• Tag Archives Pickup Trucks
  • Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 77; Creating Car Colors, 2022 Hyundai Santa Cruz

    Creating Car Colors

    Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

    Whether you drive a car, need a car, or just occasionally bum a ride with friends, you’ve come to the right place. Join the editors of Consumer Guide Automotive as they break down everything that’s going on in the auto world. New-car reviews, shopping tips, driving green, electric cars, classic cars, and plenty of great guests. This is the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast.

    Episode: 77

    Broadcast date: April 19, 2021

    Guest: La Shirl Turner

    Creating Car Colors, 2022 Hyundai Santa Cruz

    Host Tom Appel and co-hosts Jill Ciminillo and Damon Bell kick off the show by discussing the recently unveiled 2022 Hyundai Santa Cruz–a genre-bending compact SUV/pickup “Sport Adventure Vehicle” that is slated to go on sale this summer. La Shirl Turner, Director of the Advanced Color and Materials Design Studio at Stellantis, joins us to discuss how she and her team develop paint colors and interior trim for Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, and Ram vehicles. Damon has a Mopar car-color quiz for Tom and Jill, and Tom runs down the latest articles on the Consumer Guide Daily Drive blog, including test-drive reviews of the 2021 GMC Yukon AT4 and Nissan Leaf SL Plus.

    The Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast is broadcast every Sunday on Chicago’s WCPT AM 820 at 1:00 PM CST.

    Discussed this week:

    First Look: 2022 Hyundai Santa Cruz

    Consumer Guide color fun

    Quick Spin: 2021 GMC Yukon AT4

    Test Drive: 2021 Nissan Leaf SL Plus



  • Test Drive: 2021 Ford F-150 PowerBoost Hybrid

    2021 Ford F-150 PowerBoost Hybrid

    2021 Ford F-150 XLT PowerBoost Hybrid in Velocity Blue

    2015 Audi Q52021 Ford F-150 XLT 4×4 PowerBoost

    Class: Large Pickup Truck

    Miles Driven: 211.7

    Fuel Used: 11.2 gallons

    Real-world fuel economy: 18.9 mpg

    Driving mix: 70% city, 20% highway

    EPA-estimated fuel economy: 24/24/24 (city/highway/combined)

    Fuel type: Regular gas

    CG Report Card
    Room and Comfort A
    Power and Performance B+
    Fit and Finish B
    Fuel Economy B+
    Value A-
    Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
    Big & Tall Comfort
    Big Guy A
    Tall Guy A
    Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
    Drivetrain
    Engine Specs 430-hp 3.5L
    Engine Type V6 hybrid
    Transmission 10-speed automatic
    Drive Wheels 4WD

    Base price: $43,805 (not including $1695 destination charge)

    Options on test car: Equipment Group 302A ($5730), 3.5-liter PowerBoost full hybrid powertrain ($4495), 6-foot extended accent running boards ($225), Ford Co-Pilot360 2.0 ($655), twin-panel moonroof ($1495), power-sliding rear window ($350), all-weather rubber and carpet mats ($200), Pro Power OnBoard generator ($750), Interior Work Surface ($165), Trailer Tow Package ($1090), Boxlink ($80), Bang and Olufsen Sound System ($610), partitioned lockable storage ($215), tailgate step ($430), 20-inch 6-spoke dark-alloy wheels ($1395), 360-Degree Camera Package ($796), XLT Sport Appearance Package ($300), wheel-well liner ($180), spray-in bedliner ($595)

    Price as tested: $65,256

    Quick Hits

    The great: Outstanding range of options and innovative new features; high-tech infotainment system; unmatched capability from onboard power generator

    The good: Spacious interior; composed road manners

    The not so good: Steep option prices drive up the bottom line; doesn’t ride quite as smoothly as Ram 1500 rivals; observed fuel economy fell short of EPA numbers during our cold-weather test

    More F-150 price and availability information

    John Biel

    If you’ve seen the television advertising for the redesigned 2021 Ford F-150, you know it is capable of doing one thing no other vehicle ever mentioned on this blog site could do: help build its own garage.

    This is the F-150 with the new hybrid PowerBoost V6 and Pro Power Onboard mobile-generator functionality that can operate power tools—even arc welders, Ford claims. The 2021 F-150 kicks off generation 14 of this solidly popular half-ton pickup. Though every body panel is new, styling is a close-to-the-vest evolution of the design that bowed for 2015 with much-discussed (and debated) aluminum body panels. While the new truck retains aluminum-alloy construction, it rides on an all-new high-strength-steel frame.

    2021 Ford F-150 PowerBoost Hybrid

    The Ford F-150 is redesigned for 2021. Overall dimensions and passenger/pickup-bed capacities stay about the same as the previous-gen model, but the body panels are all-new and a hybrid powertrain is available for the first time.

    Consumer Guide’s XLT test truck was plucked from a lower branch of the F-150 family tree than media-fleet trucks usually occupy—of the six trim levels available, only the XL is more basic. Still, bestowed with a crew-cab body, it was eligible to be ordered with the PowerBoost engine. The powerplant is available in any F-150 with the full four-door cab, at prices that vary with trim level. In this case, it added $4495 to the $45,500 starting price (with delivery) of our 4-wheel-drive Velocity Blue test truck.

    5 Cool Things About the Toyota Tundra

    2021 Ford F-150 PowerBoost Hybrid

    The new dashboard is logically arranged, and most controls are easy to use. The lengthy list of high-tech available features includes a full-digital gauge cluster, Active Drive Assist hands-free lane-centering adaptive cruise control system, Active Park Assist 2.0 self-parking system, and over-the-air updates for the infotainment system.

    With a 33kW electric motor that’s tucked into the well-behaved 10-speed automatic transmission to aid the 3.5-liter twin-turbocharger gas V6, the PowerBoost Full Hybrid (no 48-volt “mild hybrid” for the blue-oval folks, thank you) makes 430 system horsepower and 570 lb-ft of torque, the most of either commodity available from any F-150 engine. Without a load, it hastens the truck along smartly almost all the time, though more than one driver noted an odd dead spot in acceleration right after getting away from full stops. If you have to put it to work, there’s enough oats to tow up to 12,700 pounds with the Max Trailer Tow Package option installed.

    Test Drive: 2020 Nissan Titan PRO-4X Crew Cab

    Zone Lighting

    The new Sync 4 infotainment system boasts excellent graphics and is packed with features. Included are a power-delivery display for the hybrid powertrain and a slick graphic control panel for the F-150’s neat Zone Lighting feature.

    While the hybrid is the series’ power leader, the next line on its resume is fuel saver. With straight 24s in EPA city/highway/combined estimates for 4-wheel-drive F-150s, the PowerBoost is the mileage leader in city and combined projections compared to the other Ford engines. Indeed, its city figure is 6 mpg better than the rating for the all-gas 3.5-liter EcoBoost engine, and 4 mpg higher for combined operation. Drivers get lots of feedback to help them run efficiently, with things like a trip odometer to track miles driven under electric power and a “braking coach” that reports the percentage of regenerative power sent back into the system at each full stop. This driver posted 19.1 mpg after driving 83.7 miles (20.7 of them electrically) in 58 percent city-type conditions—a disappointing number relative to the EPA estimates, but the frigid weather during our test period likely played a role in bringing our fuel economy down.

    First Look: 2021 Ford F-150

    Folding Shifter

    The clever Interior Work Surface feature is a $165 option. The shift lever powers down into the console, and the center-console armrest flips out to form a smooth work surface that can be used for signing papers, working on a laptop computer, or what have you. There’s still a traditional center-console bin as well (bottom-right photo).

    PowerBoost-equipped trucks automatically come with a 2.4kW version of Pro Power Onboard, accessed through a panel in the left side of the cargo bed. A 2.0kW variant is available with any of the optional gas engines, and the hybrid can be outfitted with a $750 upgrade to 7.2kW that adds two 120-volt plugs and a 240-volt input to the two 120 plugs already provided with the lower-power types. With the benefit of a full tank of gas, the 7.2kW one can do its stuff for up to 32 hours. Pro Power energy levels can be monitored on the truck’s touchscreen or even remotely through the FordPass app.

    Quick Spin: 2020 Ram 1500 Rebel EcoDiesel

    F-150 PowerBoost

    The XLT trim is one step up from the entry-level XL in the F-150’s model roster, so its cabin ambiance isn’t particularly ritzy. As expected, there’s generous room for big-and-tall adults in the front and rear seats.

    That touchscreen is the face of a new standard Sync 4 infotainment system. It comes with a digital owner’s manual with how-to videos, wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto smartphone connectivity, and over-the-air software updates. An 8-inch display is standard in the XLT, but the test truck was equipped with a 12-inch screen that was part of the Equipment Group 302A option. The bigger unit has split-screen capability. Happily, Sync 4 remains as easy to understand and use as its predecessor. Regardless of size, the screen fits in a redesigned instrument panel, and there’s a new steering-wheel design.

    The cabin is bestowed with big storage spaces throughout, including pockets cut into the sides of the console. CG’s test truck was gifted with the Interior Work Surface option with a panel that flips out from the console to make a level surface handy for mobile office functions. To make room for the platform when it’s in use, the shift lever folds into the center console at the press of a button.

    Quick Spin: 2020 GMC Sierra 1500 AT4 Diesel

    F-150 PowerBoost

    Since contractors and construction workers often make use of their pickups’ open tailgates as work surfaces, the F-150’s Tailgate Work Surface feature includes handy aids such as integrated ruler markings, pencil holders, and clamp pockets. Check out our photo gallery below for a close-up picture of the Pro Power OnBoard generator’s power-socket panel, which is located in the driver’s side rear of the pickup bed.

    In addition to previously mentioned items, XLT standards include fog lamps, a power tailgate lock, 60/40-split fold-up rear bench seat, illuminated entry, tilt-telescoping steering column, trailer sway control, dynamic hitch assist, 4G Wi-Fi hotspot, blind-spot and rear cross-traffic alerts, lane-keeping assist, and front automatic emergency braking. Group 302A added things like automatic dual-zone climate control (in place of manual single-zone air conditioning), satellite radio, and remote starting. The XLT Sport Appearance Package presented body-color bumpers and door handles, chrome exhaust tips, dark-accent grille, and sport-cloth upholstery. With a host of individual options that included such things as 20-inch alloy wheels, a twin-panel moonroof, 360-degree camera, and spray-in bedliner the test truck came to $65,256.

    Quick Spin: 2019 Chevrolet Silverado 4-Cylinder

    F-150 PowerBoost

    The 3.5-liter PowerBoost full-hybrid V6 powertrain tacks on a hefty $4495 to the bottom line, but it also delivers a muscular 430 hp in addition to its 24-mpg EPA rating. Twenty-inch dark-alloy wheels are a $1395 option.

    The redesign has done nothing to adversely affect F-150’s exceptional leg- and headroom in either row. A wide rear seat and flat floor welcome 3-across seating for adults, and doors open wide to make entries and exits easy. Seating position and comfort are very good. We found that finely rippled highway pavement set up a steady vibration through the steering wheel. Otherwise, it rode and drove quite well on expressways and snowy city streets—even with a leaf-spring rear suspension that will make old-timers nostalgic.

    Ford appears to have successfully reinvented its perpetual money machine. It can use this one to build its own bank.

    Future Car: 2025 Ram Dakota

    2021 Ford F-150 PowerBoost Hybrid

    The Ford F-150 has long held the title of America’s best-selling vehicle, and the redesigned-for-2021 model brings an impressive roster of headline-grabbing new features that should help this popular truck retain its sales crown.

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    Listen to the very entertaining Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

    2021 Ford F-150 PowerBoost Hybrid Gallery

    (Click below for enlarged images)

    Meet the 2021 Consumer Guide Best Buys


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  • Quick Spin: 2021 Jeep Gladiator Overland Diesel

     

    2020 Jeep Gladiator Overland 4X4 EcoDiesel

    2021 Jeep Gladiator Overland 4×4 EcoDiesel in Firecracker Red Clear-Coat (a $245 option)

    Quick Spin, Consumer Guide Automotive

    2021 Jeep Gladiator Overland 4×4 EcoDiesel

    Class: Compact Pickup Truck

    Miles driven: 196

    Fuel used: 8.3 gallons

    Real-world fuel economy: 23.7 mpg

    Driving mix: 50% city, 50% highway

    CG Report Card
    Room and Comfort B
    Power and Performance B-
    Fit and Finish B
    Fuel Economy B
    Value C+
    Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
    Big & Tall Comfort
    Big Guy C+
    Tall Guy C+
    Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
    Drivetrain
    Engine Specs 260-hp 3.0-liter
    Engine Type V6 diesel
    Transmission 8-speed automatic
    Drive Wheels 4WD

    EPA-estimated fuel economy: 22/28/24 (city, highway, combined)

    Fuel type: Diesel

    Base price: $40,395 (not including $1495 destination charge)

    Options on test vehicle: Firecracker Red Clear-Coat exterior paint ($245); leather interior-upholstery upgrade ($1595); Trailer-Tow Package ($350); Cold Weather Group ($995); Premium LED Lighting Group ($1295); 8.4-inch Radio and Premium Audio Group ($1895); Jeep Active Safety Group ($895); Adaptive Cruise Control with Full Speed Forward Collision Warning+ ($795); hardtop headliner ($555); Cargo Management Group with Trail Rail system ($895); roll-up tonneau cover ($595); 8-speed automatic transmission ($2000); 3.0L V6 turbodiesel engine ($4000) remote-proximity keyless entry ($545) body-color Freedom Top 3-piece hard top ($2395); spray-in bedliner ($495)

    Price as tested: $61,435

    Quick Hits

    The great: One-of-a-kind looks, attitude, and functionality; off-road prowess

    The good: Torquey diesel engine delivers respectable fuel economy; broad range of available features; long wheelbase provides decent ride quality for an off-road-focused vehicle

    The not so good: Pricey options really drive up the bottom-line price; steering feel demands frequent minor corrections in highway driving

    More Gladiator price and availability information

    CG Says:

    The trick for optimal off-road driving, be it inching over uneven rocks or squirming through soupy mud, is to get sufficient power to turn the wheels without generating a lot of counterproductive wheelspin. Nothing that burns fossil fuels meets that need quite like a diesel engine because of its strong, quickly developing torque, and now the Jeep Gladiator has one.

    2020 Jeep Gladiator Overland 4X4 EcoDiesel

    The Gladiator–a pickup version of the popular and iconic Jeep Wrangler–debuted for the 2020 model year. An available EcoDiesel 3.0-liter V6 is the most notable update to the Gladiator lineup for 2021.

    For 2021 Jeep makes the same 3.0-liter turbodiesel V6 it dropped into the ’20 Wrangler available in its compact pickup, now in its second year on the market. As used in the Wrangler and Gladiator, this EcoDiesel engine from VM Motori in Italy is rated at 260 horsepower that peaks at 3600 rpm, but its considerable 442 lb-ft of torque is in play by just 1400 rpm and holds for up to twice that many revs. (A version of the same engine for Ram 1500 pickups is more powerful.) That is a bunch more torque than Gladiator’s other power choice, a 3.6-liter gasoline V6, generates.

    Test Drive: 2020 Jeep Gladiator Mojave

    2020 Jeep Gladiator Overland 4X4 EcoDiesel

    Our test vehicle was equipped with a $1595 leather upholstery upgrade package that added a leather-wrapped shift knob, parking-brake handle, and instrument-panel bezels in addition to leather seat upholstery.

    An EcoDiesel was under the hood of the 2021 Gladiator Overland tested by Consumer Guide editors, albeit in on-road driving—a less-natural habitat for the engine. It is a $4000 option available for all Gladiators but the desert-running Mojave, and it requires an upgraded 8-speed automatic transmission, which costs a further $2000.

    It’s a little harder to appreciate the turbodiesel’s virtues on the street, where its measured application of power can seem a little sluggish. At start-up and at idle there’s not much of the clatter so familiar from larger-displacement diesels, though determined acceleration will raise the noise level somewhat. Still, once the EcoDiesel starts feeling its oats, it will maintain a good head of steam for sustained zippy highway runs. The effective 8HP75 automatic kicks down promptly when bursts of power are called for. Depending on the model, a diesel Gladiator can tow as much as 6500 pounds, though the gas V6 provides the most available towing capacity at 7650 pounds.

    Quick Spin: 2020 Jeep Gladiator Sport

    Jeep Gladiator, Firecracker Red

    Tall front-seat occupants might wish for a bit more legroom, but headroom is very good in both the front and rear seats. The leather upholstery upgrade package also includes a fold-down rear-seat center armrest with cupholder.

    EcoDiesel Gladiators have a smaller 18.3-gallon fuel tank than their gasoline-fed companions, but with an EPA highway-mileage estimate of 28 miles per gallon, that gives them a potential range in excess of 500 miles. Even the feds’ city estimate of 22 mpg and combined projection of 24 mpg are considerably better than what’s expected from the gas engine. CG editors extracted 23.7 mpg overall in evenly mixed driving, but one hit 26 mpg with more than two-thirds highway travel.

    Quick Spin: 2020 Toyota Tacoma TRD Pro

    Jeep Gladiator, Firecracker Red

    Choosing the handy roll-up canvas tonneau cover and spray-in bedliner treatment will set you back a total of $1090.

    The Gladiator rests on a 137.3-inch-wheelbase chassis that’s part Wrangler and part pickup truck. Heavy-duty Dana 44 axles housing 3.73:1 final-drive gears are used at both ends. They are linked by “Command-Trac” part-time 4-wheel-drive with a 2-speed transfer case. A limited-slip rear differential is included with the diesel engine option. The extended wheelbase and all-coil-spring suspension make the pickup the best-riding Wrangler derivative around, especially models like the Overland that come with 255/70R18 all-season tires that are more compatible with street and highway driving than the dedicated off-road rubber.

    First Spin: 2021 Ram 1500 TRX

    Diesel Engine

    The priciest item on our test vehicle’s option list is the $4000 EcoDiesel 3.0-liter V6 engine. Eighteen-inch Granite Crystal-finished aluminum wheels on all-season tires are standard equipment on the Overland model.

    The sticker for the Overland that CG drove started at $41,890 with delivery, which is the same price as the 2020 example the editors sampled, and we will point you to that report for details about equipment and passenger accommodations. However, our ’21 test truck wasn’t finished until it had reached $61,435 with individual and package options that included heated leather seats and steering wheel, LED exterior lighting, Uconnect infotainment with an 8.4-inch screen and navigation, blind-spot and rear cross-traffic monitoring, adaptive cruise control, cargo-bed management system, 3-piece removable hardtop roof panels, and much more. That is a breathtaking total for a compact-class pickup, a number that would fetch a pretty nice full-size truck. A turbodiesel Jeep Gladiator can help you “get away from it all” but that shouldn’t include all your money.

    Test Drive: 2020 Nissan Frontier PRO-4X Crew Cab

    2020 Jeep Gladiator Overland 4X4 EcoDiesel

    The Gladiator 18-inch wheelbase stretch over its Wrangler sibling is especially apparent in profile. It makes for an exceptionally long vehicle, but also provides a relatively comfortable ride. The EcoDiesel engine supplies excellent torque and respectable fuel economy, but it tacks a hefty premium onto an already-spendy vehicle.

    (Click below for enlarged images)

    Listen to the very entertaining Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

    2021 Jeep Gladiator Overland Gallery

    2020 Jeep Gladiator Overland

    Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 57; 2021 Consumer Guide Best Buys

    For GREAT deals on a new or used Nissan check out Nissan of Van Nuys TODAY!


  • Forgotten Concept: Nissan Alpha-T

    Nissan Apha-T Concept

    Nissan Alpha-T

    Forgotten Concepts, Forgotten Concepts

    This is an installment in a series of posts looking back on show cars that we feel deserved a little more attention than they got. If you have a suggestion for a Forgotten Concept topic, please shoot us a line or leave a comment below.

    Nissan Alpha-T

    First Seen: 2001 Detroit Auto Show

    Description: Full-size pickup truck

    Sales Pitch: “Nissan is serious about entering the full-size truck market in a big way.”

    More Forgotten Concepts

    Nissan Alpha-T

    Nissan Alpha-T

    Details:

    First seen at the 2001 Detroit Auto Show, the Nissan Alpha-T served to broadcast the Japanese automaker’s intentions to enter the North American large pickup-truck market–which it soon did, with the introduction of the Nissan Titan for the 2004 model year. The angular concept truck featured a crew-cab design and V8 power–traits popular with pickup shoppers then and now. Exterior features included a power-extending bed floor and a novel articulating tailgate design which acted as a step when fully deployed.

    The Alpha-T’s rear doors opened “suicide” style, allowing for easy ingress to the four-place seating. The orange-leather-lined cabin featured suede and brushed-aluminum accents. Power came from a 300-horsepower 4.5-liter V8 mated to a 4-speed automatic transmission.

    Forgotten Concept: GMC Centaur

    2004 Nissan Titan

    2004 Nissan Titan

    CG Says:

    It took moxie for Nissan to enter the big-truck market when it did, especially since Toyota–having rolled out its full-size Tundra in 2000–was already scaling back its pickup ambitions. But for all of the Alpha-T’s bold, futuristic angularity, the production 2004 Nissan Titan that followed was depressingly conventional.

    The first-generation Titan ran through the 2015 model year, and a redesigned second-generation model debuted for the 2016 model year. Despite the addition of a heavier-duty “XD” version with an available Cummins turbodiesel engine, the second-gen Titan didn’t make significant inroads in the domestic full-size-pickup market.

    With the Titan’s future currently in question, looking back on this concept seems especially poignant. The Alpha-T may forever serve as a reminder that it takes more than moxie to sell big pickups in the United States.

    Forgotten Concept: GMC Terradyne

    Nissan Alpha-T

    Nissan Alpha-T

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    Nissan Alpha-T

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