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Cars > Reviews

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ROYAL FORD
Globe Staff
08/11/2002 |
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2003 Nissan 350Z
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Honda Pilot SUV is crafted for 20-somethings, families
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The 2003 Honda Pilot SUV is billed as ‘‘the ultimate American family adventure vehicle.’’ |
At Honda these days, they’re singing a variation of the
song, ‘‘We Are Family.’’
Interestingly, the notion
of family is aimed at two distinct automobiles, one of which Honda
has developed as it plays a game of catchup (unusual for Honda) and the other as
it looks to leapfrog the competition through bold innovation (typical of
Honda).
Today, we’ll deal with the catch-up vehicle,
the 2003 Honda Pilot, the company’s
first full-size SUV. Honda bills it
‘‘the ultimate American family adventure
vehicle.’’
And from its surprising offroad capacity
to its activity bin for children that just
invites the slopping of ketchup, mustard,
and french fries, they make a strong case.
(The innovative rig is the Honda Element,
which I’ll go to California and drive
at its introduction in a couple of weeks,
and it is aimed at a different family: 20-
somethings who Honda says travel in
‘‘families’’ for skiing, climbing, sur.ng,
mountain biking, and other adventures.
They’re calling this one a college dorm on
wheels. I’ll let you know how that turns
out.)
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| 2003 Honda Pilot EX-L |
| Base price: $30,520 |
| Price as tested: $30,980 |
| Horsepower: 240 |
| Torque: 242 lb.-ft. |
| Wheelbase: 106.3 inches |
| Overall length: 188.0 inches |
| Width: 77.3 inches |
| Height: 70.6 inches |
| Curb weight: 4,426 lbs. |
| Seating: 8 passengers |
| Fuel economy: 19.8 miles per gallon |
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Source: Honda North America; fuel economy from Globe testing.
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| Nice touch |
| The ease of entry. I don’t know how
they built a rig in which you feel like you
are sitting so high yet which you can
seemingly slide into like a sedan.
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| Annoyance |
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The sharp edges on the backs of the
steering wheel mounted controls. Several
times as my .ngers passed over these
plastic buttons, I felt like I was getting
sliced.
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In the meantime, Honda passed up on
what must have been millions of dollars
in pro.ts in the 1990s surge of full-size
SUVs.
They gave us the CR-V, which really
was just a small box. They gave us the
Honda Passport, which (again, unlike
Honda) was really an Isuzu Rodeo.
Now comes the Pilot, running on the
platform, and with the power train of, the
Acura MDX. Both owe their lineage to the
Honda Odyssey minivan, so the roots are
stable and durable.
I drove the Pilot last May at its introduction
inNorth Carolina and came away
surprised at how good it was offroad. I
put it up slopes, up and over and down
berms, and through muck and water and
rocks and logs with which most Pilot
owners will never challenge their car. It
handled it all with ease.
But I was anxious to get it into a real
world setting—a week of hauling kids,
groceries, sports gear, and bags for the recycling
center.
It proved a paradox. It is huge inside—
seats eight and feels very wide—yet did
not feel like a big SUV in the way a Toyota
Sequoia or Ford Explorer might. Indeed,
it felt a lot like the Odyssey on the road.
Honda built the Pilot for a simple reason.
They were losing customers.
‘‘We knew what customers were leaving
Honda . . . and what they were going
to buy,’’ Frank Paluch, Pilot project leader,
said at the car’s North Carolina introduction.
Mostly what they were buying were
Toyota Highlanders (a station wagonlike
SUV) and the Ford Explorer. Both are
aimed at families, yet Highlander does
not offer a third row of seating (yet) and
the Explorer has been hurt by safety questions
that might cause trepidation for
some families. (Though the redesigned
Explorer is a brilliant step from the truck
that caused all the problems).
Honda steps in not only with its superb
reputation for safe vehicles, it also
offers a third row of seating. And it will
haul eight while getting better than 20
miles per gallon.
Despite its offroad capabilities, it is
not billed as a thumper of woods and
trail. It has no skid plates, and though its
106.3 wheelbase is shorter than all competitors,
it is still too long for serious
offroading. It has no low-range transfer
case, relying instead on a torque transfer
system that sends power front to rear (it is
usually a front-wheel drive vehicle) as
needed. There is no center or rear differential
to lock. Instead, the rear axle halves
can be locked at low speed for better use
of any torque sent back there.
Its suspension—struts up front, swing
arms in the rear—is tuned for a soft yet
solid ride. It’s softer than the MDX, stiffer
than the Highlander.
This means that, on the highway, only
slight body roll is induced in lane changes
and only moderate body roll occurs in
hard cornering on back roads. The car
handles it well and there is no sense of
control slipping away even when it is
pushed beyond where a tall vehicle like an
SUV should be pushed.
It shares the MDX’s 3.5-liter, SOHC,
24-valve engine. That plant cranks out
240 horsepower and 242 lb.-ft. torque.
Coupled with a .ve-speed automatic
transmission (silent and seamless in its
shifts), it is an excellent choice to move
more than two tons of car down the road.
And, even full of people, it does it with
surprising speed and power.
Let’s say it’ll haul a family.
And that family gets hauled in surprising
comfort and crazily delightful ergonomics.
The seating is stadium style, with each
row of seats a little higher as you move
back in the car. The rear seats are for kids,
not big adults. The middle and rear rows
fold flat leaving a spacious cargo area.
Views out the front, sides, and rear are
expansive for the driver.
And talk about amenities. There are
more nooks, crannies, tie downs, and
storage bins than you can imagine. This
thing seats eight but has nine cupholders.
Go figure.
There are six ‘‘map’’ holders—two in
the front doors, four in the rear of the
seats—that could easily .nd use as holders
of magazines or coloring books.
The front, center seat console has a
sliding lid that reveals a cellphone holder
with adapter, more storage space, and
cupholders, depending on con.guration.
A center seat console is available and is
aimed at kids—it’s here that Honda invites
the spilling and slopping of condiments
and other sticky detritus of childhood.
High-end models offer either a navigation
system or DVD player (rear seats
screen) to keep the kids enthralled on
long trips. You can’t get both navigation
and DVD player, however.
Honda was a long time coming with
this SUV, but I’ve got to say they did it
right. It won’t draw gawks on the highway
—from the outside it’s neither funky nor
imposing in size—yet from the inside, it’s
all about family funk and lots of room.
Royal Ford can be reached by e-mail at ford@globe.com.
This story ran in the Boston Globe on 08/11/2002.
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