Showing posts with label Driven. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Driven. Show all posts

Review: 2017 Nissan Titan Platinum Reserve – Superiority Required, Not Delivered

2017 Nissan Titan Platinum Reserve
At $67,595, the 2017 Nissan Titan Platinum Reserve is not the most expensive new pickup truck we've ever tested.

After consuming 18.5 litres of fuel for every 100 kilometres of driving, it wasn't the most inefficient pickup truck we've ever tested, either. 

It was the second least efficient pickup truck we've ever tested.

THE GOOD
+ Big league power

+ Great seats
+ Your friends don't have one
+ Huge rear seat space
+ Hey hey, column shifter
THE BAD
– Big league consumption
– Constant engine noise
– Small touchscreen
– Flinty ride quality
– Weighty steering
Back in the spring of 2014, we reviewed a Toyota Tundra that drank at a rate of 18.7 L/100km. 

This truck didn't consume that heavily. 

"Fine," you say, "it's a truck. Trucks are guzzlers. That's just the way it is." 

And that would have been a fair point in 2003, the last time Nissan introduced an all-new Titan. 

Back then, prior to George W. Bush's second electoral victory (or his first, depending how you counted the votes in 2000), the Titan 4x4 5.6L V8 was rated at a combined 16.8 L/100km, not quite as efficient as the F-150 4.6L V8 4x4 of the same age (15.6 L/100km) but more efficient than the 5.4L V8, which was rated at 18.8 L/100km. 

For the 2017 model year, however, hi-po Ford F-150s are rated at 12.1 L/100km, and we averaged 13.2 L/100km in an F-150 Platinum prior to the advent of a new F-150 10-speed automatic transmission. 

The Titan's combined fuel economy rating has likewise risen. But the 13.4 L/100km Natural Resources Canada rating bears no resemblance to the 18.5 L/100km rating we achieved. Perhaps it was an anomaly, an aberration caused by a number of short drives in cold weather and some snow-covered roads? 

Pehaps not. Before we spent a week with the 2017 Nissan Titan, CarDriven's Kevin Harrison suffered an 18.8 L/100km result

Fuel economy matters, even when fuel isn't at its most expensive, even among pickup trucks that are presumed guilty before proven innocent. Over the course of a 20,000- kilometre year, that F-150 Platinum would require $3036 in fuel; the Titan $4255, or $23 more per week. 

WHAT IS IT?
Nissan began building pickup trucks – little, itty-bitty pickup trucks – before time began. But Nissan's first foray into the traditionally Detroit domain of full-size pickup trucks didn't occur until 2003. 
2017 Nissan Titan Platinum Reserve Cayenne Red
Photo Credits: Timothy Cain ©www.GoodCarBadCar.net
The first-generation Nissan Titan followed the first Toyota Tundra, a successor to the too-small T100, by four years. Built in Mississippi, the Titan was largely ignored by the North American truck-buying public. 

2017 NISSAN TITAN PLATINUM RESERVE
Base Price: $46,445 *
As-Tested Price: $67,595 *
Colour: Cayenne Red
Assembly: Canton, Mississippi
Drive Type: four-wheel drive
Transmission: 7-speed automatic
Engine: 5.6L DOHC 32-valve V8
Horsepower: 390 @ 5200 rpm
Torque: 394 lb-ft @ 3400 rpm
Curb Weight: 5935 pounds
Length: 228.5 inches
Width: 80.7 inches
Height: 77.2 inches
Wheelbase: 139.8 inches
Tires: Hankook i-Pike RW11
Tire Size: 275/60R20
EPA City: 15 mpg
EPA Hwy: 21 mpg
NRCAN OEE City: 15.2 L/100km
NRCAN OEE Hwy: 11.1 L/100km
Observed: 12.7 mpg
Observed: 18.5 L/100km
* Canadian dollars, includes $1795
in fees.
Rumours suggesting the second-generation Titan would eventually become a twin of the Ram 1500 were eventually put to bed, and many years too late, Nissan finally introduced a semi-heavy-duty Titan, the XD, for the 2016 model year. This regular-duty 2017 Nissan Titan followed, a second-generation truck that will surely be Nissan's last unless significant inroads are made. 

Launched in Canada as a crew cab with standard four-wheel drive, a 7-speed automatic, and a 390-horsepower 5.6L V8, the 2017 Titan is available in five trim levels: S, SV, Pro-4X, SL, and Platinum Reserve. Titan pricing jumps from the $46,545 Titan S by $3500, $12,450, $17,400, and $21,150, respectively, taking us to this truck, the $67,595 2017 Nissan Titan Platinum Reserve. 

There are no options available on the Platinum Reserve, only accessories. To the SV, the SL adds automatic collision notification, 20-inch wheels, and leather seating, among other items. 

The Platinum Reserve one-ups the SV with cooled front seats, unique 20-inch wheels, an around view monitor, and enough Platinum Reserve badging for five Platinum Reserves.

HOW BIG IS IT?
Well, it's a full-size crew cab pickup truck. So it's pretty freaking large, eh.

Compared with the crew cab, short bed variant of the segment leader, Ford's F-150, the 2017 Titan is 3.4 inches shorter, bumper to bumper, but nearly an inch wider. Though it depends on trim levels and wheels, this Titan Platinum Reserve stands ever so slightly taller than the F-150 4x4 Platinum we tested in late 2015. The wheelbase of this truck, however, is 5.2 inches shorter than the Ford's. 

While Ford says that F-150 weighed 4890 pounds, Nissan claims a hefty 5935-pound curb weight for this Titan. 

Relative to its own truck family, the Titan Crew Cab is 9.1 inches longer than Nissan's longest Frontier, 7.9 inches wider, and 7.1 inches taller.
2017 Nissan Titan Platinum Reserve rear
DOES IT WORK?
Undeniably, the 2017 Nissan Titan is quick, capable, and comfortable. Yet there is a sense, a strong sense in some areas, that Nissan replaced its 13-year-old first-generation truck design, the 2004 Nissan Titan, with a 2017 model that would have been entirely current in 2013. 

The Titan's otherwise quiet cabin is forever interrupted by the sound of the rumbling 5.6L V8. Sounds fun? At first, yeah. But eventually, you just want the Titan to be as quiet as the Ram, Silverado, Sierra, and F-150. 

Meanwhile, when it comes to that V8, one must always be concerned that dipping into the power will cause fuel consumption to skyrocket even higher. Fortunately, the powertrain is smooth. The 7-speed never flubs a shift, selecting 4Hi goes off without a hitch, and power is accessible across the rev range. 


Less smooth are the Titan's on-road mannerisms. With 20-inch wheels, the ride becomes busy on uneven pavement. With excessively weighty steering and a burdensome curb weight, handling is predictably ponderous with no hint of nimbleness. Pushing the Titan harder doesn't cause the truck to shrink around you, as so many modern large vehicles do. Instead, the up and down suspension movements simply become more exaggerated.

The 2017 Nissan Titan Platinum Reserve drives like a pickup truck in a world where, increasingly, other pickup trucks do not.

Maybe that's not so bad. Maybe you want a pickup truck to feel like a truck. You wouldn't be the first.
2017 Nissan Titan Platinum Reserve crew cab
The Titan won't shortchange you when it comes to the crew cab's interior dimensions. Rear seat space is abundant – three adults will be happy to accept the accommodations. Up front, visibility could be better. The height of the dash, dip of the roof, and rise of the beltline hinders the outward view somewhat. 

There's still no denying the commanding view of the road and the commanding atmosphere of a truck that steers and handles and rides and sounds like a truck.

Other complaints and compliments: the small touchscreen is a very long reach from the superb driver's seat, and Nissan's infotainment unit doesn't hold a candle to Ram's UConnect. With no sunroof, let alone panoramic glass, the Platinum Reserve doesn't quite feel sufficiently platinumy

Nissan isn't embarrassed to install a traditional column shifter, thankfully freeing up space on the console for more storage. Nissan also wisely integrates a thoughtful bed management system and allows your previous drive's seat heating/cooling selection to remain as is.
2017 Nissan titan Platinum Reserve interior
IS ANYONE BUYING IT?
Sales are picking up, but relatively speaking, the Titan is an oft-rejected, oft-ignored pickup truck. With the regular-duty, non-XD Titan more readily available at the end of the year, fourth-quarter Titan volume in Canada jumped 61% to 1023 units. But keep in mind, Ford was selling 2500 F-Series pickups every week in December.

South of the border, U.S. Titan volume nearly quadrupled to 13,390 units in the final third of 2016. December sales, at 4396 units, even surged 32% past November's total. But again, even in December, the Nissan Titan owned just 2% of America's full-size pickup truck market.

The best-ever year of Canadian Titan sales was in 2012, when 3499 were sold. In the U.S., the Titan's best year was its second full year, 2005, when 86,945 were sold. If 2016's Q4 pace held, Nissan Canada would sell nearly 5300 Titans in 2017; Nissan USA would sell roughly 44,000.
2017 Nissan titan Platinum Reserve interior detail
SHOULD I BUY SOMETHING ELSE INSTEAD?
You almost certainly will.

42% of all Canadian full-size pickup truck buyers choose a Ford F-Series; another 54% choose a Ram, Sierra, or Silverado. In 2016, four times more buyers chose a Toyota Tundra than a Nissan Titan.

With the 3.5L EcoBoost twin-turbo V6 and a 10-speed automatic, the 2017 Ford F-150 SuperCrew 4x4 King Ranch is a $69,649 truck currently discounted to $65,899. 

HOW MUCH SHOULD I PAY?
Nissan doesn't offer the hugely broad pickup truck lineups witnessed at Ford, General Motors, and Ram, but that does not mean one size fits all. A Titan SV Crew Cab 4x4 with the massive $7650 Premium Package (proximity access, power rear window, power driver's seat, blind spot monitoring, and more) kicks the price up to $49,945. 

But that's currently discounted by $9500 for cash customers, $6500 for lease customers, and $2500 for finance customers. 
2017 Nissan Titan Platinum Reserve offroad
WHAT'S THE VERDICT?
Nissan's in a bind. The first Titan caught the attention of truck buyers because it was a new idea. But by the end of its tenure, the Titan was not sufficiently capable or amenable, it was well off the fuel efficiency pace, and already dominant pickup trucks were leaping forward and grabbing even greater market share.

As a result, Nissan needs the second-generation Titan to be distinctly superior to the established nameplates just to get attention. Merely matching the F-150 and Silverado and Ram in terms of towing capacity, payload, acceleration, interior volume, features, and driveability won't be enough.


Monthly & Yearly Nissan Titan Sales Figures
2016 Ford F-150 XLT EcoBoost 2.7L Driven Review
2015 GMC Sierra 1500 SLT 6.2L Driven Review
2015 Ram 1500 EcoDiesel Outdoorsman Driven Review
2014 Toyota Tundra 4x4 SR 5.7L Driven Review


Indeed, it isn't enough. Three years ago, maybe five? The Titan's V8 powerhouse, quiet and luxury-lined cabin, 1610-pound payload, and 9390-pound towing capacity would have impressed in a former day, but the top-tier competitors now do more. F-150s can tow up to 12,000 pounds, accept payloads twice as heavy as the Titan's, accelerate even more swiftly, and bathe occupants in even more luxury and refinement and technology, all while steering more accurately, handling more adroitly, and riding more comfortably.

The entire pickup truck segment is rapidly improving, and it's only that rapid rate of improvement that highlights the 2017 Nissan Titan's shortcomings. Outside of comparisons and back-to-back drives, the new Titan will definitely impress. It is, to be fair, entirely competitive, but not at a price point that lines the Nissan up directly against its Detroit competitors. 

The Titan is by no means bad. Its rivals are just too good.

Timothy Cain is the founder of GoodCarBadCar.net, which obsesses over the free and frequent publication of U.S. and Canadian auto sales figures. Follow on Twitter @goodcarbadcar and on Facebook. The Titan was supplied by Nissan Canada's press office.

2017 Infiniti QX30 AWD Review - Did Infiniti Build A Better Benz?

2017 Infiniti QX30 AWD Magnetic Red
Through the first 11 months of 2016, Canadians acquired 35% more subcompact luxury utility vehicles than in the same period one year earlier.

The 12,725 copies of the Audi Q3, BMW X1, Mercedes-Benz GLA, and Infiniti QX30 sold represented a five-times increase compared with the same period from just three years ago, when the BMW X1 was setting the stage for a larger German incursion that would eventually produce this British-built Japanese insurgent, as well.

THE GOOD
+ Punchy 2.0T

+ Attractive exterior
+ Decent ride quality
+ Impressive fuel economy
+ Infiniti improves 2.0T/DSG
THE BAD
– Interior mishmash
– Awful rear ingress
– Poor visibility
– Small cargo area
– Quite the price tag
Using Mercedes-Benz architecture and English workers, the 2017 Infiniti QX30 arrived with little fanfare from Sunderland in August. A relative handful have been sold in the intervening months, as Infiniti gradually ramps up supply and begins to more deliberately market the company's new entry-level model.

Most Canadian luxury SUV buyers don't opt for a vehicle this small. One size up, the Audi Q5 and Acura RDX – not eve including their many rivals – combine to easily outsell this subcompact sector. 

Yet tastes are changing, demand is shifting, and the market is moving away from conventional luxury cars, and cars in general, toward utility vehicles.

The Infiniti QX30 is no hardcore SUV. To many prospective buyers, however, the QX30 will appear to be more than just a car. Yet while others will make an even more delayed appearance at this particular party, Infiniti won't find it easy to make major inroads.

The three competitors that were already on stage are fielded by Canada's three highest-volume luxury brands. Collectively, they hold a tight grip. Does the QX30 have what it takes to overcome such formidable obstacles?

WHAT IS IT?
Well, that's obvious. It's a Mercedes-Benz GLA250.

Or is it?
2017 Infiniti QX30 AWD rear
2017 INFINITI QX30
Base Price: $37,985 *
As-Tested Price: $48,635 *
Colour: Magnetic Red
Assembly: Sunderland, England
Drive Type: all-wheel drive
Transmission: 7-speed dual-clutch automatic
Engine: 2.0L DOHC 16-valve I4 turbo
Horsepower: 208 @ 5500 rpm
Torque: 258 lb-ft @ 1200 rpm
Curb Weight: 3475 pounds
Length: 174.2 inches
Width: 71.5 inches
Height: 60.2 inches
Wheelbase: 106.3 inches
Tires: Michelin X-Ice
Tire Size: 235/50R18
Passenger Volume: 3058 litres
Cargo Volume: 543 litres
Max. Cargo Volume: 963 litres
EPA City: 21 mpg
EPA Hwy: 30 mpg
NRCAN OEE City: 10.6 L/100km
NRCAN OEE Hwy: 8.0 L/100km
Observed: 30.2 mpg
Observed: 7.8L/100km
* Canadian dollars, includes $1995 in fees.
Although Nissan grabbed the Mercedes A/B/CLA/GLA-Class architecture for the company's upmarket brand, Infiniti's Mercedes-Benz relation appears sufficiently differentiated thanks to a more curvaceous exterior and a mix of Benz and Nissan parts inside. 

The powertrain, a 2.0L turbocharged four-cylinder producing 208 horsepower hooked up to a seven-speed dual-cliutch automatic, is the same, but Infiniti tuned the QX30 for greater smoothness and less aggression. The suspension tuning is different, as well. But there's no mistaking the QX30 for a Nissan-developed car. This is a German-based, England-built Infiniti crossover.

Or is it a car? Not unlike the GLA on which it's based, Infiniti tries to play in two different schoolyards. The vehicle Infiniti delivered to GCBC Towers is the all-wheel-drive model, a QX30 AWD that's raised beyond the already slightly un-car-like front-wheel-drive QX30's elevated stature. The roof of the QX30 is an inch higher than a basic QX30; nearly two inches higher than the front-wheel-drive QX30 Sport's. 

While the basic QX30 has 6.8 inches of ground clearance and the QX30 has only 6.1, the Infiniti QX30 AWD has 8.0 inches of ground clearance, enough to make you feel like you're not in a conventional car.

QX30 pricing begins at $37,985. The front-wheel-drive Sport model requires a $10,500 leap. In the middle, the QX30 AWD is priced from $40,485. Throw in a $5000 Premium Package (Bose audio, navigation, rain-sensing wipers, panoramic roof, etc.) a $2500 Technology Package (blind spot monitoring and other safety gear, around view monitor, active front lighting, etc.), and $650 Magnetic Red paint and the grand total surges to $48,635. 

HOW BIG IS IT?
The 2017 Infiniti QX30 is essentially the size of a traditional compact hatchback such as the new Honda Civic Hatchback or the Mazda 3 Sport. Riding on a 106.3-inch wheelbase that mirrors those two cars, the QX30 is a few inches taller than the Civic, nealy four inches shorter bumper to bumper, and nearly an inch narrower. There's less rear seat space, however, and the Civic Hatchback provides 34% greater cargo capacity.

BMW's X1 is the top-selling vehicle in this subcompact luxury crossover class. The X1 is half an inch longer, a few inches taller, and virtually identically wide. Behind the rear seats, the X1 has 41% more space for stuff. 

Infiniti has four utility vehicles larger than the QX30. The QX50 is 12.6 inches longer than the QX30, the QX70 is 17.1 inches longer, the QX60 is 22.2 inches longer, and the QX80 is 34.7 inches longer. 
2017 Infiniti QX30 AWD Magnetic Re front
Photo Credits: Timothy Cain ©www.GoodCarBadCar.net
DOES IT WORK?
The 2.0L turbocharged four-cylinder certainly does. As in every application, this small Mercedes-Benz powerplant punches above its weight class, with a thumping 258 lb-ft of torque making its presence known just above idle. Infiniti seems to have reduced some of the seven-speed dual-clutch automatic's aggression, thereby smoothing launches and generally normalizing a gearbox that is sometimes an impediment. 

The powertrain still isn't perfect. Turbo lag is periodically evident, the Eco mode is always too eco-minded and the Sport setting is annoying when you don't want to hustle. 

Nevertheless, the engine's mannerisms suit the overall demeanor of the car. Complaints you may have read elsewhere regarding the QX30's poor ride quality certainly don't pertain to this QX30 AWD. Serene? We wouldn't go that far, but it lopes down an undulating road quite nicely, not crashing about like the CLA250 but rather taking the GLA's improved tolerance one step further. 

At least in isolation, lacking a back to back drive, the QX30 AWD comes across as the less sporting, more comfortable car. Becauise of lower ride height, different weight distribution, and different wheels, the two front-wheel-drive QX30s could present unique characteristics.


Not unique will be the interior designs of the different QX30s. Climate controls are positioned way too low, legions of buttons are scattered across the dash, the annoying console-mounted shifter (not the GLA's rinky-dink column shifter) isn't intuitive, the steering column's sole stalk is overburdened, rearward visibility is horrendous, and a surprisingly decent amount of rear seat foot and legroom is neutralized by limited headroom and difficult access. The cargo area bears no resemblance to the cargo area of a typical compact hatchback. These complaints belong to every QX30, regardless of trim or drivetrain.

But as the price climbs toward $50,000, issues that may otherwise be minor become glaring errors. There's no power liftgate, a bizarre omission in a vehicle at this price point. A $35,394 Hyundai Tucson has a power liftgate. 

Many automakers have also come to understand the need to warm hands that can't be gloved if a central control knob or touchscreen are to be operated. Yet in the midst of a Canadian winter, the $48,635 Infiniti QX50 AWD – indeed, even a QX50 Sport loaded up at $49,235 – offers no heated steering wheel. Of course a $20,995 Kia Rio has a heated steering wheel. 

There's also no keyless start in the Infiniti QX30, even a QX30 AWD luxxed up with $7500 in options. Like so many new cars, you don't need to pull the key out of your pocket to gain entry – proximity access takes care of that. But you'll need the key a minute later anyway. A $25,450 Honda Civic has pushbutton start to go with its proximity access.

IS ANYONE BUYING IT?
Keep in mind, it's still early days. In the U.S., QX30 sales began in August and rose to 723 units in October before falling back in November. 1519 were sold through the end of November. Mercedes-Benz sold 6819 GLAs in the last three months.

In Canada, the story is similar, albeit at a lower level. 123 QX30s were sold in October, the QX30's second full month. 351 were sold through the end of November, a period in which Mercedes-Benz Canada sold more than 1000 GLAs.

The GLA accounted for 4% of Infiniti's U.S. volume in November; 9% of Infiniti's volume in Canada.
SHOULD I BUY SOMETHING ELSE INSTEAD?
You've likely got your eye on the Mercedes-Benz GLA. With Premium and Premium Plus packages plus upgraded Harman/Kardon audio, navigation, a panoramic sunroof, and park assist, the GLA250 is priced at $48,555.

It's sensible to also consider the BMW X1. The Lexus NX is an odd-looking beast but handles well and offers more – relatively speaking – of an SUV feel. With the QX30 optioned up so heavily, consideration of the larger Audi Q5 would be wise at this price point. 


Monthly & Yearly Infiniti QX30 Sales Figures
2016 Audi Q3 Quattro Driven Review
2015 Mercedes-Benz GLA250 4Matic Driven Review
2017 Ford Escape Titanium Driven Review


Although it may not suit the premium badge sensibilities, a Ford Escape Titanium would offer superior driving dynamics, similar features, and more space for less money, or you could look at the Escape-related Lincoln MKC. 

If you want big power, the Infiniti QX50 isn't much more spacious than the QX30, and it also feels rather old, but it's a big league performer. The Volvo V60 Cross Country also deserves mention as a slightly high-riding wagon with relatively compact exterior dimensions.

HOW MUCH SHOULD I PAY?
If you want all-wheel drive, there aren't many ways you can configure a 2017 Infiniti QX30. Only one, Black Obsidian, of the nine available colours doesn't cost at least $650. 

There are then two available packages, the $5000 Premium and $2500 Technology, the latter of which requires the former. Want blind spot monitoring? You'll have to pay at least $47,985 for your QX30 AWD.

WHAT'S THE VERDICT?
For reasons more subjective than objective, the 2017 Infiniti QX30 AWD seems to be a better Mercedes-Benz GLA250 4Matic than the Mercedes itself. Some of the rough edges have been smoothed off, the styling is more eye-catching, the car looks and feels more premium. 

Even as an Infiniti, however, this subcompact luxury crossover remains a curious competitor in a curious segment, with limited utility, key features absent, and a price tag befitting a luxury crossover one rung up the ladder.

Timothy Cain is the founder of GoodCarBadCar.net, which obsesses over the free and frequent publication of U.S. and Canadian auto sales figures. Follow on Twitter @goodcarbadcar and on Facebook. The QX30 was supplied by Nissan Canada's press office.

2017 Volkswagen Golf Alltrack Review - Very Expensive Golfs Are Very Good, But Also Very Expensive

2017 Volkswagen Golf Alltrack red
How does one imbue the traditional station wagon, long since out of favour, with the qualities consumers associate with other vehicles that are increasingly deemed desirable?

THE GOOD
+ Torquey 1.8T

+ Quick and smooth shifting 
+ Excellent ride & handling
+ Way roomier than a Golf
+ Looks the part
THE BAD
– Dieselly start-up and idle
– Very, very expensive
– Not really jacked up
– Way smaller than Outback
– Electronic gremlins
Subaru answered this question 23 years ago. Volvo provided its response two decades ago. Audi, in the A6 Allroad, revelled in the allure of an adjustable air suspension just prior to the dawn of the new millennium. 

But with a lineup thin on utility vehicles, Volkswagen determined to use the company's Golf SportWagen as a launching pad into the SUV-ified wagon world two years after Subaru launched its fifth Outback. 

This is the 2017 Volkswagen Golf Alltrack. 

With merely 1.4 additional inches of ground clearance and overall height under five feet, it's obviously no rival for the Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Rubicon and Toyota 4Runner. 

Don't kid yourself: there's no body-on-frame construction; no Fox internal bypass shocks. The BF Goodrich Krawlers are still at the tire store. The aftermarket lift kit? Not yet ordered.

But past evidence suggests there is a market for such wagons. Should there be a market for this tall wagon?

WHAT IS IT?
Known in Volkswagen parlance as the Mk7, the current Golf is the seventh Golf in a line of Golfs that stretches back to 1974. In Canada, the Golf exists in three bodystyles: three-door hatchback (base Trendline only), five-door hatchback, and wagon. 

Sprung off the SportWagen is this Alltrack model, be-cladded and elevated by less than an inch. All-wheel drive is standard equipment on the Alltrack and now optional on the two lower trim levels of the SportWagen. 
2017 Volkswagen Golf Alltrack red
Photo Credits: Timothy Cain ©www.GoodCarBadCar.net
With the diesel emissions scandal removing TDI models from the lineup, the Golf is available with this car's 170-horsepower 1.8L turbo, a 2.0L turbo in the GTI, and a higher-strung 2.0L turbo in the Golf R. 

2017 VOLKSWAGEN GOLF ALLTRACK
Base Price: $37,020 *
As-Tested Price: $39,940 *
Colour: Tornado Red
Assembly: Puebla, Mexico
Drive Type: all-wheel drive
Transmission: 6-speed dual-clutch automatic
Engine: 1.8L DOHC 16-valve I4 turbo
Horsepower: 170 @ 4500 rpm
Torque: 199 lb-ft @ 1600 rpm
Curb Weight: 3422 pounds
Length: 180.2 inches
Width: 70.8 inches
Height: 59.7 inches
Wheelbase: 103.5 inches
Tires: Continental WinterContact
Tire Size: 225/45R18
Passenger Volume: 2670 litres
Cargo Volume: 861 litres
Max. Cargo Volume: 1883 litres
EPA City: 22 mpg
EPA Hwy: 30 mpg
NRCAN OEE City: 10.6 L/100km
NRCAN OEE Hwy: 9.0 L/100km
Observed: 31.0 mpg
Observed: 7.6 L/100km
* Canadian dollars, includes $1725
in fees.
Although Alltracks are available in SportWagen-aping S, SE, and SEL trim levels in the United States, Volkswagen Canada is simply positioning the Alltrack as the top-trim SportWagen, akin to the Highline model. 

The Alltrack sent to GCBC Towers from Volkswagen Canada for an extended stay added to its $37,020 base price one package priced at $1310 and another at $1610. The grand total: $39,940, or $1760 less than the Volkswagen Golf R. 

HOW BIG IS IT?
Bigger than the Golf you already know; substantially smaller than the Subaru Outback with which it shares a mission and is comparably priced.

Compared with a five-door Golf, the Alltrack adds 33% more cargo capacity behind the rear seats and 26% more with the seats folded thanks to an extra foot of overall length. Cabin dimensions are, predictably, virtually identical in every direction. 

However, with the Outback's 9.4 additional inches of length, the Subaru offers 11% more space for people, 17% more cargo capacity, and 10% more seats-folded capacity. For families, the 3.4 extra inches of Outback shoulder room across the rear seat and 2.5 extra inches of rear legroom will be difference makers, too. 

You pay a price for the Subaru's extra metal. Each of the four-cylinder Outback's horsepower must cart around 20.8 pounds of Outback in the top-spec model. Each of the Golf's 170 horses are tasked with hauling only 20.1 pounds. 

DOES IT WORK?
Scribble down all the possible criticisms you could possibly level at the 2017 Volkswagen Golf Alltrack, and our experience with the car's infotainment unit rises to the top of the list. 

Known as MIB II, this tech interface isn't the most advanced to begin with, though the option of plugging in for Android Auto or Apply CarPlay masks many of its limitations. But after a couple of days of normal operation at the beginning of its stay at GCBC Towers included a full day's use of the navigation system, freezes, shutdowns, and slow reboots eventually became the norm. Since visiting one dealer and chronicling this story on Twitter and on TTAC, we learned from another dealer visit after the car's stay with us that the navigation SD card appeared to be the key culprit. 

This is not confidence-inspiring stuff, especially given the degree to which actual Volkswagen quality sometimes stands in stark contrast to a Volkswagen's perceived quality. From the way the doors thunk to the nature of the materials inside, this $40,000 car feels better built than many $50,000 cars. 

But is it built better? Consumer Reports ranks Volkswagen 22nd out of 29 auto brands in reliability. 
2017 Volkswagen Golf Alltrack Tornado Red
Elsewhere in the interior, space is sufficient, albeit not plentiful. It's a wagon, sure, but it's a compact wagon. Cabin space is naturally Golf-like, which is to say not class-leading among compacts, let alone competitive with the similarly-priced Outback. And while there's a lot of space for stuff in the back, the ceiling is not terribly high and the floor not terribly low. A small family can go on vacation for a week, but they'll have to think about how they pack. 

If the five occupants are sized to fit in the Golf, they'll likely be a happy bunch. The Alltrack is equipped with a panoramic sunroof, an impressive Fender-branded audio system, nicely firm seats. Like all Golfs, it's quiet. It never rides harshly; no pothole impact is damaging. 


For the driver, more specifically, the Alltrack is every inch a Golf. There's no sensation of elevation, for instance, which may disappoint the high-riding Outback driver. But it pays dividends in the handling department. As a rule, lower cars cope with cornering better, and they can maximize their handling potential without sacrificing ride quality. 

The Golf Alltrack turns in quickly, grips tightly, corners relatively flat, and pulls out of the corner with all 199 lb-ft of torque presenting like 240 lb-ft. The Golf Alltrack is by no means a slow car, and the quick and smooth-shifting dual-clutch six-speed automatic exaggerates the 1.8T's power.

With an extensive amount of slow-speed highway driving caused by very wintry conditions, the plentiful power wasn't matched by plentiful fuel consumption. We averaged 7.6 L/100km with the 2017 Golf Alltrack over the course of 12 days with the Volkswagen. 

IS ANYONE BUYING IT?
Volkswagen Canada's sales reports don't isolate the Alltrack portion of total Golf sales. South of the border, 1616 copies of the Golf Alltrack were sold between September and November. Applhing November's Volkswagen USA performance – 906 total Alltrack sales, or 14% of total Golf sales – to Volkswagen Canada's November results would produce 207 November Alltrack sales north of the border, with no promise of accuracy. 
2017 Volkswagen Golf Alltrack interior
SHOULD I BUY SOMETHING ELSE INSTEAD?
Subaru's Outback is the obvious alternative, of that there can be no doubt. Outbacks top out right around $43,000, but that price includes a six-cylinder powerplant. With more space and features (but less straight-line performance and less dynamic appeal), the four-cylinder Outback reaches just above $40,000, but starts right around $30,000. 

The Volkswagen faithful may wish to wait and see what Volkswagen has in store at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit next month. A three-row Tiguan could narrow the Alltrack's appeal. 


Monthly & Yearly U.S. Volkswagen Golf Alltrack Sales Figures
2015 Volkswagen Golf Sportwagon TDI Highline Driven Review
2015 Subaru Outback 2.5i Touring Driven Review
2016 Volkswagen Golf R Driven Review


A basic Volvo V60 doesn't cost much more than this Golf Alltrack, there'll soon be a new version of the Subaru Crosstrek based on the latest Impreza, and you might want to look at the most nimble compact crossovers, as well: Mazda CX-5, Ford Escape, and Subaru Forester.

Don't forget Volkswagen has also made all-wheel drive available in the regular Golf Sportwagen for a $1500 premium in entry-level mid-grade Comfortline trim or Highline guise.

HOW MUCH SHOULD I PAY?
One way or another, you'll have to pay a lot.

In Canada, your options for Alltrack pricing are few, at least for now. You must take the dual-clutch automatic and the equivalent of the regular Golf SportWagen's top-tier Highline trim level. 

You can then choose a $1310 Driver Assistance Package (adaptive cruise, lane keeping assist, emergency braking, park assist) and/or a $1610 Light and Sound Package (LEDs, dynamic cornering lights, auto high beams, and Fender audio). 
2017 Volkswagen Golf Alltrack Atlantic Ocean
WHAT'S THE VERDICT?
Handsome styling, a sufficiently spacious interior, all-weather traction, abundant torque, decent fuel economy, luxurious content levels, exceptional ride and handling balance: these are the kinds of traits that can foster long-lasting relationships between a Volkswagen and its owner.

Yet a price that pegs the larger and more luxuriously equipped Subaru Outback as a prime competitor does the 2017 Volkswagen Golf Alltrack no favours. Indeed, the inevitable Alltrack/Outback comparison is particularly noteworthy since the 2016 Outback 2.5i Limited Tech in our family has been absolutely reliable for more than one year while the Golf Alltrack in our care last week suffered from meaningful maladies. 

This is a problem for a brand that saw its sales crumble in 2016 precisely because cars weren't operating the way they were supposed to.

Assume reliability and remove the prerequisite for Outback-like space, however, and the scales tilt very obviously in the Golf Alltrack's direction. The wagon's extra length and the weight of all-wheel drive don't detract from the Golf's distinctly superior on-road behaviour. 

At its core, the 2017 Volkswagen Golf Alltrack is the Subaru Outback for the keen driver. 

Timothy Cain is the founder of GoodCarBadCar.net, which obsesses over the free and frequent publication of U.S. and Canadian auto sales figures. Follow on Twitter @goodcarbadcar and on Facebook. The Golf was supplied by Volkswagen Canada's press office.

2017 Acura MDX Elite Review - It's Acura's Most Important Product, And Will Continue To Be

2017 Acura MDX Elite black front
All too often, vehicles visit GoodCarBadCar at the wrong time. 

THE GOOD
+ Lots of high-rev power

+ Looks better than last year
+ 9-spd usually works well
+ Surprisingly nimble
+ Relatively affordable
THE BAD
– Not as quiet as you'd expect
– Unfortunate infotainment
– 9-spd doesn't always behave
– Ride can be too firm
– Snug third row
Pickup trucks arrive the week after we complete basement renovations. 

Performance-tired sports cars land just as we get a late spring snowfall. 

Fuel-sipping hybrids remain parked in my driveway during a particularly busy week, the week before we expect to do a lot of driving. 

But sometimes the PR departments and the weather and our needs align. A new vehicle arrives at GCBC Towers just in time to be put perfectly to use, to be tested just as it ought to be tested. 

One such occasion was this past summer when a fourth-generation 2016 Mazda MX-5 Miata was dropped off at the beginning of a week-long stretch of sunshine, a week during which in-laws had rented a cottage 20 kilometres down a coastal route. 

It was perfection.

This time, the refreshed 2017 Acura MDX Elite was ready to hit the ground running. We'd recently brought our second child home from the hospital, we had places to be, and the grandparents were visiting from Prince Edward Island.

Could the MDX cope?

WHAT IS IT?
Acura began building the MDX in 2000, neither starting the luxury crossover trend nor arriving late to the party. A second-generation MDX arrived for the 2007 model year. Acura then replaced that MDX with a new model for model year 2014. We spent two weeks with a 2014 Acura MDX in the summer of 2013. 

For 2016, Acura replaced the MDX's six-speed automatic with a nine-speed unit from the Honda Pilot. For 2017, Acura has updated the styling, emphasized safety features, and determined to deliver a hybrid model.
2017 Acura MDX black rear
2017 ACURA MDX ELITE
Base Price: $55,835 *
As-Tested Price: $67,935 *
Colour: Crystal Black
Assembly: Lincoln, Alabama
Drive Type: all-wheel drive
Transmission: 9-speed automatic
Engine: 3.5L SOHC 24-valve V6
Horsepower: 290 @ 6200 rpm
Torque: 267 lb-ft @ 4700 rpm
Curb Weight: 4277 pounds
Length: 196.2 inches
Width: 77.2 inches
Height: 67.4 inches
Wheelbase: 111.0 inches
Tires: Continental CrossContact
LX Sport

Tire Size: 245/50R20
Passenger Volume: 3758 litres
Cargo Volume: 447 litres
C/V Behind 2nd Row: 1230 litres
Max. Cargo Volume: 2575 litres
EPA City: 19 mpg
EPA Hwy: 26 mpg
NRCAN OEE City: 12.2 L/100km
NRCAN OEE Hwy: 9.0 L/100km
Observed: 15.7 mpg
Observed: 15.0 L/100km
* Canadian dollars, includes $2145
in fees.
The 2017 Acura MDX that Honda Canada delivered to our driveway in mid-December was a top-trim Elite model. 

The basic $55,835 MDX makes way for a $59,335 MDX Navi, then a $62,335 MDX Tech, and finally this $67,935 MDX Elite, which can also be had with a two-seat second row instead of the 60/40 bench. All four of these MDXs are equipped with the same 290-horsepower 3.5L V6 and all-wheel drive. 

In the U.S., front-wheel drive is standard; all-wheel drive is a $2,000 option. (Note: the author's U.S.-centric review of this very MDX was already published on TTAC.)

HOW BIG IS IT?
Compare the MDX to two key alternatives to get a better sense of its size: GCBC's favourite luxury three-row, the Volvo XC90, and the MDX's smaller brother, the Acura RDX. 

The MDX is about an inch longer, two inches narrower, and two inches lower than the XC90, but Acura claims 28% more passenger volume (really?), an identical amount of cargo volume behind the third row, and 4% more capacity behind the second row. 

Relative to the two-row RDX, the MDX stands an inch taller, reaches nearly four inches farther across, and is nearly a foot longer, bumper to bumper. Not surprisingly, cargo volume behind the second row is 66% greater in the MDX. 

DOES IT WORK?
Picture this. You spend a Saturday morning test driving luxury utility vehicles in the city. Unless you find some space, the rather powerful Acura MDX feels comparatively underpowered. So many competitors are artificially aspirated, but the MDX has no turbochargers or superchargers. In order to observe the MDX's thrust, you must wind it up, rev it out, plant the throttle. This isn't an always-on torque monster, it's a smooth-revving V6 with a pleasant high-rev growl. (Admittedly, for a luxury crossover, too much engine noise makes its way into the cabin.) 

Revs are fun, but revs are much more fun in an Acura Integra GS-R than in an Acura MDX, the kind of vehicle where you want a slug of torque just off idle. The transmission plays a role here, too. The ZF nine-speed performs admirably when you're a demanding driver, hustling the MDX with the throttle ever closer to the carpet. But just as the 3.5L V6 lacks a happy medium, the nine-speed likewise does not know how to cooperate when you just want some power delivery. Shifts lag, a necessary two-gear kickdown takes forever, and your request for 40-60% power results in the receipt of 20% power. 

This is the nature of big, naturally-aspirated powerplants and multi-gear transmissions. There's power. But you need to work for it. The sort of instant-on torque to which we've become accustomed is easy; the MDX's rev-happy ponies are periodically more fun. 
2017 Acura MDX black profile
Photo Credits: Timothy Cain ©www.GoodCarBadCar.net
That Acura would stick with a tried and true MDX powerplant mirrors Acura's approach to the MDX's infotainment unit. As a Honda Odyssey owner, I've learned to tolerate this bizarre layout that Honda is now forsaking. But it's distinctly worse in the MDX, where there's no fan speed control or heated seat controls outside the touchscreen. The upper screen is operated by controls positioned below the lower screen. The whole system is slow, multi-layered, and way behind the times. 

Combine this old-tech approach with wind, engine, and road noise that's marginally too high for a $68,000 vehicle, lane keeping assist that doesn't do much keeping, rain-sensing wipers that always sense, a rear cross traffic monitor that's always too suspicious, a blind-spot monitoring system that 's way too easily confused by cement barriers, a shifter that tries to be futuristic but ends up being cumbersome, and a fuzzy surround view camera and the MDX, well, feels kind of old. 

The MDX also drank like an old, drunken sailor. The excuses are reasonable: we often had six passengers aboard, temperatures were frigid, remote starts were frequent, we rarely left urban areas. But at 15 L/100km, this was the worst fuel economy we witnessed in any vehicle all year.
2017 Acura MDX Elite interior
For the prospective MDX buyer who values the surprisingly athletic chassis and firm but relatively compliant ride (especially without these 20-inch wheels), who doesn't care for the image a BMW or Mercedes-Benz sends to his neighbours, who enjoys driving enough that the rev-hungry nature of the V6 is deemed desirable, the effective use of space may be enough to cancel out the dreadful infotainment cluster and the insufficient noise reductions. 

One-touch access shoves the second row seats forward. There are no power-folding mechanisms, but there's no need. We had a front-facing three-year-old and his grandmother in the third row, a rear-facing two-month-old and his grandfather in the second row, and GCBC's operators in the front row all in sufficient comfort. 

A minivan? Er, no. It's most definitely not. But with six or seven aboard there's still space for a load of groceries behind the third row and enough legroom for all. The same simply can't be said for many of the MDX's rivals, which officially list seven-seat capacity but can't handle any accompanying cargo and likely can't take seven real humans, either.


IS ANYONE BUYING IT?
Among premium-branded three-row utility vehicles, only the BMW X5 sells more often in Canada than the Acura MDX. Canadian sales of the MDX fell 5% through the first 11 months of 2016 after falling to a three-year low in 2015.

South of the border, U.S. sales of the MDX are also down 5% this year but have been ramping up of late, rising in each of the last four months. Among premium-badged nameplates, no three-row SUV/crossover outsells the MDX in America.

SHOULD I BUY SOMETHING ELSE INSTEAD?
Let's assume you want three rows, proper power, and a premium badge. The BMW X5, Audi Q7, Infiniti QX60, Land Rover Range Rover Sport, and Volvo XC90 are top contenders outside of the body-on-frame sphere. Even a basic X5 optioned up to mirror the MDX would cost more than $80,000. A mid-grade Q7 Progressiv with the 3.0L engine and equipment levels similar to this MDX will cost in excess of $75,000. 


Monthly & Yearly Acura MDX Sales Figures
2016 Volvo XC90 T6 Inscription Driven Review
2015 Acura RLX Sport Hybrid Driven Review
2016 Cadillac Escalade Platinum Driven Review


The Infiniti QX60 is much more affordable, but the powertrain – a down-on-power V6 married to a CVT – removes all joy from the proceedings. The Land Rover Range Rover Sport's available third row is tiny. 

The Volvo XC90, likewise, isn't vast inside, but the XC90 provides a decidedly premium experience and is sufficiently affordable.
2017 Acura MDX Elite interior detail
HOW MUCH SHOULD I PAY?
With only five MDX variants – the fifth merely being a six-seat version of our Elite tester – your specification choices are typically Honda-limited. Second from the top, the 2017 Acura MDX Tech likely represents the best value. 

For a $6500 leap beyond the basic model and a $3000 move up from the MDX Navi, the Tech includes perforated leather, rear seat entertainment, heated second-row seats, upgraded audio, power-folding mirrors, and rear sunshades.

At $62,335, the MDX Tech is $5600 less than this MDX Elite.

WHAT'S THE VERDICT?
The Acura MDX is justifiably popular. Though feeling aged in a segment where second iterations of the Audi Q7 and Volvo XC90 feel markedly more modern, the MDX continues to play its premium value card.

Of course, if value is the main concern, you can get more vehicle for the money in a $53,115 Honda Pilot Touring. 

But that semi-premium Acura badge hold sway. Combine the 2017 Acura MDX's upmarket pretensions with a pleasant ride and handling balance, plenty of naturally aspirated power, room for a family, and features galore. The result: a particularly appealing crossover in the light of its competitors' price points. 

Priced alongside an Audi Q7, the MDX's lack of occasion would be unfortunate. But with significant savings, it's not surprising to see that 500 Canadians drive home in a new Acura MDX every month. 

Timothy Cain is the founder of GoodCarBadCar.net, which obsesses over the free and frequent publication of U.S. and Canadian auto sales figures. Follow on Twitter @goodcarbadcar and on Facebook. The MDX was supplied by Honda Canada's press office.

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