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    2023 Ford Bronco Sport Heritage Editions Play the Retro Card

    Ford continues to channel the rich history of its iconic Bronco 4×4 with the introduction of two new retro-inspired special editions of its compact Bronco Sport SUV.The 2023 Bronco Sport Heritage Edition and Bronco Sport Heritage Limited Edition celebrate the birth of the Bronco brand with a classic-themed appearance package that takes styling cues from the original 1966 truck. Both variants feature a white roof, white rear badging, white 17-inch aluminum wheels, and a white grille with red BRONCO lettering.The Bronco Sport Heritage Edition, built on the Big Bend trim level, utilizes Ford’s 181-hp turbocharged 1.5-liter inline-three, which is paired with an eight-speed automatic transmission and all-wheel drive. Suspension features include hydraulic front bump stops and specially tuned springs included in Ford’s High-Performance Off-Road Stability Suspension (HOSS) system package, plus five user-selectable “G.O.A.T.” terrain modes for off-road driving. The Heritage Edition’s interior styling includes white trim accents, plaid cloth seats, blue-and-red accent stitching, a microsuede center console armrest, and Navy Pier Blue accents on the door panels and dash. Buyers have a choice of seven paint options, including Robin’s Egg Blue, a throwback color based on one that was available on the original Bronco.More on the Bronco SportThe pricier Heritage Limited Edition is derived from the Bronco Sport lineup’s more off-road-focused Badlands package, which features the larger turbocharged 2.0-liter inline-four, two additional G.O.A.T. modes, a torque-vectoring rear differential, and a lockable center clutch pack for the all-wheel-drive system. Our Peak Blue sample is one of three paint shades available, the others being the lighter Robin’s Egg Blue and the intense Yellowstone Metallic.Heritage Limited Edition–specific features include larger 29-inch all-terrain tires, leather-trimmed seats, and white door inserts. A retro-style plaque adorns the center console, while metal Bronco door badging in the classic ’60s script is satisfyingly eye-catching.James Lipman|Car and DriverDespite its basis in the humble C2 unibody platform as used in the Escape SUV and Maverick pickup, the Bronco Sport proves to be unexpectedly capable off-road, with the 2.0-liter’s 250 horsepower and 277 pound-feet of torque making light work of the steep gullies, embedded boulders, and deep sand that constitute the Johnson Valley area of the Mojave Desert. (So much of the model’s off-road development was conducted here that Ford chose to include a geographic coordinate from the area as an Easter egg hidden in the molding of the rear hatch trim.)An aluminum skid plate, part of the standard Badlands equipment package, eases concerns of stabbing the Bronco Sport’s underbody with spiky terrain elements. Despite the Sport’s modest ride height, its 8.8-inch ground clearance (on 235/65R-17 tires, the model’s largest available) proves to be perfectly adequate for comfortably brisk-paced desert driving as we follow the dusty wake of our guide, Melissa. She is well-versed in the Bronco Sport’s abilities, having taken a stock Bronco Sport Badlands to first place in the 1500-mile, off-road Rebelle Rally in both 2021 and 2022.It is the suspension that makes the Bronco Sport, and despite the plethora of off-road driving modes available, this SUV handles even soft trail running just fine in its standard drive mode. Locking in the all-wheel-drive system and the rear differential is more than sufficient for confident thrashing in deeper sand. All of that would be equally true for the less retro-tastic Badlands model, however. At $46,250, the Heritage Limited Edition is fully kitted out, carrying nearly $5000 worth of features that are optional on the Badlands. Screen that out, and you see that the retro look carries a roughly $2000 premium. One rung down, the $34,245 Heritage Edition represents a roughly $1500 upcharge over the equivalent Big Bend model. James Lipman|Car and DriverIs that worth it? Well, several miles east of where we drove this Bronco Sport, classic Broncos, stock and modified, are swarming the viewing areas of this year’s King of the Hammers desert road-race competition. For off-road enthusiasts, the appeal of those classic Broncos, the reborn Bronco, and this offshoot Bronco Sport is wrapped up in the combination of capability and aesthetics. The Bronco Sport Heritage Editions lean more heavily on the latter, but to no detriment of the former.Arrow pointing downArrow pointing downSpecificationsSpecifications
    2023 Ford Bronco Sport Heritage EditionVehicle Type: front-engine, all-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 4-door wagon
    PRICE
    Base: Heritage, $34,245; Heritage Limited, $46,250
    ENGINES
    turbocharged and intercooled DOHC 12-valve 1.5-liter inline-3, 181 hp, 190 lb-ft; turbocharged and intercooled DOHC 16-valve 2.0-liter inine-4, 250 hp, 277 lb-ft
    TRANSMISSION
    8-speed automatic
    DIMENSIONS
    Wheelbase: 105.1 inLength: 172.7 inWidth: 74.3 inHeight: 70.2–71.4 inPassenger Volume, F/R: 53–56/50 ft3Curb Weight (C/D est): 3600–3800 lb
    PERFORMANCE (C/D EST)
    60 mph: 5.9–8.2 sec1/4-Mile: 14.5–16.3 secTop Speed: 125 mph
    EPA FUEL ECONOMY
    Combined/City/Highway: 23–26/21–25/26–28 mpg More

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    2023 BMW M3 Touring Puts Undiluted M Goodness into a Rare Form

    Call them wagons or estate cars, it doesn’t really matter. What counts is the sad fact that a drop in global demand is speedily driving the genre that epitomizes style, space, and street cred toward extinction. Worse still, the industry has fallen concurrently into the habit of replacing every single outgoing family holdall with another anonymous SUV or crossover. Central Europe is now the last stronghold of the formerly coveted body style, which is often badged Touring, T-model, Variant, or Avant, and is typically kitted out with inspiring powertrains and lifestyle-oriented accessories.The auto industry’s costly crusade from gasoline and diesel propulsion to hybrid powertrains and EVs will continue to thin the wagon ranks, but BMW, for one, decided to expand its offerings. The 2023 503-hp M3 Touring made its debut last year, and it will be followed in early 2025 by the all-new 650-hp PHEV M5 Touring Competition and the even brawnier 740-hp M5 Touring Label Red.BMWThe M3 Touring—a first of its kind—shares its overbite grille and adaptive AWD/RWD system with the marginally less expensive M3 Competition xDrive sedan. The two also share the same powertrain, comprising a twin-turbocharged 3.0-liter inline-six bolted to an eight-speed automatic transmission. The fully loaded example we drove stickers for a whopping $120,000. The More M3, The MerrierAlthough 53 cubic feet of luggage space with the rear bench folded is a welcome bonus for the next weekend getaway or trip to the DIY superstore, the M3 Touring is best used on six days out of seven in its signature role as the ultimate driving machine. True to this moniker, it goes like stink, handles like a gymkhana hero, oozes presence even when parked, and makes all the right noises when not. The run from naught to 60 is over and done with in 3.4 seconds, according to BMW. The pricey M Driver’s Package lifts the top speed to 174 mph. And from 2750 to 5500 rpm there is 479 pound-feet of maximum torque that can be sent to all four wheels—or only the rear two. Fuel economy when pushed? Next question.The scalpel-sharp steering gets the German Society of Surgeons seal of approval. Even on Michelin winter tires, our M3 Touring delivers massive grip, the carbon-ceramic anchors are liable to pull eyeballs out of their sockets, and the optional thinly padded lightweight composite bucket seat clamps man to machine. Like the facelifted 3-series, the M3 Touring features the latest infotainment complete with a wide-screen digital display, jazzed-up instrument graphics, and too many new functions (think M Drift Analyzer) to process in a single session. The M3 Touring is a hardcore and rough-edged high-performance wagon that shines brightest when driven aggressively. Keen drivers will find an unfiltered audio soundtrack, an uncompromising ride, a narrow bargaining zone at the limit, and on uneven tarmac, the iffy directional stability of a tightrope walker. While the taller and longer rear end improves the weight distribution by a tiny margin, it inches the center of gravity upward by a similar measure. Since the recalibrated rear suspension is tuned for a broader variety of axle loads than the sedan, the Touring displays an occasional shoulder-jostling stiffness we don’t recall in its notchback sibling.BMWMore sensible shoppers will gravitate toward the M340i xDrive Touring, but dyed-in-the-wool M3 aficionados will want the real McCoy. But beware: The 503-hp Touring is not a part-time school bus; Saturday morning shopping cart; or the family’s only car, with two baby seats in the back. Instead, this super-special M car deserves to live its life in the fast lane.Arrow pointing downArrow pointing downSpecificationsSpecifications
    2023 BMW M3 TouringVehicle Type: front-engine, all-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 4-door wagon
    PRICE
    Base: $108,772 (Germany)
    ENGINE
    Twin-turbocharged and intercooled DOHC 24-valve inline-6, aluminum block and head, direct fuel injectionDisplacement: 183 in3, 2993 cm3Power: 503 hp @ 6250 rpmTorque: 479 lb-ft @ 2750 rpm
    TRANSMISSION
    8-speed automatic
    DIMENSIONS
    Wheelbase: 112.5 inLength: 189.0 inWidth: 74.9 inHeight: 56.9 inPassenger Volume, F/R: 55/42 ft3Cargo Volume, Behind F/R: 53/18 ft3Curb Weight (C/D est): 4200 lb
    PERFORMANCE (C/D EST)
    60 mph: 3.0 sec100 mph: 7.2 sec1/4-Mile: 11.2 secTop Speed (mfr): 174 mph
    EPA FUEL ECONOMY (C/D EST)
    Combined/City/Highway: 18/15/22 mpg More

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    From the Archive: 1980 AMC Eagle Tested

    From the February 1980 issue of Car and Driver.Several staff members drove a small fleet of Eagle prototypes at the AMC press preview last summer and came back from Kenosha reeking of a kind of enthusiasm that’s usually reserved for European exotica. Only the week before I’d had lunch with AMC marketing vice­-president Tom Staudt—a recent arrival from Chevrolet—and he was waving his arms in this snazzoid French restaurant, protesting the folly that had led his new employers to come up with what was simply the best idea in the history of De­troit and then only plan for production of 40,000 units in the first year. “Gee,” he complained, “Chevrolet could lose 40,000 cars in a year. This thing is so good that it demands a hundred percent effort by everybody involved!” Natural­ly, I was cautious. Automotive journal­ists—even ours—can be swayed by the fun and games and shiny new toys at a press preview, and automotive market­ing directors are among the greatest self-hypnotists of all time. But I got my chance soon. Our test Eagle arrived here on Hogback Road just as my friends were gathering from around the country for our annual out­ing on the Au Sable River, so I com­mandeered the little beastie and mo­tored off into the autumn night for the 180-mile run up north to our camp. Be­fore a week had passed I’d driven it over a thousand miles, at least half of those off-pavement, if not actually off-road. I hadn’t set out to prove anything. I wasn’t trying to find its limits. I just wanted comfortable, sure-footed trans­portation for a week of bad back roads and muddy Jeep trails, and I thought it would be nice to show off for my pals with the one truly new product out of Detroit in 1980. To say that I loved the Eagle would be the understatement of the year. When I got home, I bought 200 shares of American Motors stock. The Eagle had convinced me that AMC was a hot property. AMC Eagle Tested and Vintage 4x4sThe Eagle is not just a Concord with Quadra-Trac four-wheel drive. The Ea­gle is the Concord transformed, an ut­terly different car from anything AMC has ever offered us in the past. It is not an off-road vehicle. It is a luxurious compact car with four-wheel drive, a grown-up Subaru. I saw my first one at the annual Northwood Institute auto­mobile show at Midland, Michigan. It looked like a tall Concord, but the tall feeling went away when I got behind the wheel. All three models—coupe, sedan, and wagon—were present there, and I quickly decided that the wagon configu­ration was the most appropriate for the Eagle idea. Somehow the coupe and se­dan, with their vinyl roofs arid flashy ’51 Telefunken-radio trim, just didn’t have any credibility as four-wheel-drive machines. There’s a tidier sport option for the coupe and the wagon, which re­places much of the flash with black paint and seems to pull the shape together rather nicely, particularly on our test wagon, which is finished in a lovely fire­-engine red. If the Eagle started as a Concord, the Concord started as a Hornet, and we’ve always felt that the original AMC Hor­net—especially the wagon—was one of the better-looking American cars. Strange, the Hornet was first intro­duced in 1969, and now, after a kind of uneventful cruise through ten years of high automotive drama, the Hornet/Concord becomes the Eagle and sets the woods on fire. Eagles are command­ing full sticker price in Snow Belt AMC dealerships, and the mind-blowing suc­cess of the four-wheel-drive family se­dan caused AMC first to double its original estimate of first-year sales, then—talk about high drama—an­nounce that it was dumping the Pac­er to concentrate those production facil­ities on building more and more Eagles. Why? Is it just that America was wait­ing for a domestic manufacturer to bring out something as sensible as a Su­baru, or is the Eagle more important than that? We’re inclined to support both views. Certainly, Subaru proved there was a vast untapped market for four-by-four family cars in the United States. But—and you’ll have to drive an Eagle to appreciate this—the Eagle does many things better than most American cars, just motoring along in situations where four­-wheel drive isn’t even a factor. Many observers see the Eagle as a logical outgrowth of AMC’s trailblazing experience with 4WD in Jeeps and Wag­oneers, but the connection is more phil­osophical than mechanical. The Eagle is not a Concord with Jeep underpinnings, but an entirely new approach to 4WD for road cars in America. Actually, the basic Concord was more useful to AMC’s en­gineers than any existing Jeep/Wago­neer technology. The Concord’s dou­ble-wishbone front suspension (with coil spring and shock absorber mounted up on top, out of the way) was ideally suited to allow the necessary space for front half-shafts, and its rear leaf springs made it relatively easy to accom­modate the larger wheels and added ride height of the new 4WD package.Three things seem to contribute most to the surprising pleasure of driving an Eagle: first, stiffening the suspension by about 15 percent over the standard Concord; second, the optional (and su­perb) P195/75R-15 Goodyear Tiempo all-season tires; and third, the undeni­able advantage of independent front suspension. Our Mr. Sherman adds that it certainly doesn’t hurt to have the front wheels pulling and the rear wheels pushing when you commit yourself to a banzai charge onto some slippery Inter­state off-ramp. Another advantage of the Eagle’s full-time 4WD is enhanced braking performance, in that the limited-slip function (rear to front) of the one-speed transfer case also provides some anti-skid benefits by helping to balance fore-and-aft braking forces. The Eagle, by virtue of its stiffer sus­pension and more aggressive tires, feels quite European. It is smooth and quiet to a fare-thee-well, but the tires and sus­pension contribute a feeling of tight, solid sure-footedness that just isn’t there in a standard Concord. The steer­ing is about average, but in normal driving, the Eagle offers better control feedback and overall “feel” than any American Motors product in our experi­ence, better than most American cars, period. The main limitation on han­dling and roadability in the Eagle is the standard 4.2-liter (258-cubic-inch ) six-­cylinder engine, since you run out of power long before you lose traction­—and this is equally true when slogging through the muck. The Eagle’s higher center of gravity might have been a lia­bility, but seems to have been offset by the stiffer suspension, particularly the front and rear anti-roll bars. The heady success of the Eagle can only be explained in terms of all-round automotive goodness, plus four-wheel drive, because it doesn’t feature the kind of beauty that would launch a bass boat, let alone a thousand ships. The exterior is tall gimcrackery, salvageable only if you have the foresight to order the sport trim option. The interior is better, provided you ignore the instru­ment panel, which appears to be a ran­dom collision of afterthoughts. The front seats are better than average for a Detroit product, though they still lack the range of adjustment available on the meanest of Japanese econoboxes. The rear seat is a little short under the legs but is acceptable otherwise. The best feature back there, however, is the ultra-­simple, one-handed system for flopping the seatback down to increase load space—better than the Wagoneer’s, bet­ter than most. Our test Eagle was up­holstered in a pleasant but impractical gray-tan plaid material that felt like high-quality wool and vividly showed every dog footprint and hint of human error. We’d probably go for vinyl in a vehicle of this kind. The very fact that the Eagle is so clearly designed for supe­rior performance in unfriendly climes dictates that you’ll be climbing in and out with wet outer garments and dirty footgear. (As a matter of fact, we have some thoughts about that interior . . . but that comes later.) Aaron Kiley|Car and DriverEvery Eagle comes with the 4.2-liter engine, three-speed automatic transmis­sion, Quadra-Trac 4WD, and 15-inch wheels as standard equipment. There is no manual transmission available, which is okay by us. There’s a wide range of options listed for the Eagle: AM/FM ra­dios, cassette decks, trailer packages, a self-leveling system, plus all the interior and exterior trim options that we’ve come to expect from Detroit. Scanning the list, it’s doubtful even the kitschiest customer could put together an order for a bad one, considering the combina­tions to be had, but the wagon with the sport trim option, Tiempo all-weather radials, and a light-trailer package was clearly the hot setup for us. The wait for a new Eagle stands at six months as of this writing. Shades of the Honda Accord and GM’s new X-cars! The car is such a smash hit that we can’t help but wonder how successful it might have been with yeastier, more contem­porary styling and the clout of General Motors behind it. It is quiet and stable at 75. It drives better than most Ameri­can sedans at any price, and it offers the manifold advantages of full-time four­-wheel drive combined with independent suspension in a true family car. If it suf­fers any liabilities at all—beyond its somewhat dated styling—they would be lack of power, some fuel-consumption penalty for the Quadra-Trac system, smaller interior dimensions than most recently introduced compacts, and typi­cal American seats. Otherwise, it’s an absolute charmer. Aaron Kiley|Car and DriverThis is the first time we’ve been so unanimously impressed with an Ameri­can Motors product, and we’re all a lit­tle bemused by our own enthusiasm. So great is our affection for it, in fact, that we’ve decided to turn our red test car into a long-term project vehicle. As you read this, our project Eagle (Boss Wag­on 4×4) is in California with Mr. Techni­cal Editor Sherman, having a new interi­or installed, its engine breathed upon, and some additional development work done with its suspension. Our goal is to bring the performance of the engine up to the potential of the suspension and four-wheel drive and, at the same time, to optimize the handling and roadability on pavement without compromising its performance in mud and snow. This will probably be our most ambitious project to date, spiced considerably by the fact that for the first time, we’re working with a highly sophisticated four-wheel-drive system. As they say, watch this space. The Eagle has landed and is about to scream.CounterpointHere we have a rare phenomenon: The whole is way more than the sum of its parts. Little AMC, which you’ll agree is anything but America’s prince of technol­ogy, took one obsolete car line, jacked the body three inches skyward, stuck in enough gears and fluid couplings to make all the wheels drive, and called it Eagle. And the thing flies! It’s got to be the most impressive piece of automobile engineer­ing in America today. What’s more, it drives well. There’s actual road feel in the steering wheel. The brakes work great. It goes straight down the highway. And it produces only a little more wind whistle and road noise than your average conven­tional car. The wagon version even looks right perched up on its tippy-toes. The only things I don’t like about the Eagle are its lack of a manual transmission, and the Modern American Funky interior it comes with. The seats in particular look like furniture you’d expect to find in a re­ally wacko shrink’s office. All of which fades into insignificance the instant you’re confronted with bad roads or rot­ten weather. If you’ve got ten grand to spend on mobility insurance, this Eagle will do you a whole lot more good than State Farm. —Don ShermanWith derisive hoots. That’s how I met the news about AMC’s plan to build a four­-wheel-drive Concord. I couldn’t think of a more whacked-out way for AMC to spend precious research-and-development dol­lars, especially in the face of the strong demand for efficient, front-wheel-drive econoboxes. Better to scrap the old Gremlin-cum-Spirit and get on with a proper program for the Eighties. Well, I was right about one thing. The Spirit can still use a good scrapping. But who’da thunk AMC was going to turn its semi­-successful Concord into one of the best American cars around? And I’m pleased, pleased that AMC has finally built a car no one—not the company, not the buy­ers, not anyone—has to make excuses for. The four-wheel-drive system has trans­formed the Concord: It drives, rides, and handles like nothing else AMC has ever built. Yes, that silly dime-store-design in­terior is still there with its funny seats, anachronistic parcel tray, and such. But for the first time, in light of the Eagle’s overall personality, I’m willing to over­look the traditional AMC touches. —Mike KnepperIf I were a believer in . . . imaginative in­vestment, I’d put some money on Ameri­can Motors bulling through the thick and skating across the thin. All the way to sur­vival and prosperity. Something has hap­pened over there in Nash Land that’s go­ing to take some getting used to. Ameri­can Motors has suddenly found the han­dle for building cars people want to buy. The Eagle is already back-ordered for half a year, and AMC has just announced it has good sense. It will stop building Pacers altogether in order to gain more space for Eagle production. On pave­ment, the Eagle will pick ’em up and put ’em down with an aplomb never before felt in a four-wheel-drive whatever. Inside is serenity. It gets better. Nothing chang­es when the pavement ends unless you execute a triple-gainer into a ditch of can­yonesque proportions. Then you might scream. But if it’s only normal tomfoolery like a high-crowned, hyper-washboard strip of endless blast-site gravel, you won’t know it from an Interstate. Hot damn! —Larry GriffinSpecificationsSpecifications
    1980 AMC EagleVehicle Type: front-engine, all-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 5-door wagon
    PRICE
    Base/As Tested: $7549/$9535Options: A/C, $513; AM/FM with CB radio, $399; sport package, $299; power windows and door locks, $289; rear-window defroster, $89; trailer-towing package, $82; convenience group, $75; heavy-duty suspension, $65; tinted glass, $63; light group, $39; protection group, $30; fabric upholstery, $25; heavy-duty battery, $18.
    ENGINEPushrod inline-6, iron block and headDisplacement: 258 in3, 4235 cm3Power: 110 hp @ 3400 rpmTorque: 206 lb-ft @ 1800 rpm 
    TRANSMISSION3-speed automatic
    CHASSIS
    Suspension, F/R: control arms/rigid axleBrakes, F/R: 11.o-in vented disc/10.0-in drumTires: Goodyear TiempoP195/75R-15
    DIMENSIONS
    Wheelbase: 109.3 inLength: 186.2 inWidth: 71.9 inHeight: 55.0 inCurb Weight: 3740 lb
    C/D TEST RESULTS
    60 mph: 13.2 sec1/4-Mile: 19.2 sec @ 71 mph80 mph: 27.9 secBraking, 70–0 mph: 195 ft 
    EPA FUEL ECONOMY
    Combined: 16 mpg (est.) 
    C/D TESTING EXPLAINED More

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    Ford Bronco DR Is Ready for Off-Road Racing

    A pair of hands plugs my helmet into a filtered air feed, another clips the window net in place. In the seat next to me, Curt LeDuc, Off-Road Motorsports Hall of Famer, keys the intercom. “We’re going to take it easy till the shock oil has warmed up.” Oh, God. I peer past the reassuring lattice crash structure, into the interminable lunar topography of the Southern California desert outside, and ponder at which point my spinal cord will exit through the top of my skull.Starting at $295,000, the new ultra-hardcore DR— for Desert Racer—is Ford’s ultimate off-road mission statement in its Bronco lineup. The DR channels a decades-long legacy of desert racing that began with a stock first-gen Bronco’s class win of the legendary 1967 Baja 1000, an outright race win in 1969, further class wins in 1971 and 1972, and 15 Baja 1000 Class 3 wins for the ’78-to-’95 model between 2002 and 2019.Eager to retain the DR’s lineage to the dealer-lot-variety Bronco, Ford deliberately eschewed the traditional tubular frame architecture of top-tier off-road racing Trophy Trucks, instead opting to build it from a production Bronco four-door frame with as many stock suspension and drivetrain components as possible. A standard-issue 10R80 automatic transmission delivers power to the independent electronically locking front and rear 4.70:1 differentials via a stock Ford electronic shift-on-the-fly transfer case. The upper front suspension A-arms are production-Bronco, and a forward section of chassis stiffening, cut from the rear rollover frame of the production Bronco, is visible in the front wheel wells. The rear axle is stock F-150, giving the DR a widened track of 73.3 inches, and the brakes are stock Bronco, or in this case, optional Alcon units. The DR’s power is from a largely stock 5.0-liter Coyote V-8 equipped with thunderous exhaust headers that instantly confute any notion of road legality (the DR is not road legal).More on the BroncoAs we buck gently across the landscape, concerns of my intervertebral discs being smashed to a frothy pulp are vanquished. The 80-mm remote-reservoir Multimatic spool-valve dampers give the racer over 50 percent more suspension travel than the production Bronco Badlands—15.7 inches at the front and 17.4 inches at the rear—with hydraulic bump stops soaking up the last few inches of travel from the 37-inch BFGoodrich tires. The DR’s structure is immensely stout, and the electric power-assisted steering—completely devoid of kickback—is full of feel, wildly direct, and confidence-inspiring. From the right seat, LeDuc relays 25 years of Dakar and Baja desert-racing wisdom, his casual wit as dry as the deserts of which it was born, and I begin to relax. Aside from being a tool built for a job, the DR, at this speed, is unexpectedly comfortable and enormous fun.James Lipman|Car and DriverThe big spool-valved dampers have obviously warmed up, and LeDuc gestures ahead. “Okay, we can get on it.” By now I have no idea how fast we’re going, and at this rate, I can’t really take my eyes off the trail to check. I listen to the mechanical chaos beneath us and wonder how much the DR can take. “You cannot break it,” LeDuc reassures me. “Just don’t turn during a jump.” (It’s not the truck that he’s worried about.) Faster still, and the approximately 6200-pound DR begins to float atop the terrain like a speedboat on plane. After years of bucking across these same desert trails in my own lowly road-focused garbage, the stress of not even having to consider mechanical failure is a revelation.We break out onto a wide, smooth dry lakebed. “Full gas, let’s go.” I press the pedal to the floor, and the DR, now pushing out over 400 horsepower, thunders like industrial machinery. With nothing for miles around to provide a visual clue as to our speed, I glance at the center-mounted screen. We’re at 100 mph, but the ride is so utterly liquid and stable that I would happily sit here for hours, in this Zen-like state, being gradually deafened by five liters of screaming V-8 as the desert gently rolls by. What a fantastic place to be.The press release describes the DR as “a turnkey racing solution for serious off-road competitors,” but I suspect that many of the 50 cars Ford plans to build will end up in the hands of collectors or wealthy off-road enthusiasts who just wanna rip across the desert in the baddest Bronco there is.We’re back at base now. I’m back on my feet but still floating from the experience. I look over to LeDuc, pleased to see that he’s still smiling.”You were at about 40 percent of its capability,” he says, grinning. “This thing is serious. With a bigger fuel tank, it’d do Dakar.”I look for any sign of a wink or a nod, but he’s just too dry to read.James Lipman|Car and Driver More

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    2024 Maserati GranTurismo Folgore Embraces the Sound of Silence

    In the United States, outside of the stunning MC20, modern-day Maseratis have a knack for going unnoticed. In small-town Italy, however, the trident emblem and distinct engine symphonies possess the ability to stop bystanders in their tracks. Approval is delivered via thumbs-up from pedestrians. The 2024 Maserati GranTurismo Folgore and its silence bring a new reaction: head-scratching. Though Maserati’s all-new GranTurismo is offered with a potent twin-turbocharged 3.0-liter V-6, the Folgore brings another powertrain option: electric. The Folgore shares the body and styling of the internal-combustion version, with the only differing visual cues being bronze trident badges and brake calipers along with the omission of tailpipes. At rest, there’s no valvetrain clatter from under the hood, just a warbling electronic soundtrack being broadcast out to onlookers. Heck, the Folgore’s hood can only be opened by dealer technicians.More MaseratisWhile the Folgore’s soundtrack won’t rattle the bricks of ancient structures in the Old World, it represents Maserati’s foray into an electric future. Beneath its striking sheetmetal, there’s a massive wallop of power, courtesy of three electric motors. The Maserati-specific motors—one driving the front axle and two powering the rear—are permanent-magnet synchronous units built by Marelli Motori. Each motor can spin up to 17,500 rpm and is capable of delivering 402 horsepower and 332 pound-feet of thrust. Currently, the maximum combined output is limited to just 818 horsepower. Limiting the motors from their true potential is the 83.0-kWh lithium-ion battery pack. Maserati baked more capability into the motors and inverters in preparation for the next advancement in battery technology, which is believed to be a few years away. The Folgore also shares the same overall structure—albeit reinforced to accommodate the additional mass of the battery—as the gasoline-fed model, but while other manufacturers install mattress-sized battery packs in the floor, Maserati takes a different approach. Occupying the center section, some of the “engine” bay, and a bit of real estate behind the rear seat is the dog-bone-shaped battery. Maserati admits that stuffing a taller, hefty brick of lithium down the center of the car raises the center of gravity relative to a vehicle with a flat battery pack, but the beauty of this design is that the floorpan remains low and has no effect on passenger space.Range, You Ask?Maserati engineered the Folgore to be a performance weapon, with the focus on range being ancillary. Though the official EPA ratings are still some time away, we estimate the Folgore should travel 240 miles on a charge. Its 800-volt architecture enables electrons to be replenished quickly on a DC fast-charger at a peak of 270 kW, and recharging from 20 to 80 percent should take 18 minutes, according to Maserati. For Level 2 AC recharging, the onboard charger will deliver up to 22.0 kW to the pack, meaning the Folgore can take full advantage of the most powerful at-home charging equipment.Behind the wheel in the richly appointed leather cabin, forward visibility is improved over the previous-generation GranTurismo courtesy of reshaped metal and slimmer A-pillars. That’s a good thing because the Folgore is capable of blurring the world ahead. No fewer than four drive modes are selectable by a steering-wheel-mounted knob. Max Range states the obvious, extracting every mile possible from the battery by dialing back power and limiting top speed to 81 mph. The default setting, GT, keeps the standard air springs and electronically controlled dampers relaxed and allows you to use up to 80 percent of the powertrain’s output. But the real Folgore experience begins with Sport mode, where full power is uncorked and the pumped-in sound is amplified. The synthesized audio track also can be turned off. Thrill-seekers should continue on to the Corsa setting. It dials back the traction- and stability-control parameters, lowers the air springs, and tightens the dampers. Additionally, the 12.2-inch digital instrument cluster displays the thermal state of the battery. Within the Corsa setting, and when the battery’s state of charge exceeds 80 percent, Max Boost is accessible through the familiar Uconnect-based center touchscreen. Max Boost preps the battery pack for maximum acceleration and releases all 818 horses. With launch control engaged, releasing the brake pedal shoves shoulder blades into the comfortable seatback with chiropractor-adjusting force. Maserati claims 60 mph arrives in 2.7 seconds. We believe it. Max Boost also unlocks three selectable torque-vectoring and traction-control settings. There’s also an Endurance mode within Corsa to maximize the battery pack for track use. Slowing things down a bit, the Folgore swiftly navigates the twisty hillside roads north of Rome. The steering is always on the lighter side of the spectrum, and cool January weather and winter tires prevented us from pressing the limits. There’s a fair amount of rattle from the multilink front and rear suspension, but admittedly, Maserati says it has a few months to fine-tune the ride quality. Stopping power comes from brakes shared with the gas-powered GranTurismo. Up front, six-piston calipers clamp 15.0-inch cross-drilled rotors, while four-pot calipers pinch the 13.8-inch cross-drilled rear rotors. The pedal is light on feel, and the added mass in the Folgore works the brakes hard. That’s a bit concerning, considering the Folgore’s top speed is a claimed 202 mph, making it one of the fastest EVs on the road. Overall, the GranTurismo Folgore is a hellacious coupe with ample space for four adults. And though it lacks the character of the brand’s internal-combustion engines, both past and present, it certainly doesn’t fall short on speed. We estimate the Folgore to start at $215,000 when it arrives this fall. Whether the upcharge over the gas-powered variants is worth it to the Maserati faithful remains to be seen. We think they won’t care. It’s all about being seen, not heard. SpecificationsSpecifications
    2024 Maserati GranTurismo FolgoreVehicle Type: front- and rear-motor, all-wheel-drive, 4-passenger, 2-door coupe
    PRICE (C/D EST)
    Base: $215,000
    POWERTRAIN
    Front Motor: permanent-magnet synchronous AC, 402 hp, 332 lb-ft Rear Motors: 2 permanent-magnet synchronous AC, 402 hp, 332 lb-ft (each) Combined Power: 818 hpCombined Torque: 995 lb-ftBattery Pack: liquid-cooled lithium-ion, 83.0 kWhOnboard Charger: 22.0 kWPeak DC Fast-Charge Rate: 270 kWTransmissions: direct-drive
    DIMENSIONS
    Wheelbase: 115.3 inLength: 195.2 inWidth: 77.0 inHeight: 53.3 inTrunk Volume: 10 ft3Curb Weight (C/D est): 5000 lb
    PERFORMANCE (C/D EST)
    60 mph: 2.7 sec100 mph: 6.6 sec1/4-Mile: 10.9 secTop Speed: 202 mph
    EPA FUEL ECONOMY (C/D EST)
    Combined/City/Highway: 100/110/90 MPGeRange: 240 mi More

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    From the Archive: 1982 Cadillac Cimarron Road Test

    From the August 1981 issue of Car and Driver.America, in all its years of absorbing fat-cat de Villes and Fleetwoods, has never before been confronted with a Cadillac anything like the new Cimar­ron. You can forget everything you know about the softly lined cruisers of the past—the Cimarron pays no hom­age to Cadillac tradition. The new Cim­arron is not the size of a battleship. It does not coddle you like a mother’s arms. In fact, your average Eldorado owner wouldn’t recognize it as a Cadillac if he backed into one.As you can well see, the Cimarron looks like anything except what it is—a Toyota, a BMW, or a Chevy maybe, but not a Cadillac. And in this case, appear­ances aren’t in the least deceiving. The 1982 Cimarron represents nothing less than an about-face in Cadillac market­ing philosophy—one of the boldest moves ever made by a car company.Cadillac, friends, is now in the small­-car business. Along with the standard array of decadent behemoths, Caddy dealers are now selling a car that’s bare­ly an inch longer than a Honda Accord four-door sedan—which is to say, very compact indeed. Cool 80s Cars and Best-Sellers From the PastBut the plot thickens. The only thing more surprising than the new Cadillac’s diminutive dimensions is its personality. The Cimarron’s standard gearbox, for instance, is a four-speed manual unit. The cleanly styled instrument cluster houses a full set of gauges, including a tachometer. The suspension is tuned for handling as much as for ride. And if we are to believe Cimarron advertising, which is targeted at the same people who buy BMWs, Audis, and Volvos, Cadillac thinks it’s building some kind of sports sedan. The next thing we know, Ronald Reagan will turn into a knee­-jerk liberal. The sudden upheaval in Cadillac­-think stems from two sources. Cadillac desperately needed a small car to stem the tide of buyers defecting to smaller, more fuel-efficient makes. The decision to try to build a driver’s car rather than a pint-sized Seville arose from a desire to capture the affluent, upwardly mobile buyers who had been shelling out for expensive, high-quality sedans like the Audi 4000 and the BMW 320i—a group Cadillac doubted it could ever lure into the fold with its lineup of plushmobiles. A design with the potential to meet these lofty marketing goals, Cadillac found, was already under development at GM under the code name “J-car.” (The J-cars, as you no doubt know, de­buted last spring as the Pontiac J2000 and Chevrolet Cavalier, GM’s smallest front-drive sedans to date.) On paper, the J-car’s transverse-engine, front­-drive, high-efficiency design was repre­sentative of the latest in small-car think­ing, and its 101.2-inch wheelbase and 173-inch length slotted it smack in the middle of the BMW 320i-Audi 4000-Honda Accord class.What was left for Cadillac to do was to hone the basic platform to world­-class status. Making a Bimmer-baiter out of what started life as a Chevrolet is no small feat, but it’s still within the realm of possibility. Sedan de Villes, af­ter all, look and feel quite a bit different from Impalas, but share numerous me­chanical pieces. Since Cadillac latched onto the proj­ect only a year before production­—which is well into the eleventh hour in the car business—the Cimarron shares a far greater than normal number of parts with its Pontiac and Chevrolet siblings. Truth be known, the designers and en­gineers had only enough time to re­arrange the front and rear sheetmetal, redo the interior trim, retune the sus­pension, and fiddle with the standard­-equipment list. If you look closely, you might notice that the Cimarron, which is available only as a four-door sedan, shares its roof, doors, fenders, and hood with the Cavalier.Though the Cimarron bears a close kinship to other J-cars, we can say that the revisions Cadillac has made were all aimed in precisely the right direction. In fact, considering the division that’s pro­ducing the Cimarron, it’s a revelation. The restyling Cadillac did, for in­stance, couldn’t have been more apro­pos. The Cimarron looks like the clean break with the past that it is. The typi­cal-for-Cadillac bow-shaped hood and massive grille have given way to a front-­end treatment that looks like that of an Impala (which itself started looking like a Cadillac a few years back). The tail is neat and simple. The standard tires are chunky blackwall Goodyear P195/70R­-13s mounted on 5.5-inch-wide alloy wheels—also standard. Chrome is used sparingly. And, wonder of wonders, there’s not even a stand-up hood orna­ment to spoil the effect.When you pull open a door you find more of the same inside. The interior styling is conservative to the point of being nondescript. All Cimarron seats are covered with handsome perforated leather. The door panels repeat the pleated theme with some of the world’s best vinyl. There are map pockets in the front doors and more map pockets be­hind the front seats—which recline, as do all J-car front seats.The dash is standard J-car fare, with the exception of a new flat-aluminum­-look facing. Full instrumentation is standard, including gauges for oil pres­sure, water temperature, fuel level, volt level, and a pair of large round dials for the tachometer and speedo. The skinny three-spoke steering wheel looks a bit dated now that the thick-grip look is in, but it is at least wrapped in leather. And there’s not a square inch of fake wood in sight. The interior designer gets a gold star for restraint. The Cimarron’s admission price is a hefty $12,131. But for that sum, you get a fully equipped car, which is in keeping with the basic J-car policy. Along with the leather interior, the standard-equip­ment list includes such things as power steering, power brakes, air condition­ing, a four-speaker AM/FM-stereo ra­dio, electric mirrors, a digital clock, grab handles above the doors, a rear-­seat center armrest, a center console with a coin tray, intermittent wipers, and lights for the trunk and the engine compartment. You can add more, of course, although many of the full-sized Caddy’s labor-savers—like the automat­ic headlight dimmer—aren’t available. We’re also happy to report that the Cimarron appears to be put together with more care than we’ve seen in most American cars until now. We managed to score a pair of early-production Cim­arrons for this test—numbers five and fifteen, to be exact. We found their paintwork good (unlike our photo car, a pre-production prototype), the fit of the doors snug, and the body panels and trim lined up just so. In the cabin, ev­erything was battened down tightly as well. The body structure was rock solid. The overall feeling around these parts is that the Cimarron doesn’t have quite the tight-fitting look of an Audi 4000, but it isn’t far off, either—and that’s saying something. When you’re keeping company with BMW and Audi, a high level of fit and finish is expected. So are first-class road manners, and Cadillac didn’t neglect its duties on that front either. The Cimarron’s suspension—which consists of MacPherson struts and an anti-roll bar up front, with a pair of trailing arms connected by a transverse member, coil springs, and an anti-sway bar bringing up the rear—benefits from exclusive calibrations aimed at optimiz­ing ride without hurting handling. To ease the Cimarron over bumps, the en­gineers specified the soft springs from the base-level Cavalier. Body roll is held in check with the thick anti-roll bars used on the Pontiac J2000 handling package, and Cadillac worked out its own special shock-absorber valving. The most important part of the package is a new set of rear-suspension trailing-­arm bushings designed to be soft in the fore-and-aft direction to soak up pave­ment imperfections, but stiff laterally to provide quick response in directional changes. Engineering talk is all well and good, but when it comes to drivers’ cars there’s only one acid test. So we round­ed up four of the Cimarron’s world-­class competitors—the Audi 4000 4E, the BMW 320i, the Honda Accord SE, and the Volvo GL—for a day-long drive-off to see just where it stands. In the past, Cadillacs have been engi­neered to float you along the boulevard as if it were paved with clouds. About two blocks is all it takes to see that the Cimarron is a complete departure from the easy riders of yore. For the first time in a Cadillac of recent vintage, you can actually feel there’s a road down there. In fact, the ride is actually quite firm, about like the BMW’s. On smooth roads and on the high­way, though, the Cimarron proved to be almost silky—and about the best of the group. At least part of this is acoustical. Thanks to the J-car’s inherently good noise isolation, you simply don’t hear very much road rumble or tire hum. Some credit also goes to the Goodyear radials, which are ground on tire-truing machines after they pop out of the molding ovens to ensure the best possi­ble ride. On the twists and turns of our coun­try-road test loop, the Cimarron showed it could cut and run almost as well as Europe’s best. In most situations the tires stay planted securely and allow you to make good use of the 0.73-g corner­ing potential—which is well into BMW territory. The steering is quick, and the tail tracks respectfully behind when you dive for an apex or whip around your favorite cloverleaf. About the only time the suspension falls down on the job is when the road gets rocky. Over badly broken macad­am, which the foreign competition shrugs off, the Cimarron’s front end gets jumpy—not badly so, mind you, but enough to keep the Cimarron from feeling as confidence-inspiring as, say, the Audi. This last point is indicative of what our comparo drive revealed about the Cimarron: It just doesn’t feel as good to drive as the cars it’s pitted against. The Cimarron’s power steering, for in­stance, feels numb when compared with the Volvo’s superb system. And all of the Cimarron’s pedals act just slightly out of sync. It’s much the same with the drive­train, which consists of the standard J-­car 1.8-liter, 85-hp four-cylinder engine mated to a four-speed manual transmission. (A three-speed automatic is optional.) The Volvo, Audi, and Honda four-cylinder powerplants whir like sew­ing-machine motors when you press them, but the Cimarron thrashes in the upper rev ranges—though it doesn’t as­sault your ears nearly as badly as the BMW. And though the Cadillac’s 13.7-second 0-to-60 time is a match for the Honda’s, and within a tick of the Au­di’s, the wide ratios in the gearbox keep the Cimarron feeling flatfooted. If the Cimarron isn’t exactly a BMW­-killer, it’s still solidly competitive else­where. For one thing, it’s very roomy for a car so small. GM has hollowed out an impressively large cabin, big enough to seat four adults comfortably. The seats, front and rear, are commendably supportive for long-distance touring (though the front buckets could use more lateral support). The Cimarron is a first-rate Interstate sled as well—as stable as an Amtrak liner and about the smoothest and quietest 80-mph cruiser in the group. Cadillac, we can tell you, is already well aware of the ground it has to make up. The engineer and the product plan­ner who shepherded the Cimarrons through our test had their notebooks open when we reported our findings, and they claim that the division will do everything it can to close the gap. Our sources report that a 2.0-liter fuel-in­jected four-cylinder engine and a five-­speed close-ratio manual transmission are already under development for the 1983 model year. With a little polishing here and there, the Cimarron could actually make it as a world-class small sedan. (Not even Audi gets everything right the first time around.) But even as is, the Cimarron is a pretty nice piece of work. And for a Cadillac—well, it’s just plain amazing.The Making of an UnCadillacIn introducing the bite-sized Cimarron, it’s safe to say that Cadillac has done the unexpected. Everybody knows that the name “Cadillac” has always stood for prairie schooners of prodigious dimen­sion. Even a small Cadillac could be noth­ing less than a two-tonner. So when the Cimarron turned out to be not just down­sized but compacted to the volume of one of the smallest Chevrolet models in histo­ry, that was really unexpected.Cadillac planners say they did the unex­pected on purpose because they carefully examined the car market two years ago and discovered it was doing the unexpect­ed. There was a “hot spot,” 30-to-40-year-olds making upward of $35,000 a year. The planners looked at the cars these people were buying. Right off, they saw that relatively expensive cars like the BMW 320i were being purchased by peo­ple younger and earning less than they had imagined. They also saw that as buy­ers in this group aged and grew more af­fluent, they tended to upgrade their pur­chases within the same brand. And finally, to their horror, they saw that people in this market segment were not buying Cadillacs. This was bad news indeed. Detroit had always told itself that the bulk of the im­ports was being bought by poor, young folks, and when they grew older and made more money they would buy Ameri­can. But now Detroit was finding that im­port buyers, as they make more money, buy more expensive imports. Today’s Cadillac buyers, who fall into the older group, would die off and not be replaced. Adios, Cadillac. To ensure its future, Cadillac had to get a toehold in that young, affluent hot spot of the market that’s buying BMWs, Audis, Saabs, Peugeots, Volvos, and the like. If it moved fast, it might also beat the Japanese. And if it made the right move, it might even sidetrack a few current im­port owners who were planning to buy more imports. But the only way the planners could see to accomplish all of this was to build an UnCadillac. Enter Leonard I. Wanetik, product planner. Wanetik, 34, is an Easterner, trained as a lawyer, bearded, Jewish, and given to wearing leather caps. In short, the sort of guy who wouldn’t have been allowed past the lobby in Detroit five years ago. Wanetik was put on the Cimar­ron project. It was as though Cadillac re­alized it was facing a market it didn’t understand, so it compensated by giving the job to a guy it didn’t understand either. But Wanetik understood UnCadillacs. He was a twenty-year subscriber to Car and Driver. He was a confessed foreign-car freak, having owned seven of them, rang­ing from a Sprite to a Saab. He had the habit bad. He was a resident of the hot spot. And he set about leading Cadillac to the promised land.The Cimarron could have been built on the X-car or any other GM platform, but it ended up a J-car, in part because the size would be unexpected. Also, the J-­car’s newness in the market would mean that buyers would have no preconceived notions about the Cimarron’s identity. Because Cadillac was a late entry into the J-car program, and because GM doesn’t allow the divisions too much orig­inality on a given platform anyway, the Cimarron would share all of its important hardware with the Chevrolet Cavalier and the Pontiac J2000. Cadillac had primarily visual details to work with, so Wanetik went to work on that front. The goal became “a car that a BMW owner or an Audi owner would not be unhappy with.” Everything had to be consistent within that theme. The ride-and-handling bogey was the 320i. The appearance bogey was also German—and definitely UnCadillac. Blackwall tires were made standard equipment. “We’re trying to tell people this is a different kind of car than Cadillac has made before. If they see whitewalls, they might not believe us.” The whole Cadillac hierarchy is now caught up in the UnCadillac theme, but not everyone knows how to act. When Ed Kennard, the general manager, speaks of the standard-equipment manual transmis­sion, he calls it a “synchromesh,” the term that was current when manuals were dropped from the lineup back in the dark ages of the Fifties. Nor does everyone know what all of this UnCadillac stuff re­ally means. Thus far, Wanetik has been acting as Cadillac’s native guide. For ex­ample, the Cimarron will not use the roof rack offered by the other divisions on their J-cars, but will instead have an op­tional deck-lid rack unique to Cadillac. There is general agreement that this is more “within the theme” than, say, a vi­nyl roof, but for the most part, Wanetik is being trusted on this point. He knows. He had one on his Sprite. —Patrick BedardSpecificationsSpecifications
    1982 Cadillac CimarronVehicle Type: front-engine, front-wheel-drive, 4-passenger, 4-door sedan
    PRICEBase/As Tested: $12,131/$12,789Options: power windows, $216; power seats, $183; power door locks, $142; tilt steering wheel, $88; deck-lid release, $29.
    ENGINEDOHC inline-4, iron block and headDisplacement: 112 in3, 1840 cm3Power: 85 hp @ 5100 rpmTorque: 100 lb-ft @ 2800 rpm 
    TRANSMISSION4-speed manual
    CHASSIS
    Suspension, F/R: struts/control armsBrakes, F/R: 9.7-in vented disc/7.9-in drumTires: Goodyear Polysteel RadialP195/70R-13
    DIMENSIONS
    Wheelbase: 101.2 inLength: 173.0 inWidth: 65.0 inHeight: 53.3 inPassenger Volume, F/R: 50/39 ft3Trunk Volume: 12 ft3Curb Weight: 2684 lb
    C/D TEST RESULTS
    60 mph: 13.7 sec1/4-Mile: 19.5 sec @ 70 mph90 mph: 52.0 secTop Gear, 30–50 mph: 17.2 secTop Gear, 50–70 mph: 21.7 secTop Speed: 91 mphBraking, 70–0 mph: 219 ftRoadholding, 282-ft Skidpad: 0.73 g  
    EPA FUEL ECONOMY
    Combined/City/Highway: 31/26/42 mpg 
    C/D TESTING EXPLAINED  More

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    Tested: 2023 Lucid Air Touring Hits the Sweet Spot

    Lucid’s Air Dream is no more, but our test team’s memories of its otherworldly power and range live on. Its dual-motor powertrain cranked out a reality-bending 1111 horsepower in Performance guise, while the range-oriented variant dialed that back to a mere 933 horsepower to be a certified 520-mile bladder killer.Impressive? Absolutely. But does anyone really require that much, especially when you consider the cost? For 2023, the top-trim 1050-hp Grand Touring Performance commands over $180,000, while the 516-mile range-specialist Grand Touring hovers just south of $140K. The bigger gotcha is an unwelcome side effect of the large battery—112 kWh for the Grand Touring, 118 kWh for the Performance variant—necessary to unlock all that power and range: It occupies the rear footwells, creating a knees-up seating position that’s exacerbated by extremely little toe room under the front seats. Legroom is unquestionably abundant, so it’s still roomy back there, but the seating posture is unusual.Marc Urbano|Car and DriverThe Touring, which at 10 paces looks identical to the higher-trim variants, deviates in one crucial way that reverberates up and down the spec sheet: Its underfloor battery consists of 18 modules instead of 22. That drops its capacity to 92.0 kWh, but the loss of those four modules gives back rear-seat footwell room and provides a considerably more luxurious experience for passengers. In fact, Lucid was able to flatten the Touring’s bottom cushion angle slightly because the rear seat no longer needs to support legs that jut up.More on the Lucid AirLess battery capacity does reduce power and range. While the Dream and the GT have both in abundance, the Touring’s range is still a healthy EPA-rated 425 miles with 19-inch all-season tires or 384 miles with our test car’s no-cost 20-inch summer rubber. The Touring also offers 620 horsepower and 885 pound-feet of grunt. Around town, you won’t miss the absent horses, because this is still a frisky powertrain. Surging from 30 to 50 mph, for example, takes just 1.8 seconds. Even if you floor it off the line, as we do in our track tests, the difference between 1111 and 620 horsepower is a scant 0.4 second to 60 mph, with the Touring notching a still-impressive 3.0 seconds. While the Touring can’t match the Dream’s 10.1-second, 142-mph quarter-mile, buyers certainly shouldn’t feel shortchanged by 11.0 seconds at 126 mph.HIGHS: Abundantly quick, impeccably smooth ride, better rear-passenger experience than longer-range models. The smaller battery helps shed 270 pounds, and the 5012-pound Touring indeed feels lighter on its feet in corners. Its lateral grip is a tick better at 0.93 g, while 70-mph panic stops are just four feet longer at 167 feet. Our Touring’s 20-inch Michelin Pilot Sport EV summer tires are fractionally more supple than the Dream’s 21-inch Pirellis, but otherwise the two cars’ dynamics mirror each other. On the open road, the Touring makes the miles disappear, as it is an extremely calm and capable cruiser. The ride is relaxed and smooth without a hint of float or wallow, and the taller sidewalls of its 20-inch performance rubber add an extra measure of rolling comfort.The dead-ahead sense you get from the steering is quite pronounced, and it inspires enough confidence that we felt more comfortable using the steer-it-yourself adaptive cruise setting on the interstate instead of the Highway Assist lane-centering function that’s part of the $10,000 DreamDrive Pro option. A driver-monitoring system is present, but Lucid is not yet using it to allow Super Cruise–style hands-free driving, so you’ll still get the usual warning to keep your hands on the wheel if they’re absent for 15 seconds.Marc Urbano|Car and DriverWhile the Touring’s rated range is quite good, we found the actual distance to be more speed dependent than we expected. Despite a stated range of 384 miles, our test car managed just 280 miles in our 75-mph highway test. Later, the car essentially matched its estimated range on a random drive that was highway-heavy but featured an average speed closer to 63 mph. All told, our Touring averaged 107 MPGe, which falls well short of its lofty 121 MPGe EPA combined rating but is still a good showing compared to other large luxury EVs. Perhaps our Touring test car’s most noteworthy new feature was related to charging, not range. Like with a Tesla Supercharger, plug-and-charge is now fully implemented here. Nothing more than plugging in was necessary to get going at Electrify America refill stops, with charge initiation and billing happening in the background using a preconfigured account that’s set up via the Lucid ownership portal. Those of you who have futzed around getting a fast-charge going at non-Tesla sites know this is a life-changing development.LOWS: Less expensive but still expensive, highway range drops off markedly, skip the $10K driver-assist pack.During our 75-mph range test, we had plenty of time to ponder a few quirks of the Lucid Air’s instrumentation and its control interfaces, which are quite eye-pleasing in terms of design and materials. The absence of Apple CarPlay and Android Auto reportedly will be rectified with a “coming soon” over-the-air update, but until then, your phone is suction-cupped to the windshield. The turn-signal stalk is quite short, so it’s easy to trigger the end-mounted wiper button when attempting to active the turn signals. The sweeping instrument panel and central tablet are gorgeous, but a lot of screen real estate is wasted. A large Air logo occupies a prominent spot to the right of the speedometer, with a rudimentary trip odometer on the left. Marc Urbano|Car and DriverFor all of that, the Air Touring carries a more palatable price of $109,050. That figure includes a conventional aluminum roof, which means buyers in the Sun Belt won’t need the $4500 glass canopy top. Our tester stickered for $127,550, which included the glass roof, a $4000 premium audio system, and that $10K DreamDrive Pro driver-assistance option we could happily do without. Of all the Air variants, the Touring strikes us as the sweet spot where price, performance, range, and passenger comfort overlap.SpecificationsSpecifications
    2023 Lucid Air TouringVehicle Type: front- and rear-motor, all-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 4-door sedan
    PRICE
    Base/As Tested: $109,050/$127,550 Options: Dream Drive Pro (highway assist, surround-view monitor, hardware for future semi-autonomous driving), $10,000; glass canopy roof, $4500; Surreal Sound Pro premium audio, $4000
    POWERTRAIN
    Front Motor: permanent-magnet synchronous ACRear Motor: permanent-magnet synchronous ACCombined Power: 620 hpCombined Torque: 885 lb-ftBattery Pack: liquid-cooled lithium-ion, 92.0 kWhOnboard Charger: 19.2 kWPeak DC Fast-Charge Rate: 250 kWTransmissions, F/R: direct-drive
    CHASSIS
    Suspension, F/R: multilink/multilinkBrakes, F/R: 15.0-in vented disc/14.8-in vented discTires: Michelin Pilot Sport EVF: 245/40ZR-20 99Y LM1R: 265/40ZR-20 104Y LM1
    DIMENSIONS
    Wheelbase: 116.5 inLength: 195.9 inWidth: 76.2Height: 55.4 inPassenger Volume, F/R: 61/46 ft3Trunk Volume, F/R: 10/22 ft3Curb Weight: 5012 lb
    C/D TEST RESULTS
    60 mph: 3.0 sec100 mph: 6.7 sec1/4-Mile: 11.0 sec @ 126 mph130 mph: 12.0 secResults above omit 1-ft rollout of 0.2 sec.Rolling Start, 5–60 mph: 3.5 secTop Gear, 30–50 mph: 1.8 secTop Gear, 50–70 mph: 2.6 secTop Speed (gov ltd): 140 mphBraking, 70–0 mph: 167 ftBraking, 100–0 mph: 332 ftRoadholding, 300-ft Skidpad: 0.93 g
    C/D FUEL ECONOMY AND CHARGING
    Observed: 107 MPGe75-mph Highway Range: 280 mi
    EPA FUEL ECONOMY
    Combined/City/Highway: 121/121/120 MPGeRange: 384 mi
    C/D TESTING EXPLAINED More

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    From the Archive: 1987 Lincoln Mark VII LSC Tested

    From the July 1987 issue of Car and Driver.Designer-bodied sports cars with enough power to light up a small town and more speed than the starship Enter­prise may be the flashiest things on four wheels, but the true heavy hitters of the automotive world are the more sedate lux­ury coupes. They serve their makers as corporate flagships, and they must serve their owners not only as multifariously tal­ented transportation machines but also as badges of wealth and good taste. The best of them combine the most advanced driv­ing technology, the most elegant styling, and the most extensive assortment of dec­adent creature comforts their builders can muster. Of course, luxury, styling, and outstanding driving qualities mean differ­ent things to different people. That’s why the luxury-coupe class, though relatively small, has room for cars as different as the Cadillac Eldorado and the BMW M6.Splitting the difference between the two extremes is the Lincoln Mark VII LSC. Introduced as a 1984 model, the Mark VII was a bold departure from what was probably the most overstated inter­pretation of the American luxury-coupe genre in recent history. The 1983 Lin­coln Continental Mark VI was little more than a glitzed-up, portholed variant of the already baroque Town Car. It was long on ostentation and cushy comfort but short on contemporary style and performance. The new Mark VII was instantly recog­nized as a breakthrough car for the Ford Motor Company. Even today, four years later, the Mark gives a good account of it­self. Built on a thoroughly revamped ver­sion of the old Fairmont platform, the Mark VII is reasonable in size, if a bit on the heavy side. Its styling artfully com­bines old-fashioned elegance with mod­em aerodynamic lines, in keeping with Ford’s commitment to functional design. More Historical Lincoln CoverageUnderneath the attractive skin, Ford’s port-fuel-injected 4.9-liter V-8 drives the Mark’s rear wheels through a four-speed automatic transmission. The suspension consists of struts up front and a live axle fixed by four trailing links in the rear. The chassis details are unremarkable except for the absence of conventional steel springs. In their place the Mark VII has computer-controlled, air-filled rubber bladders to support its loads and maintain a constant ride height. The system allows extremely soft spring rates without caus­ing the undercarriage to drag on the ground when the car is heavily loaded. It should also be noted that the 1985 Mark VII was the first American car with a mod­ern anti-lock braking system. The Mark VII is offered in two editions: the luxury-oriented Bill Blass Designer Series model and the performance-orient­ed LSC. The LSC is equipped with a stiffer suspension, grippier tires, sportier seats, analog rather than digital instruments, and a more powerful engine. Naturally, we’ve always preferred this model, and so has the public. Currently, the LSC outsells the Designer Series version by about four to one. Ford apparently wants to keep things that way. Both versions of the Mark have recently been upgraded, but the LSC is the more improved model. For 1987, both are propelled by the latest and greatest in­carnation of Ford’s 4.9-liter V-8, produc­ing 225 hp at 4000 rpm and 300 pound-­feet of torque at 3200. (Last year’s versions of the same engine yielded 200 hp in the LSC and 150 in the Designer Se­ries.) In addition, the LSC now rides on 225/60R-16 Goodyear Eagle GT+4 tires, mounted on restyled seven-inch-­wide wheels, and its suspension has been recalibrated to match. Other changes common to both Marks include a re-textured grille, a reworked sound-insu­lation package, and minor interior-trim revisions. The new engine certainly perks up the Mark’s performance. Although a bit slug­gish from rest, the LSC reaches 60 mph in only 8.0 seconds, and 100 mph in an im­pressive 22.0 seconds. In the process, it covers the standing quarter-mile in 16.1 seconds at 88 mph. The LSC is still no match for such gold-plated competitors as the Mercedes-Benz 560SEC and the BMW M6, but it’s actually quicker than a Porsche 944—not to mention its true rivals, like the Cadillac Eldorado, the Buick Riviera, and the Oldsmobile Toronado. Despite its impressive power, there are a few weak aspects in the LSC’s perfor­mance profile. The engine-control com­puter limits top speed to 120 mph, which Ford engineers feel is the maximum safe speed of the Eagle GT+4 tires in this ap­plication. (Higher-rated tires would solve this problem.) Moreover, reaching top speed requires some effort, because the four-speed automatic refuses to stay in top gear when the throttle is pressed to the floor. We admit that these limitations are largely academic on American roads, but they do undercut the LSC’s standing as an international-class luxury coupe. Larry Griffin|Car and DriverA third powertrain shortcoming may have been peculiar to our test car. Seem­ingly at random, our LSC’s driveline pro­duced annoying vibrations. They weren’t so strong that they threatened to shake the car apart—in fact, we wouldn’t even men­tion them if this were a review of a lesser car—but luxury coupes are supposed to have creamy-smooth drivetrains. A refined combination of ride and han­dling is also expected of high-dollar luxu­ry chariots, and in this regard, the LSC is generally satisfactory. It tracks well in a straight line and offers good on-center steering feel, and its cornering perfor­mance belies its 3834-pound weight. While no nimble sportster, the LSC re­sponds to the helm nicely and corners with agility and poise. When pushed to the limit, it understeers moderately and never threatens instability. Unfortunately, that limit is a lackluster 0.74 g. The original 1984 model managed 0.75 g on smaller wheels and tires. Perhaps the all-season Eagle GT+4s simply can’t match the grip of the previous Eagle GTs. In their favor, the slippery-road traction of the new tires is much more tenacious. Along with commendable handling, the LSC provides a remarkably absorbent ride under most conditions. Over bumps that run the width of the car (causing the wheel motions to be controlled more by the air springs than by the anti-roll bars), the LSC positively glides. If anything, the calibrations are too soft, for the car floats a bit at very high speeds. In some conditions, however, the sus­pension is unpleasantly stiff. The LSC suf­fers from a distinct lack of compliance over tiny bumps and pavement cracks. Over bumps that disturb only one side of the car (causing the wheel motions to be resisted by the anti-roll bars as well as by the air springs), the LSC is stiff enough to toss the passengers’ heads about. Undoubtedly, the mismatch of yin and yang in the LSC’s suspension is at least partly a result of Ford’s attempt to make the car appeal to both loyal Lincoln cus­tomers and the new breed of upwardly mobile, import-oriented buyers. Most of the resulting compromises are successful, but the suspension could profit from fur­ther refinement. The interior of the LSC is outfitted partly in the American luxury-car idiom, with a full complement of automatic head­light controls, trip computers, vanity mir­rors, and power assists. More European in origin are the LSC’s duster of mechanical analog instruments, highly supportive seats (with Mercedes-style power adjust­ments), and rather subdued interior styl­ing. The result is a cabin well suited to tra­ditional and modern buyers alike. The same is true of the LSC’s exterior styling. Although there is more chrome trim along the lower flanks than we like, the treatment doesn’t spoil the car’s basic lines. Even the showy grille and the vesti­gial spare-tire hump seem surprisingly appropriate. At the same time, these ele­ments are among the upmarket touches that catch the eyes of traditional buyers. The stylists in Dearborn who created the Mark VII did a masterly job of walking the tightrope between the two groups. Ford’s move toward a more interna­tional luxury coupe has paid off in strong sales for the Mark VII. Meanwhile, the lat­est editions of GM’s Eldorado, Toronado, and Riviera, after a dismal introductory year, are just starting to claw their way up the sales charts. The success of the Mark VII proves that well-heeled American cus­tomers are ready for luxury coupes designed with as much emphasis on perfor­mance as on comfort. For that reason, the LSC’s most serious competition comes from across the water. Its newest rivals are the Acura Legend Coupe, which also sells in the $25,000 bracket, and the Volvo 780, at about ten grand higher. More entries in the high-­profit-margin class are inevitable, so Dearborn should already be hard at work on the Mark VIII if it hopes to remain competitive in this market. As updated for 1987, though, the LSC is plenty good enough to hold its own for a few more years. CounterpointFord Motor is taking up where Avis left off: it’s number two and trying hard­er. In the LSC we have yet another Ford product that could have been recycled one more year without disastrous results—but the company felt com­pelled to bolt in the latest tweaks.Ford gets an A for effort but a B for execution. The LSC makes its domestic competition look lame, but there is also a world of imports in this price range that pull no punches. Cars such as the Saab 9000 Turbo, the Acura Legend Coupe, the Audi 5000 Turbo, and the BMW 325is are tempting indeed. The LSC’s bulk, its bunkerlike interi­or, and its suspension, calibrated more for touring than for hard-edged han­dling, hold it back. On the other hand, its power, smoothness, appointments, and all-around velvety feel are hard to fault. Like a number of other Ford prod­ucts, the LSC has the world-class com­petitors in sight. Before it can mix it up with the big boys, though, Ford will have to try even harder. —Rich Ceppos I applaud Ford’s decision to drop its beefy V-8 into the Mark VII LSC. Faster is better, so any time an automaker sees fit to pack more power under the hood of one of its products, it has improved that car in my book. Fleeter of foot, the Lincoln LSC is now a better car. But the Lincoln is still not ready to take on the best in its class. Its design is aging; for a big car, the LSC offers an unexpectedly narrow view out of its cockpit. The steering is sloppy and slow; the LSC doesn’t have the quick re­flexes one expects of a driver’s car. And despite the firmness of its suspension, the LSC rolls over and plays dead when it’s hurried through corners. In a world full of Acura Legend Coupes, Audi 5000s, and Volvo 780s, this lack of fine-tuning hurts. Ford de­serves plenty of credit for plumping up the LSC and heading it in the right di­rection; Lincoln devotees will no doubt be impressed with the car’s newfound muscle. Without the moves to comple­ment its power, though, the LSC still falls shy of the mark. —Arthur St. AntoineSuccessful go-getters are drawn to the LSC just as Lincoln prayed, and just as they are drawn to BMWs, Jaguars, and Mercedes-Benzes. Well, no, not just the same, actually: the LSC will never draw the same crowd drawn to the big-buck, big-sport imports. The problem lies more in the high rollers’ perception of the Lincoln’s American heritage than in perceptible problems under its skin, down in its oily, steely, gunmetal-gray guts. Nobody has a problem seeing and feeling that the Mark is far removed from its origins as a lowly Fairmont. Ford’s rehab therapy has worked a miracle akin to the second coming of Henry himself. In seeing Lincoln, of all once-isolated and isolation-oriented car companies, produce the athletic LSC, we have witnessed the once unthink­able. The Mark’s suspension remains too soft and its steering too rubbery, but only a little. In daily driving, the LSC is often nicer to live with than its grand op­ponents. The trouble is that they will eat it for breakfast on the open road, which is where successful go-getters get down to business. —Larry GriffinSpecificationsSpecifications
    1987 Lincoln Mark VII LSCVehicle Type: front-engine, rear-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 2-door sedan
    PRICE
    Base/As Tested: $25,540/$27,466Options: moonroof, $1319; Ford/JBL sounds system, $506; limited-slip differential, $101.
    ENGINEpushrod V-8, iron block and heads, port fuel injectionDisplacement: 302 in3, 4942 cm3Power: 225 hp @ 4000 rpmTorque: 300 lb-ft @ 3200 rpm 
    TRANSMISSION4-speed automatic
    CHASSIS
    Suspension, F/R: struts/live axleBrakes, F/R: 10.9-in vented disc/11.3-in vented discTires: Goodyear Eagle GT +4P225/60R-16
    DIMENSIONS
    Wheelbase: 108.5 inLength: 202.8 inWidth: 70.9 inHeight: 54.2 inPassenger Volume, F/R: 51/46 ft3Trunk Volume: 15 ft3Curb Weight: 3834 lb
    C/D TEST RESULTS
    60 mph: 8.0 sec1/4-Mile: 16.1 sec @ 88 mph100 mph: 22.0 secTop Gear, 30–50 mph: 4.3 secTop Gear, 50–70 mph: 5.4 secTop Speed: 120 mphBraking, 70–0 mph: 200 ftRoadholding, 300-ft Skidpad: 0.74 g 
    C/D FUEL ECONOMY
    Observed: 14 mpg 
    EPA FUEL ECONOMYCity/Highway: 17/24 mpg 
    C/D TESTING EXPLAINED More