Sunday, November 10, 2013

2010 Chevrolet Traverse LS: another classic review from The Car Exam





The 2010 Chevrolet Traverse LS: another classic review from The Car Exam

Good Grades: Nice Exterior Styling, comfortable front seats, decent front and rear visibility, good instrumentation on the dash, lots of cargo room, sliding second row seats, fuel economy okay for a large, heavy crossover (17 mpg city, 24 mpg highway), the steering feel is a bit over-boosted but acceptable.


Bad grades: The six-speed automatic transmission seems to hunt at times, body roll, this is a very heavy crossover—its base curb weight is 5066 pounds—Yikes!—and the brakes work hard to stop it. The 281 horsepower, 3.6 liter V6 pulls adequately, but feels taxed pulling 2 ½ tons-plus around. Interior plastics on the dash are satisfactory, but could be better on the doors. I didn’t like the cloth materials on the seat—a bit on the rough side. While the second row seats do slide forward, access to the third-row rear seats still feels awkward. Also, the third-row rear seats are too tight and uncomfortable for adults.



Final Grade: This crossover has its shortcomings, but it still comes off as a likable vehicle. Put it on a diet, give it some more horsepower, get rid of the hapless third-row seats, and give it some better interior materials (the seats, especially), and it will be much improved.

The Car Exam Grade: B/B-

Base MSRP: $29,999 (with $775 Destination Charges included)

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Ford Taurus Limited, 2010: another classic review from The Car Exam







 Ford Taurus Limited, 2010: another classic review from The Car Exam




Good Grades: Solid build quality, nice interior ergonomics and quality,supportive and comfy seats, good exterior styling--in short a lot of the SHO's good attributes.

Bad Grades: The base 3.6 liter, 263 horsepower V6 struggles to pull the 4,000 pound Taurus. You really miss the twin-turbocharged 365 horsepower V6 in the SHO--and it shows (pun intended)! My test car missed some of the goodies found on the SHO (navigation, all-wheel drive, etc.), and it shares a flaw with the SHO (short windows all around--which means a big blind spot in the rear.

Final Grade: The Taurus Limited is a good car, but it feels underpowered--especially after you drive the Taurus SHO. If you can afford to spend the extra dollars (and driving performance matters), do go for the SHO.

The Car Exam Grade: B