Open Country M/T tires contribute to the XTF’s 0.70-g skidpad result and 201-foot stop from 70 mph. After the rear anti-roll bar is manually disconnected, the truck is capable of extreme off-road axle articulation, as we soon found out.The main challenge, both on-road and in the woods, is the width of the thing. If you were wondering how wide the street parking spaces are in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, it turns out they’re just a little bit less than 90 inches. Out on the trail, about the only obstacle that will stop an XTF would be two trees spaced 89 inches apart.Since we wanted to exercise that Slinky-on-the-stairs suspension travel, we put the XTF in the hands of rally driver Wyatt Knox and told him to point the truck toward the nearest jump. After some acclimation on the dirt skidpad and slalom course, he aimed the truck uphill toward a steep crest that’s designed to send rally cars into low orbit. But rally cars don’t have 20 inches of suspension travel, and instead of flight, the XTF’s suspension extended to maximum droop, like a cat clinging to a fabric sofa, and the front contact patches barely got a taste of daylight. “Well, normally, that’s a jump,” Knox said. Foiled there, we headed to a mudhole specifically designed to cross up axles and put tires in the air, training drivers to deal with that particular off-road situation. Except, again, the XTF refused to play by the rules, stuffing its high-side rear tire up under the fender and dangling the low side impossibly far into the rut to maintain contact with the ground. If the rear axle were any more articulate, it would be defending its thesis on modern juxtapositions of the patriarchal monarchy to the American frontier, as exemplified by King Ranch.More Pickups!If you’ve got the requisite mechanical skills, the XTF kit is an intriguing value proposition: For about the price of a Raptor, you might build a truck with far wilder looks and capability while maintaining stock Ford interior amenities and powertrain reliability. (Hiring some-one to build it will likely add nearly $20K.) And when it comes time to register, insure, or finance the truck, it’s just an F-150 with a factory VIN rather than a homebuilt kit car. Of course, Raptors are also upgraded under the hood. But easy mods are there for the taking—this EcoBoost truck included a low-restriction intake and exhaust that gave it a Ford GT soundtrack, and Factory Five is already building a supercharged V-8 truck to see what happens when 700 or so horsepower join the party. VERDICT: What the Raptor wants to be when it grows up.For small manufacturers looking for a niche, part of the peril is that an OEM might decide to pursue the same concept on a factory production line. The Jeep Gladiator killed the AEV Brute, and Factory Five’s own GTM was usurped when GM finally built a mid-engine Corvette. But the XTF pushes the desert-racer truck concept further than it’s ever gone or is likely to go. Ford won’t build this. But you can.SpecificationsSpecifications
    Factory Five XTF 3.5-liter EcoBoostVehicle Type: front-engine, rear/4-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 4-door pickup
    PRICE
    Base/As Tested: $96,562/$97,226
    ENGINEtwin-turbocharged and intercooled DOHC 24-valve V-6, aluminum block and heads, port and direct fuel injectionDisplacement: 213 in3, 3496 cm3Power: 435 hp @ 5750 rpmTorque: 480 lb-ft @ 3100 rpm 
    TRANSMISSION10-speed automatic
    CHASSIS
    Suspension, F/R: control arms/live axleTires: Toyo Open Country M/T37x12.50R-20LT 126Q M+S
    DIMENSIONS
    Wheelbase: 145.0 inLength: 231.9 inWidth: 90.0 inHeight: 77.2 inCurb Weight: 5862 lb
    C/D TEST RESULTS
    60 mph: 5.9 sec1/4-Mile: 14.8 sec @ 88 mph100 mph: 21.8 secResults above omit 1-ft rollout of 0.3 sec.Rolling Start, 5–60 mph: 7.0 secTop Gear, 30–50 mph: 3.6 secTop Gear, 50–70 mph: 4.6 secTop Speed (gov ltd): 110 mphBraking, 70–0 mph: 201 ftRoadholding, 300-ft Skidpad: 0.70 g 
    C/D FUEL ECONOMY
    Observed: 12 mpg75-mph Highway Driving: 15 mpg75-mph Highway Range: 390 mi 
    C/D TESTING EXPLAINEDSenior EditorEzra Dyer is a Car and Driver senior editor and columnist. He’s now based in North Carolina but still remembers how to turn right. He owns a 2009 GEM e4 and once drove 206 mph. Those facts are mutually exclusive. More

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    1996 Nissan Pathfinder SE Is High-Riding High Fashion

    From the January 1996 issue of Car and Driver.The first Pathfinder, introduced as a 1985 model, was one of the pio­neers in what has now become a high-fashion category, compact sport-utes. That was way back in the pre-Explorer days when four side doors seemed like a goofy idea. “Whaddaya gonna do, use it for a car? Harharhar.” That Pathfinder had two side doors, like all Broncos and Blazers and Jimmys of the day. Only the odd Cherokee and Wag­oneer had four doors. Times change. This all-new Pathfinder only comes with four side doors, and the idea of using it as an off-road dustbuster seems, well, “Ya wanna risk denting up your cool $28-grand car?” HIGHS: Maxima mood of the interior, blot-up-the-bumps stride of the suspension, quality feel throughout.For the record, we’ve driven the test Pathfinder out in the belly-scraping nas­ties, and it behaves as if it were made for the job. Yet we’re well aware that most owners think getting to the other side of deep Cool Whip on the way to the trattoria is challenging enough. A sport-ute, to them, is an all-weather road car with the rugged good looks of the Marlboro man. Actually, that first Pathfinder probably did more than any other single model to put sport-utes in the fashion spotlight. Its taut, hard-body shape and macho-swagger treads—especially those hunky, square-shouldered tires—made a helluva fashion statement to the urban sophisticate. It was Patagonia on wheels. Ken Hanna|Car and DriverThis all-new Pathfinder takes that con­cept of go-anywhere gear and smooths off the edges. It’s so easy-to-wear now that Maxima and BMW drivers can make a painless transition to an authentic sport­-ute. In fact, we think they’d be happier here than in one of the American choices because Nissan has built in so many of the cues that import drivers associate with their kind of car. Little things like the hue of the speedo needle and the texture of the steering-wheel rim and the firm support­iveness of the seats are all import style. There’s a sense of quality here too, a lack of squeaks, creaks, and quivers. The Pathfinder feels well made, lasting, and expensive. Part of the credit should go to unitized construction, new for the Pathfinder and rare for a sport-ute (the Cherokee and the Grand Cherokee are unit bodies). This design stiffens the structure; Nissan claims 2.3 times greater bending stiffness and 2.9 times more torsional stiffness than in the old Pathfinder. Credit the ride, too—it’s surprisingly smooth, notably better than that of a V-8 Explorer. Credit the lack of interior noise—howl from the drivetrain and tires are nicely muted. Credit the on-road response of the controls—always linear and predictable. Even the classically cor­rect round dials on the instrument panel are reassuring. Except for the sit-up-high driving position, there’s nothing trucky about the Pathfinder. Car and DriverOutside dimensions have been increased in the new model. It has 2.0 inches more wheelbase, and it’s 6.4 inches longer overall (without the optional external spare) and 2.2 inches wider. That makes the Pathfinder about Grand Cherokee size, some three inches shorter than the Blazer, and more than ten inches shorter than the Explorer. Passengers are more comfortable than in the Grand Cherokee, particularly in back, where Pathfinder knee and foot spaces are much more generous and the rear seatback reclines over a wide range. In hauling capacity, sport-utes are tighter inside than their hulking presence suggests—comparable to compact station wagons—but the Pathfinder’s extra width now allows it to carry a full sheet of ply­wood (it rests atop the wheel wells and extends out the tailgate). The load floor can be made flat by tilting the seat cushions forward, then folding the one­third/two-thirds split seatback forward into the space vacated by the tilted cushions. The full interior compartment is available because the under-floor storage area for the spare accommodates tires of all sizes. The test car’s outside-mount spare is an option, offered because some folks like the look. LOWS: Weak acceleration, contrived step rails on an otherwise overcautious exterior, behind-the-times four-wheel drive.By enlarging the V-6’s bore, Nissan added 0.3 liters of displacement, for 3.3 total. Power is up 15 hp to 168, but the spe­cialty here is torque—over 90 percent of peak torque is available by 1500 rpm. Nat­urally, this means little need to visit the upper reaches of the tachometer, though the redline allows 5900 rpm. Accelerating to 60 mph takes 11.3 seconds, exactly one second quicker than before (weight is up 54 pounds to 4254, offsetting part of the power increase). The Pathfinder still feels slow compared with 9.1-second Blazers and 10.4-second Grand Cherokees. Ken Hanna|Car and DriverOff-road, the Pathfinder feels a bit low; the center differentials drag sooner than we expected. But let’s be serious—this is, for most customers, a road car, and many of those customers com­plain about the high step aboard. (Why else would Nissan make those contrived, whacked-tube step rails standard equip­ment on the SE model?) Road-driving cus­tomers don’t like noisy off-road treads either, so the tires have been greatly compromised toward touring, probably a wise decision. Unfortunately, the on-road security of full-time four-wheel drive that is available in the Explorer, the Bravada, and upper­-level Grand Cherokees is not available on this Nissan. Still, the Pathfinder’s part-­time, shift-on-the-fly (below 50 mph) system acquitted itself handsomely in our off-road ventures. Excellent bump absorp­tion, lack of steering kickback, and stiff body structure are all appreciated in the rough stuff. Serious hill-and-gully riders will be delighted by the available five­-speed manual, with its creamy-smooth clutch and snick-snick shifter. An off-road package including cockpit-adjustable suspension damping and a limited-slip rear differential is available on the SE. Ken Hanna|Car and DriverThe anti-lock system standard on all Pathfinders has been specially adapted for off-road use, Nissan says, by the addition of a “G-sensor” that adjusts braking for the tricky condition of loose gravel. With normal anti-lock, the tires tend to skim over the loose surfaces commonly found off-road, locking and releasing too easily, resulting in long stopping distances. We did not measure a stop on gravel, but in our normal dry-pavement braking evalua­tion, 206 feet was required to stop from 70 mph, longer than the sport-ute average. More off-road Ready SUVs From the ArchiveOn road, body roll is nicely limited by the standard-equipment anti-roll bar front and rear. We measured 0.69 g at the skidpad limit, accompanied by a deter­mined understeer. Automatic-transmission Pathfinders are rated for towing up to 5000 pounds. VERDICT: Go anywhere, never muss your hair.Not that towing matters for most owners. Rugged-looking sportswear that doesn’t bind, chafe, or irritate is the over­whelming desire, and with this new Pathfinder, Nissan proves to be a fine tailor. SpecificationsSpecifications
    1996 Nissan Pathfinder SEVehicle Type: front-engine, rear/all-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 5-door wagon
    PRICE
    Base: $28,000 (est.)
    ENGINESOHC V-6, iron block and aluminum heads, port fuel injectionDisplacement: 200 in3, 3276 cm3Power: 168 hp @ 4800 rpmTorque: 196 lb-ft @ 2800 rpm 
    TRANSMISSION4-speed automatic
    CHASSIS
    Suspension, F/R: struts/rigid axleBrakes, F/R: 10.9-in vented disc/11.7-in drumTires: Bridgestone Dueler H/T265/70SR-15
    DIMENSIONS
    Wheelbase: 106.3 inLength: 188.2 inWidth: 72.4 inHeight: 67.9 inPassenger Volume, F/R: 54/39 ft3Cargo Volume: 38 ft3Curb Weight: 4254 lb
    C/D TEST RESULTS
    60 mph: 11.3 sec1/4-Mile: 18.4 sec @ 73 mph100 mph: 56.8 secRolling Start, 5–60 mph: 12.0 secTop Gear, 30–50 mph: 5.7 secTop Gear, 50–70 mph: 9.2 secTop Speed (drag ltd): 101 mphBraking, 70–0 mph: 206 ftRoadholding, 300-ft Skidpad: 0.69 g 
    C/D FUEL ECONOMY
    Observed: 16 mpg
    EPA FUEL ECONOMYCity/Highway: 15/19 mpg 
    C/D TESTING EXPLAINED More

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    2025 Mercedes-AMG GLC63 S E Performance Gets It Done the Hard Way

    The moniker that’s attached to the new top-dog Mercedes-AMG GLC—2025 Mercedes-AMG GLC63 S E Performance—is the first indication of the newfound complexity of this extreme machine. AMG’s signature product was once known as the Hammer, a simple but effective tool. You wouldn’t call AMG’s new GLC simple, but it’s undeniably effective.The source of motivation is the biggest change versus the previous generation. That model used a twin-turbocharged 4.0-liter V-8 that somehow managed to channel the brawny character of AMG’s big naturally aspirated 6.2-liter V-8. Now, AMG has chopped the cylinder count and displacement in half, switching to a 2.0-liter turbo four—but before you walk away in disgust, listen to this: 671 horsepower!To reach that lofty total, the heavily boosted M139l four (itself good for 469 horsepower—an incredible 236 horsepower/liter) is teamed with a rear-mounted electric motor. The motor delivers up to 201 horsepower and is fed by a 4.8-kWh battery that can be charged by either engine or cord, making this a plug-in hybrid. There’s also an electric motor on the shaft linking the compressor and turbine wheels that spools up the turbo; it also keeps the snail spinning when the driver lifts off the gas. There’s a 400-volt system to run that e-motor (and to facilitate the automatic stop-start system). A nine-speed automatic transmission again employs a clutch pack rather than a torque converter, and the rear motor gets its own two-speed gearbox. Finally, the 4Matic+ all-wheel-drive system can distribute the torque from the engine and e-motor to either axle in any percentage from 50/50 to 100 percent rearward. Aside from minor details, this is the powertrain from the 2024 C63.There’s plenty going on underneath this SUV as well. The latest GLC63 trades the previous air springs for steel coils, paired with retuned adaptive dampers that now provide a greater range of adjustability. There are also active anti-roll bars, which necessitate their own 48-volt electrical system. Rear-wheel steering is another new addition. With a factory-stated curb weight of nearly 5100 pounds, the brakes need to be beefy and they are, with 15.4-inch discs up front and 14.6 inches at the rear.The GLC63 S E Performance “enables a previously unknown variety of driving experiences,” says Steffen Jastrow, director of vehicle development at AMG. To that end, there are no fewer than eight drive modes (Slippery, Individual, Battery Hold, Electric, Comfort, Sport, Sport+, and Race), chosen via the steering wheel’s starboard dial. They mix and match three levels of adaptive damping (Comfort, Sport, and Sport+), seven powertrain settings (Reduced, Battery Hold, Electric, Moderate, Sport, Dynamic, and Race), and four AMG Dynamics levels (Basic, Advanced, Pro, and Master—the last only after switching off stability control), which alter the all-wheel-drive system, the rear-wheel steering, the limited-slip differential, and the stability control. There’s also a launch mode; the only thing missing is the C63’s Drift mode. The driver can load two of the selectable elements onto the steering wheel’s left display circle, where two buttons allow one to cycle through the choices without delving into the touchscreen. To wring the very most out of the powertrain, it’s necessary to load Boost mode onto that left circle; available when in Race mode only, it allows the electric motor to deliver its maximum 201 horsepower in 10-second bursts.One of the previously unknown GLC63 experiences, evidently, is motorsports driving. There’s also a Drag Race menu, should you be headed to the Christmas tree. Or if you’re on a road course, the GLC63 has saved maps of major racetracks. For your track session, you can record and later download telemetry including speed; steering wheel angle; longitudinal, lateral, and vertical acceleration; slip angle; front and rear wheel angle; boost pressure; electric turbocharger power; engine output, torque, and speed; gear engine or transmission oil temperature, 12V battery voltage and current, HV battery charge level, voltage, current, and temperature; rear axle locking ratio; individual tire temperatures and pressures; and on and on—80 parameters in all. Is anyone going to use this? “We don’t know how many of our customers are going to a racetrack,” admits AMG product planner Patrick Roth. But “if you want to, you can do it.”At the far opposite end of the spectrum, there’s the electric-driving component. The GLC63 can be driven in EV mode, and the motor is muscular enough for highway speeds, although pushing through the accelerator’s kick-down detent will wake the gas engine. EV range is only a few miles (12 kilometers on the European WLTP cycle, which equates to about six miles using EPA methodology), so if you’re keen on battery-electric driving, this really isn’t your car.The GLC63 does offer four levels of liftoff regen (from none to one-pedal driving)—but the higher-than-standard levels can’t be selected until the battery is significantly depleted. Once the driver selects a higher-than-standard level of regen, it works in any drive mode except for Race. No matter what liftoff regen level is selected, the brake regen is unaffected, and indeed, brake modulation felt totally natural.This powertrain’s ludicrous output numbers shade competitors such as the BMW X3 M Competition (503 horsepower, 479 pound-feet) and Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrifoglio (505 hp, 443 pound-feet). That certainly sounds like overkill, but the GLC63 has a lot more weight to cart around—some 500 pounds more than the BMW. AMG says the zero-to-62-mph time is 0.3 second better than the old car’s; we got a 3.4-second 60-mph time from the previous GLC63 S, so figure 3.1 seconds for this car. That would just barely nose it ahead of the BMW (3.2 seconds) and the Alfa (3.3). So if the hyper-complicated new propulsion system doesn’t appear to give AMG a major leg up on its rivals, why do it? It’s clear that AMG sees the move as a step toward the EV future. “We’re an engineering company, and we want to develop,” says Roth. Drive the GLC63 S E Performance, however, and you discover that, for all the over-the-top complexity, this thing just works. That was the overwhelming feeling we got after two days of driving in southern Spain, mostly along empty mountain roads. Engine response was everything you could ask for and more. As you might guess, the GLC63 also roars off from a stop, without even having to fuss with launch control. Through an extended series of fast sweeping curves and then tighter switchbacks, we switched among the more sporting drive modes. Again and again, the nine-speed automatic delivered well-timed anticipatory downshifts as we dove into corners, held the lower gear for a just-right length of time, and snappily upshifted as our speed climbed. Out on the highway, flat-foot the accelerator, and acceleration isn’t immediately frenetic. The multi-pronged powertrain takes half a beat to gather itself before shoving the GLC forward on a wave of torque. When cruising, calls for higher speed bring a gentle swell of acceleration with no abrupt downshifts. And in low-speed stop-and-go, the PHEV smoothly hands off between gas and electric propulsion. Those who are new to AMG should be fully satisfied with this electrified four-banger. Returning buyers, however, may miss the thunderous character of the brand’s V-8s. The turbo four does offer an enhanced sound setting (independent of the drive mode), and while it isn’t bad, it can’t match the deep-throated rumble of the V-8, especially at startup.The GLC63’s chassis is just as complicated as the powertrain, and here there’s no downside. The steering, in any of the three settings, avoids all the obvious pitfalls—it doesn’t vary wildly in its response and is neither overboosted in Comfort nor overly heavy in Sport+. Instead, it provides predictable reactions and even a modicum of feel. The degree of rear steer depends on the chosen drive mode, among other factors, and there was one point during a series of moderate-speed twisties when we could feel it tightening the line. But during most of our two-day drive, its helping hand remained invisible. The suspension is especially impressive. A brutal ride is typical of high-performance SUVs (we’re looking at you, X3 M Competition). Not so here. These adaptive dampers are claimed to offer a wider range of compression and rebound tuning, and together with the steel springs they provide impressive bandwidth. The ultra-low-profile tires (Michelin Pilot Sport 4 SUV, 265/40ZR-21 front and 295/35ZR-21 rear) don’t offer much cushion over sharp ridges, but the suspension never feels jarring or stiff-legged. With the standard active anti-roll bars, head toss never rears its, uh, head, and body roll is a nonissue in the cars we drove. The optional AMG Performance seats, however, are too firmly padded to be truly comfortable. At least they’re not overly confining, although the outer bolsters can be adjusted for a tighter squeeze. The interior is otherwise little changed from the standard GLC and has the same pros and cons as most current MB products. Pros: a sleek waterfall dash that swoops down to the center console, great-looking digital displays, and a central screen that minimizes menu diving. Cons: a total lack of physical switchgear, idiotic touch sliders, and annoying steering-wheel touchpads. Outside, the GLC63 gets the AMG vertical-bar grille and an AMG-specific lower fascia, side sills, and rear diffuser with quad exhaust outlets.Related StoriesWe should also note that the previous GLC63 S was only offered in SUV coupe form; those wanting the more traditional SUV shape had to settle for the mere GLC63. This time around, the SUV version is not held back—we expect the still-to-be-unveiled SUV coupe model, which should appear sometime before the GLC63’s on-sale date in mid-2024, will offer the same powertrain. So that, at least, is simple. Even if not much else here is.SpecificationsSpecifications
    2025 Mercedes-AMG GLC 63 S E PerformanceVehicle Type: front-engine, rear-motor, rear/all-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 4-door wagon
    PRICE (C/D EST)
    Base: $100,000
    POWERTRAIN
    turbocharged and intercooled DOHC 16-valve 2.0-liter inline-4, 469 hp, 402 lb-ft + AC motor, 201 hp, 236 lb-ft (combined output: 671 hp; 4.8-kWh lithium-ion; 3.7-kW onboard charger)Transmissions, F/R: 9-speed automatic/2-speed automatic
    DIMENSIONS
    Wheelbase: 113.7 inLength: 187.0 inWidth: 75.6 inHeight: 64.4 inPassenger Volume, F/R: 56/49 ft3Cargo Volume, Behind F/R: 54/17 ft3Curb Weight (C/D est): 5100 lb
    PERFORMANCE (C/D EST)
    60 mph: 3.1 sec100 mph: 6.9 sec1/4-Mile: 11.1 secTop Speed: 171 mph
    EPA FUEL ECONOMY (C/D EST)
    Combined/City/Highway: 20/18/23 mpgCombined Gasoline + Electricity: 29 MPGeEV Range: 6 miDeputy Editor, Reviews and FeaturesJoe Lorio has been obsessed with cars since his Matchbox days, and he got his first subscription to Car and Driver at age 11. Joe started his career at Automobile Magazine under David E. Davis Jr., and his work has also appeared on websites including Amazon Autos, Autoblog, AutoTrader, Hagerty, Hemmings, KBB, and TrueCar. More

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    2022 Cadillac CT5-V Blackwing 48-State Road Trip

    From the November 2023 issue of Car and Driver.A road trip that puts tires in all 48 contiguous states and hits 50 major U.S. landmarks was the perfect exclamation point to put at the end of our time with our long-term 2022 CT5-V Blackwing. Our route followed the framework of a 13,699-mile itinerary designed by a data scientist in 2015.We figured we could get it done in about 30 days if we kept a steady supply of fresh drivers, so we sliced it into seven chunks, with keys handed off from one pilot to the next about every four days at various points around the country. Some staffers brought a spouse, a child, or a friend along for the ride, and all reveled in the cathartic healing of a road trip exploring the vastness of our country. We introduced the CT5-V Blackwing to both natural and manufactured beauty. We drove past the Grand Canyon and through Yellowstone, Bryce Canyon, and Glacier National Parks and posed in front of the White House, Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin house in Wisconsin, and the Breakers, the Vanderbilts’ dramatic summer home in Rhode Island. The Mall of America was not on the route, but we stopped there anyway. It is decidedly not beautiful.No one would expect such a high-performance sedan to be so adept at the long haul, but the CT5’s ride quality is luxury-car fantastic, although many found the firm seat bolstering and armrest padding a little tiresome after hours in the saddle.Car and DriverThe vast amount of soak time means nothing escaped our watchful eyes. For example, the seat’s lateral elements are black—black wings, get it? Also, as the temperature drifts upward from a cool morning, the air conditioning often doesn’t keep up. Following a restart, it seems to reset itself and comes on full force.If you keep the speeds modest, fuel economy can be quite good (23 to 24 mpg), on par with boring midsize crossovers. A small-block V-8 turning slowly is a time-tested fuel-saving strategy. But from the Blackwing’s CTS-V origins, Cadillac’s megasedan has always had a relatively small tank, with none of us able to stretch it to even 400 miles between fill-ups.Even though some drivers reported hitting the brakes no more than a couple of times a day, somehow, late in our time with the Blackwing, its rotors became curiously warped. This is quite surprising, considering that a few spirited laps at Virginia International Raceway months prior had no ill effects. We also had plenty of time to ponder some of life’s big questions. Like, considering the wide-open spaces we drove through in Texas, Oklahoma, Montana, the Dakotas, and Nebraska, what percentage of the cows in this country have now seen a CT5-V Blackwing? Also, why do some historical landmarks attract so much kitsch? The biggest eye-roll goes to the vendor outside Mount Rushmore whose billboard dangled the loftiest of promises: “Be President, Next Right.”Leg 1: From Ann Arbor, Michigan, to Washington, D.C.Open GalleryFox Theatre, MichiganShelburne Farms, VermontMount Washington Hotel, New HampshireAcadia National Park, MaineUSS Constitution, MassachusettsThe Breakers, Rhode IslandThe Mark Twain House and Museum, ConnecticutStatue of Liberty, New YorkLiberty Bell, PennsylvaniaCape May Historic District, New JerseyNew Castle Historic District, DelawareColonial Annapolis Historic District, MarylandWhite House, Washington, D.C.Leg 2: Washington, D.C., to Mobile, AlabamaOpen GalleryMount Vernon, VirginiaWright Brothers National Memorial, North CarolinaLost World Caverns, West VirginiaFort Sumter National Monument, South CarolinaOkefenokee Swamp Park, GeorgiaCape Canaveral Air Force Station, FloridaUSS Alabama, AlabamaLeg 3: Mobile, Alabama, to Carlsbad, New MexicoOpen GalleryFrench Quarter, LouisianaVicksburg National Military Park, MississippiElvis Presley’s Graceland, TennesseeToltec Mounds, ArkansasThe Platt Historic District, OklahomaThe Alamo, TexasCarlsbad Caverns National Park, New MexicoLeg 4: Carlsbad, New Mexico, to St. George, UtahOpen GalleryPikes Peak, ColoradoYellowstone National Park, WyomingCraters of the Moon National Monument, IdahoBryce Canyon National Park, UtahLeg 5: St. George, Utah, to Seattle, WashingtonOpen GalleryGrand Canyon National Park, ArizonaHoover Dam, NevadaSan Andreas Fault, CaliforniaSan Francisco Cable Car Museum, CaliforniaColumbia River Highway, OregonLeg 6: Seattle, Washington, to Minneapolis, Minnesota Open GalleryHanford Site, WashingtonGlacier National Park, MontanaFort Union Trading Post, North DakotaMount Rushmore National Memorial, South DakotaAshfall Fossil Beds, NebraskaFort Snelling, MinnesotaLeg 7: Minneapolis, Minnesota, to Ann Arbor, MichiganOpen GalleryFrank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin, WisconsinTerrace Hill Governor’s Mansion, IowaC.W. Parker Carousel Museum, KansasGateway Arch, MissouriAbraham Lincoln’s Home, IllinoisWest Baden Springs Hotel, IndianaMammoth Cave National Park, KentuckySpring Grove Cemetery, OhioDirector, Vehicle TestingDave VanderWerp has spent more than 20 years in the automotive industry, in varied roles from engineering to product consulting, and now leading Car and Driver’s vehicle-testing efforts. Dave got his very lucky start at C/D by happening to submit an unsolicited resume at just the right time to land a part-time road warrior job when he was a student at the University of Michigan, where he immediately became enthralled with the world of automotive journalism. More

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    1995 Luxury Car Comparison Test: Hedonistic Hustle

    From the February 1995 issue of Car and Driver.Could it be? The in-depth selec­tion of four-doors newly avail­able and popularly priced at 60 large has escaped your attention?Tsk, tsk.While you weren’t looking, automakers have been particularly energetic in this rarefied stratum­—three new entries within the last few months. Comparison test, anyone? For the record, placing the seats of our trou against this much leather for the better part of a thousand miles—through metro congestion, over interstates, and into the mountain twisties—is not a job we dread. Still, such exquisite choices have agonies of their own. Dom Perignon or Perrier-Jouet? That only begins to suggest the dueling delights of this 60-grand class. From Lexus, a brand that’s zoomed from skepticism (“Sure, the Japanese are great at little cars, but . . . “) to worldwide admi­ration in about two weeks, we have a reengineered LS400. Not, mind you, that the old one had grown tiresome in the five years since its debut. Also from Japan, and modestly reworked last year, is the Infiniti Q45. We always look forward to the 278-horsepower rush of the Q’s four-cam 4.5-liter V-8. From Jaguar of Coventry we have a refreshed XJ6, now look­ing very much like Jaguar’s previous classic, the XJ6 introduced in the late Sixties. Merely parking one of those aging beauties in a driveway has been known to lift property values for blocks around. Still warm from its Munich bakery is an all-new BMW 7-series, the V-8-powered 740i. BMW kneaded and stretched the sheetmetal into a muscular, wide-stance shape that looks the same as before, only better. If this company has any doubts about what BMWs should look like, they never show.Facing these newcomers is a car that’s constant as Gibraltar and just about as old: the Mercedes-Benz E420. Oh, sure, the model number has been uplifted—it was 400E when we last tested it as a 1993 model—and the price has been chopped nearly $4500. (Mercedes discovered that price sensitivity extends all the way up to the automotive stratosphere.) Are these minor tweaks enough to keep this veteran, with its new-in-1985 body, alive and vital against the best efforts of four other world-class makers?Comparison tests were invented to answer tougher questions than that. So let’s move into the ratings section, where answers abound.5th Place: Infiniti Q45 The Q45 that debuted in the 1990 model year was a heroic nonconformist. It hustled down the road with muscular grace that stood out in this comfort class, and it showed a smooth face to a world that expects luxury cars to present their cre­dentials in the form of a recognizable grille. It also refused to decorate the interior with wood. Although we were charmed by that car, affluent buyers contained their enthusiasm, and Nissan has been backing away from the original definition ever since. A chrome grille appeared in 1993, there’s wood now, and the suspension keeps getting softer.HIGHS: Silken V-8 sings to 6900, good visibility all around.LOWS: Indecisive steering, illogical small controls, slippery leather seats.VERDICT: A powerful player that’s a little unsure of its mission.This current Q finishes in fifth place largely because the muscle tone of its sus­pension doesn’t meet the needs of enthusi­astic driving. When spending this much, we expect a car to do it all. This one’s sus­pension reaches the end of its travel too eas­ily, a severe impairment to handling, and the steering is uncommunicative. As it’s turned off-center, the steering effort tapers up too gradually to give a sense of what the front wheels are doing. So hurrying into turns is less secure than it needs to be. Perhaps a footnote is in order here. On the fast California mountain roads where we conducted this test, the Q45 would likely have benefited from one of the two handling options lnfiniti offers: the Tour­ing Package ($3795) with a stiffer sus­pension and performance wheels and tires, or the Full-Active Suspension ($7645), which interacts with the road in a way that keeps the car within the suspension’s sweet spot. In past tests, both of these ver­sions behaved impressively. Unfortu­nately, neither option was available to us. Still, we need to be careful in extrapolat­ing the past, because the rear-steering fea­ture is deleted from the Touring option as of this model year. The Q’s muscle loss is clearly intentional. In this base version, the slippery leather on the seats always worked against our sense of control. The bucket’s contour is properly shaped for cruising, but even there the slick surface is off-putting. The Q45 is the big guy of this group, two inches longer than the second-longest (Jaguar) and a foot beyond the compact Mercedes. Trunk room and rear-seat room are about average for the class. Rear pas­sengers will find the bottoms of the front seats tight on their toes. The big V-8 remains as satisfy­ing as it always has been. While it didn’t top the charts in any tests other than street start, its sound and midrange thrust are partic­ularly fine, and the 146-mph top speed will keep you ahead of any carjacker that doesn’t catch you at a traffic light. This Q45’s small controls are not handy. The seats move with a series of door-mounted rocker switches that require full attention to operate. Controls for the front windows are neatly placed high on the door armrests, a long way from the rear-window controls on the center console. For now, this standard-suspension Q45 finds itself in an awkward position: no longer the intriguing nonconformist, yet not quite effortlessly mainstream either. For now we say, “Drive the optional sus­pensions and call us in the morning.”1995 Infiniti Q45278-hp V-8, 4-speed automatic, 4080 lbBase/as-tested price: $54,880/$57,025C/D TEST RESULTS60 mph: 7.8 sec1/4 mile: 16.1 sec @ 91 mph100 mph: 20.0 secBraking, 70­–0 mph: 187 ftRoadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.69 g C/D observed fuel economy: 16 mpg4th Place: Jaguar XJ6When you unroll 60 large for an auto­mobile, it ought to haul your temporal self down the road like precious cargo and lift your spirits above the moon. All of the candidates here score high marks on the former, but the way this Jaguar frames your view of the distance, then delivers it to you on a tray formed by its artfully sculptured hood, is an aesthetic treat the others can’t match. The shiny mascot leads, crouched beyond the sheetmetal horizon, so low and purposeful you see hardly more than its head and powerful shoulders. Off to the sides, the brows curv­ing over each headlight remind that a Jaguar is not another sterile exercise in aerodynamic efficiency. This is a motor­car, and its arrival should gladden hearts and vanquish gloom.HIGHS: High style, worth the price just for the driver’s-eye view out over the artfully sculptured hood.LOWS: Tight cockpit, limited rear-seat space, engine no match for the V-8s.VERDICT: There’ll always be an England.Jaguar’s newly reshaped XJ6 is, first and last, about style. And no one can deny its success. It’s not, however, about inte­rior space. Its roofline is 2.6 to 3.4 inches lower than the others, and it’s narrower than all but the Mercedes. The front is snugly compartmented—one person on each side of the prominent tun­nel. In back, knee and head room are ungenerous. The car’s taper­ing tail makes the trunk small, too. The luxury of this car is in the wood and leather appoint­ments, not in the available space. This four-door is not about performance either, although it does surprisingly well, given that its 3980 cc in-line six has the low­est output of the group (245 hp at 4700 rpm). Credit the happy part­nership with its four-speed auto­matic, which seems always ready with just-in-time downshifts whenever a burst of acceleration is needed. Working together, this power team kept the Jag ahead of the much more powerful BMW to 60 mph (8.1 seconds vs. 8.4) and pulled to a top speed of 139 mph—12 mph above the two German cars, which were held back by governors.Unlike the V-8s of the other cars, which seem to make no sound until called upon for full or nearly full power, the Jaguar’s six hums a low and soothing note on the interstate.Jaguar partisans watch anxiously these days, wondering if Ford, owner since 1990, will fumble away the Jaguarness that makes this brand so unlike all others. Not so far, we say. We do notice a Detroit-style sunglasses compartment overhead now, and in a compulsive quest to organize, the central-locking but­ton has been grouped with, and therefore lost in, an array of similarly shaped but­tons in the center of the dash. But the wood and leather are at least as fine as before. Some small controls, such as those for the power seats, are vastly more logical and convenient. Ford stepped up to the tooling bill necessary to restyle the exterior skin, to bring back the headlight brows that had been discontinued and to add a seductive curve to the trunk lid. The XJ6 has gained neatly crafted sub­tleties, too. To open the trunk from out­side, a press of the cat face above the license plate triggers an electric release. And as the lid rises, hidden gas struts slow its upward swing to a stately halt as it reaches the top of its travel. And we’re happy not to report any electrical problems of the sort that plagued last month’s proto­type XJR.Work remains to be done, however.This car has a nervousness as speeds approach 100 mph, in crosswinds or on uneven blacktops, that makes its path less straight than the others. It feels like deflec­tion steer, perhaps the unintended by­product of suspension-isolation rubber. Still, this is easily the best Jaguar ever, with stylistic refinements that can only draw more admirers to the fold.1995 Jaguar XJ6245-hp inline-6, 4-speed automatic, 4020 lbBase/as-tested price: $56,178/$61,788C/D TEST RESULTS60 mph: 8.1 sec1/4 mile: 16.3 sec @ 88 mph100 mph: 21.3 secBraking, 70­–0 mph: 189 ftRoadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.74 gC/D observed fuel economy: 17 mpg3rd Place: BMW 740iThis all-new sedan elicited wholly unexpected responses from the testing jury. The BMW partisans among us liked it less than they had expected—less, even, than the car it replaces in some respects (steering feel, for one), while those who take a show-me approach to BMWs became smiling converts by the second day of driving. The difference between these two polar­ized opinions has to do with what we expect of a $60,000 four-door and what we expect of a BMW. This car is overtly lux­urious in its poshly appointed interior, silent and slinky ride, and Sharper Image presentation of electrickery. Some of us think those are the essential pleasures that separate 60-grand cars from 30-grand cars. The other opinion holds that BMWs are for blurring the fence posts, and any softening of that purpose is tanta­mount to decadence. HIGHS: Plush interior, lush freeway ride, and hushed V-8 add up to lavish transit.LOWS: Heavy on gimmicks, particularly in the electronic manipulation of the five-speed automatic.VERDICT: BMW veers off in the Lexus direction with mixed results.As a device for speed and g-forces, this 740i does not excel. It’s too heavy, weighing 190 pounds more than the Infiniti (second heaviest) and 510 pounds more than the similarly luxurious Lexus. That weight impairs performance. All of the other V-8s generally outrun this BMW (in top speed, the Mercedes’ governor holds to the same 127 mph). The BMW’s cornering grip tops the charts at 0.79 g, but the dynamic capabil­ity of the suspension loses that advantage to the degree that in the emergency lane­-change test, this car barely stays ahead of the last-place Jaguar. Our ratings scatter when it comes to the subjective details of steering response and high-speed confidence. The BMW partisans want more steering effort, more athletic feel. The lux­ury advocates think it’s just fine the way it is. (For those who expect unanimity on these ratings, let us remind that Olympic judges rarely agree either.) Comfort seekers will rank this car very close to the new Lexus. In rear-seat room and comfort, they are closely matched and clearly better than the others. For the driver, the BMW offers a seat with true have-it-your-way hospitality. It has all the normal adjustments plus a lumbar support that can be tailored for both firmness and height. The front seatback has power artic­ulation so that the angle of its upper por­tion can be set independently of its lower half, a nice trick that aids shoulder sup­port. When you get all of these shapes just right, your personal setting can be saved in one of three memory positions.This willingness to conform to your anatomy is just one aspect of a wonderfully hedonistic interior. The contrasting doeskin and fawn­-colored leathers, trimmed in furni­ture-grade wood-grain, suggest the opulence of a private train car. All of the contours on the dash and wheel are familiar BMW, but the execution is far warmer and more inviting than BMW (or Mercedes) have done in the past. Both the performance and the luxury partisans do agree about many aspects of this new 740i. For example, there’s too lit­tle automation in the climate-control sys­tem—the driver must manually turn on the compressor and regulate fan speed. And in the powertrain operation, where there should be simple mechanical har­monies, we get instead blatant electronic intervention. Microswitches in the accel­erator linkage trigger downshifts in the five-speed automatic—they feel unnatural. A quick dip of the accelerator cause the power to fade up like some fancy stereo. Automatic upshifts at full power are so heavily manipulated that the engine note sounds as if a real driver is lifting off the gas to shift a five-speed. All of this pro­cessing gets in the way of the real-car fla­vor that’s made BMW famous. Yet when we want intervention enough to tug the gear selector (which initiates the sporty shift program), the difference is hardly noticeable. For now, we think the hedonists will like this 740i better than the hot-blooded types will, and the hedonists will like it a lot.1995 BMW 740i282-hp V-8, 5-speed automatic, 4270 lbBase/as-tested price: $60,952/$66,837C/D TEST RESULTS60 mph: 8.4 sec1/4 mile: 16.6 sec @ 90 mph100 mph: 20.6 secBraking, 70­–0 mph: 181 ftRoadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.79 gC/D observed fuel economy: 17 mpg2nd Place: Mercedes-Benz E420Every quality our more aggressive drivers missed in the BMW they found in this car. It’s tremendously, extravagantly, lustily power­ful—0 to 60 mph in 7.3 sec­onds, 15.7 seconds and 93 mph in the quarter-mile. On the highway, a step on the pedal causes the automatic transmission to instantly bang down a gear, then the 4.2-liter V-8 engine takes it from there, heading for the horizon with an impatience that surely raises eyebrows among the cultured classes. Naturally, we all like this part a lot. HIGHS: Raw power, lots of raw power, and a sinewy chassis.LOWS: Five years behind the others in conveniences—to unlock the doors, you still need a key.VERDICT: Potent, but with all the luxury you’d expect of Nordic Track.Mercedes cars typically have a trusty feel in the twisties, and here it’s height­ened by compact dimensions and light weight—far less weight than all but the almost equally tight Lexus. The hedonists, though, were thor­oughly unimpressed. This is a little car, close to ten inches shorter than the aver­age of the others, more than two inches narrower than the Jaguar (second slimmest), and almost five inches narrower than the BMW. Except for power and price, it’s just not in the same class. The interior is solemn, with thin padding over its structural bones. Luxurious little details—locking and unlocking by key-fob magic, adjustable lumbar support, sunroof, auto-dimming mirror—are simply not included for $55,130. This is the only car in the group without cupholders. The interior space is narrow and tall. Headroom is plentiful. The seats are well shaped and rather upright, which yields adequate, though by no means luxurious, kneeroom in back. Three-across seating in back is marginally more comfortable than in the Jaguar but, again, not luxuri­ous. The trunk is large, thanks in part to the high tail. The no-frills starkness of this car has a certain charm if only because it lets the raw power and connected-to-the-road handling stand out. The brakes, too, are firm, like well-conditioned muscles. There’s a machine here, a well-oiled machine, though it’s not notably eager to please. In metro traffic, the steering is lethargic, and the dated transmission resists downshift­ing until you press deep into the power, at which time it bangs a down shift and gives a hearty lunge forward. There’s not a trace of flab in this definition of exclusive motoring, nothing but a sinewy stride over the road, surefooted on any surface. What we’re describing here is not the usual flavor of luxury, but driving is not the same as meekly easing down the high­way, either.1995 Mercedes-Benz E420275-hp V-8, 4-speed automatic, 3740 lbBase/as-tested price: $55,018/$55,130C/D TEST RESULTS60 mph: 7.3 sec1/4 mile: 15.7 sec @ 93 mph100 mph: 18.2 secBraking, 70­–0 mph: 185 ftRoadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.73 gC/D observed fuel economy: 19 mpg1st Place: Lexus LS400This newly redone Lexus earns respect more than affection, but the respect flows in such torrents that placing it anywhere but atop the heap is out of the question. The superb engineering that brought instant prestige to the original LS400 is completely surpassed here. Considering its fine accommodations, this car is very light—only 3760 pounds, a mere 20 pounds heavier than the ten-inches-shorter Mercedes. Yet the interior space is tremendous. Lengthening the wheelbase by 1.4 inches (with no change in overall length) has brought real stretch-out room to the rear seat. Headroom is generous, too. Five of almost any size will be happy passen­gers in this car. HIGHS: Amazing performance, amazing fuel economy, amazing back seat, amazing list of amazements.LOWS: Amazing lack of soul.VERDICT: Good, really amazingly good, but we keep reaching for the ketchup.Keeping the weight low has brought excellent performance. This car runs just a tick behind the Mercedes in every test but top speed, where it easily outruns all the others (156 mph). Again, the engi­neers’ attention to details—aerodynamics this time—tells the story: the Cd is just 0.28, best in the class. That attention results in performance and fuel economy. The LS400 tops the EPA ratings for this group, at 19 mpg city, 25 highway. In our driving, the Mercedes squeaked out 1 mpg more, 19 vs. 18 for the Lexus. We find driving this car to be unin­volving, but in a way that is a compliment. It means there are no idiosyncrasies or intrusions to be noticed. Steering response is quick and correct, the brakes take up intuitively, the throttle is not jumpy, the suspension is taut rather than floaty, and the path is maintained down the interstate with little tending required of the driver. There’s simply nothing to get in the way of untroubled motoring. The wind passes over the exterior shape with only a whis­per. The engine, even at full power, makes just a sweetly textured purr. Small-bump harshness is surprisingly apparent if you look for it, but the impacts are so silent you may not notice. Silence envelopes this car like a blanket. The small details inside the LS400 work beautifully too. There’s a center visor over the mirror, mounted so that it swivels in any direction you choose. The seat’s pneumatic lumbar support adjusts quickly—there’s none of the tedious wait­ing for undersize compressors and orifices to do their jobs. The remote-lock fob is powerful yet tiny in your pocket. The transmission pattern is perfect for gear changes on the fly, with solid stops at both ends of the 2-3 and 3-4 shifts. Still, we keep wondering, does perfec­tion have to be so antiseptic? The dash is so perfectly organized that it seems too simple. There are no intrusions into the driver’s space, which after a time makes the car seem standoffish and distant. The contours everywhere are so smoothly formed that they hardly catch the eye and are quickly forgotten once we leave the car. The same is true of the exterior: the impressively low Cd says it’s more pleas­ing to the wind, but to the eye it lacks the shapely flair of the old, less perfect model. Now you understand the testers’ agony, and why days in the seats of the very best four-doors that man has ever created never quite draw to a blissful conclusion. This new Lexus is a high-water mark of auto­motive engineering. But, doggone it, if they were doing it this well, why did they stop short of compelling? 1995 Lexus LS400260-hp V-8, 4-speed automatic, 3760 lbBase/as-tested price: $53,593/$57,828C/D TEST RESULTS60 mph: 7.8 sec1/4 mile: 15.8 sec @ 92 mph100 mph: 18.9 secBraking, 70–0 mph: 182 ftRoadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.74 gC/D observed fuel economy: 18 mpg More