Road Test: 2021 Ford Mustang EcoBoost Premium

High-Performance Turbo Manual Transmission Fun

In April 2018 Ford announced all its sedans and coupes would be going away by 2020, except for one–the iconic Mustang. High-powered Mustang GT, Mach1 and Shelby GT500 versions are well-known, with the latter model pumping-out 760 pin-you-back-in-your-seat horsepower. Big horsepower gets the headlines and is as sexy as all get out, but what about getting into a Mustang that provides driving exhilaration while also not scaring the heck out of you? Look no further than the 2021 Mustang Coupe with the 2.3-liter EcoBoost.

2021 Ford Mustang EcoBoost Premium
High-performance four-cylinder fun

Respectable Power and Performance

2021 Ford Mustang EcoBoost Premium

Plenty of power under that long hood

Clean Fleet Report spent a week in the rear-wheel drive 2021 Ford Mustang EcoBoost Premium Fastback, powered by a high-performance turbocharged 2.3-liter I4 mated to a six-speed manual transmission with launch control and five selectable drive modes. Producing a fun 330 horsepower and 350 pound-feet of torque, the Mustang high-performance package and the six-speed manual is civil enough for around town driving. And yes, you can spin the tires!

The EPA has rated the EcoBoost 2.3L high-performance at 20 mpg city/27 highway/22 combined. In 240 miles driving around Southern California we averaged 23 mpg, but in a 100-mile run with the adaptive cruise control set at 65 mph, we averaged 31.2 mpg, exceeding the EPA figure. This fuel economy is encouraging, but it will take a wide open road with little traffic and lots of patience to equal it. If fuel economy is your primary focus and you can live without high performance, the standard turbocharged 2.3L puts out 310 horsepower and delivers 21/32/25 with its 10-speed automatic.

Being realistic, no one will be buying a high-performance Mustang for making bread and milk runs. This car begs to be driven with great elan, so real world driving will use more fuel. Fuel economy numbers reported by Clean Fleet Report are non-scientific and represent the reviewer’s driving experience using the dash gauge computer. Your numbers may differ. 

Shifting Fun

Clean Fleet Report took delivery of a 2021 Ford Mustang Coupe and knew the week ahead was about to be fun. There are not many manual transmission cars anymore, and getting one with rear-wheel drive and 330 horsepower was a treat. The electric power-assisted rack-and-pinion steering delivered confident road feel, aided by the Pirelli PZero Corsa4 ZR rated 265/40 summer tires on 19-inch, luster nickel-painted aluminum wheels. ZR is a speed rating, which in this case means the tire can handle speeds surpassing 150 mph.

2021 Ford Mustang EcoBoost Premium

Good grip from the rear

The grip was excellent, thanks in a big part to the independent rear suspension that delivered a controlled driving experience. The optional MagneRide damping system, part of the $1,995 Handling Package, kept the rear tires planted. MagneRide responds to road conditions 1,000 times per second for each damper or shock absorber. First introduced in 2002, versions of this suspension system are found on Camaro, Corvette, Cadillac, Acura, Audi, Land Rover, Ferrari, and Lamborghini models.

Stopping was by the four-wheel power disc brakes, which have a four channel anti-lock braking system with rear sway bars and electronic stability control.

The leather-trimmed gear shifter is perfectly positioned for arm angle and grip size, whether for slow or hard shifting. The clutch has a good feel and smooth engagement, but the shifts can be notchy at certain rpms and if not perfectly rev matched. This is not the smoothest manual we have driven, but it is still a blast going through the gears.

First gear is for getting off the line, but 2nd, 3rd and 4th are where things get interesting. When it is go-time, the turbocharged 2.3L came to life with a throaty note that would grumble and pop from the active valve performance exhaust system. This adaptive system, which amplifies the sound, has exhaust settings such as sport and track, making for a pleasant reminder you are driving a high-performance car. There is even a quiet setting when sneaking out at 5 a.m. to go to a car show. For even a racier sound, check-out what comes from the Mustang GT with the 5.0L V8 engine, which has 100 more horsepower.

Zero-to-60 mph times were right around 5.0 seconds, with linear acceleration and unnoticeable turbo lag. Pushback in the seat comes at 3,000 rpm, and stays consistent and stout through the 6,500-rpm red line. The optional 10-speed rev-matching automatic probably would pull even faster times (it also delivers slightly better fuel economy).

Old-Modern Interior

2021 Ford Mustang EcoBoost Premium

The command position–just as its always been

The 2021 Ford Mustang interior has a comfy, retro feel to it. Digital gauges are large and easy-to-read, with black backgrounds and white letters, and toggle switches are a throw-back to sports cars from the 1960s. Clean Fleet Report’s Mustang came with black leather-trimmed Recaro sport seats that were manually adjustable.

Accent stitching on the seats, console and heated, leather-wrapped steering wheel combine with carbon fiber on the dash for added custom detail. The Recaro seats were supportive and tight fitting, while the rear seats are best for those of a smaller stature. The trunk is surprisingly large, but when folding the split rear seat the Mustang is its most versatile, as the cargo area is exceptionally large. Two on a weekend trip will have no problem fitting all their gear.

The 12-speaker, including a trunk-mounted subwoofer, infotainment system includes navigation, Ford SYNC and SiriusXM/FM/CD/HDAM with MP3 playback capability. USB ports with iPod connectivity, Apple CarPlay, Android Auto, music streaming via Bluetooth wireless technology, and hands-free phone capability complete the system. All this is viewed through a 12-inch, high-resolution LCD touch screen. The Ford PassConnect includes 4G LTE WiFi.

The Classic Mustang Look

A long hood with a short trunk lid sums-up the classic Pony Car design made famous in the 1960s by the Mustang, Chevrolet Camaro and Dodge Challenger (and a few others who have disappeared from the scene). The 2021 Mustang coupe has the distinctive fastback design, and is done in a retro-modern style, harkening back to the 1965 Mustang. From the LED head and fog lights to the signature sequential turn-signal taillights, the 2021 Mustang is a good-looking car. The slight hood bulges have functional air intakes. For even more fun, our Mustang came in a very bright Grabber Yellow!

2021 Ford Mustang EcoBoost Premium

Ponies in the puddle

Convenience and Safety

The 2021 Ford Mustang has available convenience features such as illuminated sill plates and Mustang “pony” puddle lights, ambient interior lighting, autodim rear view mirror, rain-sensing windshield wipers, a tilt and telescoping steering column, hill start assist, power and heated exterior mirrors, power windows with one-touch up and down, keyless start and entry, passive entry system and a theft deterrent system.

Safety systems include dual front, seat-mounted side, driver knee, and full side curtain air bags. The Ford Co-Pilot360 is an advanced driver assist system (ADAS), which includes forward collision warning, lane keeping and driver alert warning, lane keep assist, blind spot with cross traffic alert, rear view camera, rear parking distance warning, pre-collision assist with emergency braking and pedestrian detection.

The 2021 Mustang has a 5-Star safety rating, the highest by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). The Insurance Institute for Highway safety, IIHS, has awarded the Mustang Good ratings for crash worthiness.

Pricing and Warranties

The 2021 Ford Mustang comes in 10 models, with the listed prices excluding options, but including the $1,195 destination and handling fee.

EcoBoost Fastback                    $28,400

Convenience and Safety

The Recaros matched the car’s performance well

EcoBoost Fastback Premium   $33,420

EcoBoost Convertible                $33,900

EcoBoost Convertible Premium  $38,920

GT Fastback                                 $37,480

GT Premium Fastback               $41,480

GT Convertible Premium          $46,980

Mach 1                                           $54,595

Mach 1 Premium                         $56,495

Shelby GT500                              $74,095

Clean Fleet Report’s 2021 Ford Mustang EcoBoost Premium coupe had a base price of $32,175. With $13,150 in options and the $1,195 destination and delivery fee, the MSRP came to $46,520.

2021 Ford Mustang EcoBoost

Not recommended for “normal” adults

The 2021 Ford Mustang EcoBoost High Performance comes with these warranties:

Bumper-to-Bumper – Three years/36,000 miles

Powertrain – Five years/60,000 miles

Roadside Assistance – Five years/60,000 miles

Corrosion – Five years/Unlimited miles

Observations: 2021 Ford Mustang EcoBoost Premium High Performance Coupe

The 2021 Mustang EcoBoost High Performance is a fine-driving, riding and handling car. The power is fun to play with, and when mated to a six-speed manual, a blast to drive. The high tech suspension system, adjustable exhaust, summer tires and multiple drive modes are what make this a driver’s car.

Convenience and Safety

Bridging the past and present

The performance from the turbocharged high-performance four-cylinder was more than adequate for a sporty drive, whether on mountain curves or cruising leisurely your favorite highway or road. The 2.3L High Performance offers 20 more horsepower than the base EcoBoost engine (Ford dropped the V6 as the base engine in 2021), while not making it necessary to go for the Mustang 5.0L V8 for extra performance.

When visiting your Ford dealer, tell the rep you want to drive the Mustang EcoBoost High Performance. Then, for comparison take a spin in the Mustang GT or Mach 1. This way you will know which of the iconic Mustangs could be right for you.

Make sure to opt-in to the Clean Fleet Report newsletter (top right of page) to be notified of all new stories and vehicle reviews.

Story by John Faulkner. Photos by Lex Adams.

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Disclosure:

Clean Fleet Report is loaned free test vehicles from automakers to evaluate, typically for a week at a time. Our road tests are based on this one-week drive of a new vehicle. Because of this we don’t address issues such as long-term reliability or total cost of ownership. In addition, we are often invited to manufacturer events highlighting new vehicles or technology. As part of these events we may be offered free transportation, lodging or meals. We do our best to present our unvarnished evaluations of vehicles and news irrespective of these inducements.

Our focus is on vehicles that offer the best fuel economy in their class, which leads us to emphasize electric cars, plug-in hybrids, hybrids and diesels. We also feature those efficient gas-powered vehicles that are among the top mpg vehicles in their class. In addition, we aim to offer reviews and news on advanced technology and the alternative fuel vehicle market. We welcome any feedback from vehicle owners and are dedicated to providing a forum for alternative viewpoints. Please let us know your views at publisher@cleanfleetreport.com.

For GREAT deals on a new or used Toyota check out Toyota of Glendora TODAY!

Test Drive: 2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T AWD Advanced in Cardiff Green (A $500 option)

Consumer Guide Test Drive

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T AWD Advanced

ClassPremium Compact SUV

Miles driven: 447

Fuel used: 21.5 gallons

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B
Power and Performance B
Fit and Finish A
Fuel Economy C+
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 300-hp 2.5L
Engine Type Turbo 4-cylinder
Transmission 8-speed automatic
Drive Wheels All-wheel drive

Real-world fuel economy: 20.8 mpg

Driving mix: 65% city, 35% highway

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

Fuel typePremium gas recommended

Base price: $41,000 (not including $1045 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Cardiff Green paint ($500), Select Package ($4000), Advanced Package ($4150)

Price as tested: $50,695

Quick Hits

The great: Posh, comfortable cabin; quietness; long list of available comfort and convenience features

The good: Respectable acceleration from 4-cylinder engine; confident, distinctive styling; competitive pricing

The not so good: Our mediocre observed fuel economy trailed EPA estimates; some control-interface quirks

More Genesis GV70 price and availability information

John Biel

Perhaps Genesis mislabeled its brand-new premium-compact SUV by calling it the GV70. It is derived from the platform of the G70 sedan and styled in the same vein. But the available engines, rotary-dial gear selector, and console dial for the infotainment system are straight out of the midsize G80 sedan and GV80 sport-utility. Maybe the newcomer ought to really be called the GV75.

Of course, there are numbers that truly are more important to shoppers and we’ll get to them by and by. What really counts is that with the GV70 Genesis has created an excellent, value-packed entry in this busy market segment.

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T AWD Advanced

The Genesis GV70 launches for 2022 as the second crossover SUV in the growing Genesis-brand product lineup; in size and price, it slots in below the midsize Genesis GV80, which debuted for 2021.

Riding a wheelbase of 113.2 inches and ranging 185.6 inches from bumper to bumper, the 5-passenger GV70 is, respectively, 3.1 and 9.1 inches shorter in those categories than the GV80 that’s set up to carry seven in some models. Where the G70 premium-compact sedan offers the choice of a 2.0-liter turbocharged four or a 3.3-liter twin-turbo V6, the GV70 engines are a similarly aspirated 2.5-liter four and 3.5-liter V6.

All-wheel drive is standard in every GV70. Prices (with delivery) begin at $42,045 for the base 4-cylinder version and rise to $63,545 for the V6 Sport Prestige. Consumer Guide sampled a 2.5-equipped Advanced—it sits second from the top of four 4-cylinder models—with a starting price of $50,195. Only a spray of Cardiff Green paint nudged the final tab to $50,695.

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Consumer Guide Test Drive

The GV70’s interior is dazzling in terms of both design and materials. The infotainment system can be controlled via a center-console dial (which is unfortunately easy to grab when you intend to use the rotary-dial gear selector mounted just aft of it) or the extra-wide, 14.5-inch high-definition touchscreen.

Typically for a Genesis, trim levels are treated as packages added to the core model. To get two steps up from the base vehicle, CG’s tester first had to absorb Select equipment (19-inch alloy wheels, panoramic sunroof, 16-speaker Lexicon premium audio, ventilated front seats, and brushed-aluminum interior accents). Then came the Advanced package with leather upholstery, heated steering wheel, interior trim with a “Waveline” pattern, surround-view monitor, blind-spot view monitor, front parking-distance warning, rear parking-collision avoidance, Remote Smart Parking Assist (to jockey the vehicle in and out of tight spaces while the driver stands outside), and advanced rear-occupant alert.

Test Drive: 2022 Genesis G70 3.3T Sport Advanced

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

There’s ample space in the GV70’s front seats, but the rear-seat legroom and headroom can be tight for adults.

All that is the frosting on the cake. It builds on GV70 basics like LED headlights and taillights, heated exterior mirrors, heated front seats with power adjustment, dual-zone automatic climate control, front and rear 12-volt power outlets, and hands-free liftgate. Tech items include an infotainment system with 14.5-inch screen, navigation, satellite and HD radio, and Apple CarPlay/Android Auto compatibility; dual front and rear USB ports; wireless device charging; and fingerprint recognition for one-touch starting. Safety and driving assists consist of adaptive cruise control, forward collision avoidance with pedestrian and cyclist detection, lane-keeping and following assist, rear parking-distance warning, and blind-spot and rear cross-traffic monitoring.

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2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

The GV70’s cargo volume is a bit better than most premium compact SUV rivals–there’s 28.9 cubic feet behind the second-row seats, which grows to 56.8 cubic feet when the second-row seat backs are folded.

The Advanced’s luxury additions fill out a cabin that’s pretty lush for the price, with lots of soft-touch material—even far down on the doors past the point at which lots of other manufacturers default to plastic. Knurled surfaces adorn the ends of the wiper and light-control stalks, steering-wheel thumb buttons, and the transmission selector dial. Metal accents brighten the doors, dash, console, and steering wheel. The big infotainment display atop the instrument panel is vibrant, easily legible, and can show two things at once (for instance radio settings and navigation map). Fortunately, it is a touchscreen, which means you don’t have to use the remote console controller—and this one reminds us a little of the Lexus Remote Touch get-up that we’ve never particularly liked. By the way, it’s uncanny how easy it is to reach this round controller when you really want the trans selector. Easy-working temperature dials mix with numerous buttons for climate control.

Quick Spin: 2021 Genesis GV80 3.5T Advanced

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

A 300-hp turbocharged 2.5-liter 4-cylinder is GV70’s base engine; a 375-hp turbo 3.5-liter V6 is also available. Choosing the Select package upgrades the standard 18-inch wheels to 19-inch alloys.

Comfortable seats welcome four adults. The front row is roomy; the second row slightly less so—but it would be wrong to call it cramped. Headroom is quite good, too, and driver sightlines are fairly unobstructed. Personal-item storage is accomplished in a large glove box, decent covered console bin, door pockets with bottle holders, and net pouches behind the front seats. Exposed cup holders are found in the console and the pull-down center armrest in the rear seat.

Overall cargo space is good, even if the rakish rear shape might stand in the way of certain loading options. The cargo bay holds at least 28.9 cubic feet of stuff. Drop the 60/40-split rear seats, which fold absolutely flush with the load floor, and a further 28 cubic feet open up.

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2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

The GV70’s attractively athletic body shape is highlighted by nicely executed styling details, such as the Genesis brand’s signature shield-shaped grille and slim “Quad Lamp” LED headlights and taillights.

The 2.5 engine, rated at 300 horsepower and 311 lb-ft of torque, is attached to an 8-speed automatic transmission. This powerteam is an eminently competent pairing for moderately lively performance that gets a little zestier (and a touch louder) in “Sport” mode, with its quicker throttle response and more patient upshifts. Still, you can happily cruise all day in subtler “Comfort” mode. “Eco” and “Custom” settings are available as well. We wish the GV70 was a little stingier with gas—premium, wouldn’t you know. EPA ratings are 22 mpg in city driving, 28 on the highway, and 24 combined. When this driver put 81.5 miles on the test vehicle—with 69 percent city-style operation—it returned just 20.3 mpg.

With a suspension that’s a retuned version of the G70’s front struts and multilink rear, ride quality is luxury-brand good, with fine bump absorption and isolation from road noise. Steering is nicely weighted and responsive in the Comfort setting. Maybe the more resistant Sport-mode steering is a help on twisty roads where you wouldn’t want to overdo inputs, but in lazier urban-expressway driving it just feels heavy. Brakes are easy to modulate and predictably reliable.

The inaugural GV70 finds its strength in numbers—the number of things it does right. That would be true no matter what number Genesis assigned to it.

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2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T AWD Advanced

The new-for-2022 Genesis GV70 might be the Genesis brand’s most impressive vehicle so far; it delivers an athletic driving character, attractive styling inside and out, and a high level of luxury and available technology features, all at prices that handily undercut its primary European luxury-brand rivals.

Listen to the Car Stuff Podcast

Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced Gallery

Click below for enlarged images.

Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

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Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

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Test Drive: 2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL in Alloy Silver Metallic

Consumer Guide Test Drive

2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL S-AWC

Class: Compact Crossover

Miles Driven: 222

Fuel Used: 9.8 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 22.6 mpg

Driving mix: 65% city, 35% highway

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort A
Power and Performance B
Fit and Finish B+
Fuel Economy B
Value B+
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 181-hp 2.5L
Engine Type 4-cylinder
Transmission CVT automatic
Drive Wheels All-wheel drive

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 24/30/26 (mpg city/highway/combined)

Fuel type: Regular gasoline

Base price: $33,745 (not including $1195 destination charge)

Options on test car: Accessory tonneau cover ($195), Welcome Package ($160; includes carpeted floor mats, touch-up paint pen, center-console tray mat)

Price as tested: $35,295

Quick Hits

The great: Excellent passenger space/comfort and cargo versatility; broad range of available comfort and driver-assist features

The good: Competitive pricing; topline SEL trim delivers upscale interior ambiance and several desirable features; pleasant driving character; additional flexibility of third-row seating (albeit very cramped)

The not so good: So-so acceleration; only one powertrain is available for now; Mitsubishi brand’s sparse dealer network in some markets

More Outlander price and availability information

John Biel

After stepping aside for a year, a gasoline-engine Outlander compact SUV is back in Mitsubishi showrooms for model-year 2022. It’s totally new of course, but Mitsubishi didn’t have to reinvent the wheel to make it happen. That’s because this Outlander shares its platform and powerteam with the redesigned-for-2021 Nissan Rogue.

2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

The Mitsubishi Outlander is completely redesigned for 2022 on a platform shared with the redesigned-for-2021 Nissan Rogue. The Outlander is a bit bigger all-around the the Rogue, however, with unique styling inside and out.

Don’t think that means the Outlander is just a Rogue in a fresh Mitsubishi wrapper. While they share a 106.5-inch wheelbase, at 185.4 inches long, 74.7 inches wide, and 68.8 inches high the Outlander is a little more than 2 inches bigger in all those dimensions than the Nissan. That gives the Mitsu enough space for its third-row seat, an extremely rare feature in the class that the Nissan doesn’t have. Plus, the Outlander’s all-wheel-drive system is its own, and features more and different terrain settings than those used by the Rogue.

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2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

Much of the new Outlander’s switchgear and digital displays are shared with the Rogue, but Mitsubishi manages a distinctive look and feel nonetheless. SEL models come nicely equipped with lots of desirable features.

The Outlander didn’t go completely dark during 2021, just its previous 4- and 6-cylinder gas models; a plug-in hybrid kept the nameplate alive for the year. For ’22, though, the only way to go is a 2.5-liter four and continuously variable transmission (CVT) picked up from the ’21 Rogue (the ’22 Rogue loses this 2.5 engine and gets a turbocharged 1.5-liter 3-cylinder instead). In the all-wheel-drive SEL model that Consumer Guide tested, the 181-horsepower engine proved itself a better highway cruiser than an in-town jackrabbit. The engine operates surprisingly quietly for a four, helped to an extent by a better-than-average CVT that doesn’t make the powerplant moan with exertion in pursuit of its power peak.

EPA fuel-economy estimates for the AWD Outlander are 24 mpg in city driving, 30 mpg in highway use, and 26 combined. (Note that projections for higher-trim AWD Rogues are a mile or two per gallon higher.) However, in this tester’s 89.9-mile stint that included 66 percent city-style motoring, the truck averaged 23.2 mpg.

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2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

The Outlander shares its unconventional push/pull gear selector with the Nissan Rogue. The center console is also home to a drive-mode selector knob and a wireless charging pad located in the cubby bin forward of the shifter.

Mitsubishi’s S-AWC all-wheel drive (for “Super All Wheel Control”) is available on all models at an $1800 upcharge from front-wheel drive—though the line-topping SEL Launch Edition has AWD as its lone driveline. Five drive modes—“Tarmac,” “Gravel,” “Snow,” “Normal,” and “Eco”—are available to all at the twist of a knurled console dial, but a “Mud” setting is added to those with S-AWC. All-wheeler Rogues have five modes, one of which is “Sport” for different power delivery. Ride isn’t especially disturbed by highway cracks or expansion joints but the all-season tires sound off with loud thwacks. Handling is easy and maneuverability is good.

The test vehicle had a starting price (with delivery) of $34,940. SEL is the trim level at which body-color bumper and side-sill accents, roof rails, leather seat upholstery, heated rear seats, auto-dimming rearview mirror, key-linked memory of driver’s-seat settings, 3-zone automatic climate control, and a 12.3-inch LCD instrument-cluster display are added as standard equipment. The climate system and instrument display are features new to the Outlander/Rogue.

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2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

In SEL trim, the Outlander boasts a surprisingly classy cabin ambiance; handsome quilted leather upholstery is standard. Occupant space is quite generous in both the front and rear seats.

Note that most of those items are found inside. Indeed, the test vehicle felt like a step up in cabin execution for Mitsubishi. SEL seats and imitation-leather door panels are done in the currently popular diamond-quilted pattern. There is good distribution of padded surfaces on the dash, doors, and armrests—even a little on the console sides. Driver instruments and info displays show up bright and legible. Large windows make for good outward vision all around.

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2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

Unlike the Nissan Rogue (and every other compact SUV save for the VW Tiguan), the Outlander offers a third-row seat. That seat is exceptionally cramped, but it can still be useful for small children and/or very short trips. There’s a slim 11.7 cubic feet of cargo space behind the third row. The extra-tall headrests must be removed when the seats are folded down (there’s a handy storage spot for them underneath the cargo floor; see pic in the photo gallery below).

There’s plenty more in packed into the Outlander by the time it gets to SEL territory. Exteriors sport LED headlights and fog lights, 20-inch two-tone alloy wheels, and a hands-free power liftgate with adjustable height limit. The power-folding side mirrors and front seats are heated, and leather covers the shift knob and steering wheel. Infotainment features—navigation included—are displayed on a 9-inch touchscreen and conveniences run to Android Auto and wireless Apple CarPlay smartphone mirroring, wireless smartphone charging, satellite radio, and keyless entry and starting. The biggest of the driver-assistance features is Mi-PILOT (Mitsubishi’s name for Nissan’s ProPILOT system) that pairs adaptive cruise control with automatic lane centering to steer and change speeds with the driver’s hands contacting the steering wheel. Also included are front and rear automatic emergency braking, blind-spot and rear cross-traffic alerts, lane-keeping assist, and front parking sensors.

The audio system works with clarity and ease. The drive selector looks like it a conventional shift lever but only the grip moves forward or backward to go into Drive, Reverse, or Neutral, with Park activated via a button. In our experience, it wasn’t hard to get used to. Climate management consists of two handy dials to set up-front temperature with all other functions entrusted to lots of buttons.

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2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

The Outlander offers fine overall cargo space for a compact SUV; there’s 33.5 cubic feet of space behind the second-row seats, which expands to 78.3 cubic feet with the second-row seatbacks folded.

First- and second-row legroom dimensions vary between the Outlander and Rogue but both offer plenty of room in these areas. The Mitsu’s second row is quite spacious—especially if there’s nobody in the third row, because with seats back, there’s almost no third-row legroom. In truth, children are the only people with a legitimate shot at being able to inhabit the third row.

Personal-item storage is all right, but just. There’s a modest glove box, small console box, slits in the sides of the console, four small door pouches with bottle holders, and pouches on backs of the front seats. Cup holders are placed in the console, the pull-down second-row center armrest (which creates a pass-through when retracted), and in the sidewalls that flank the third seat.

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2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

The Outlander loses its V6 engine with its redesign; for now, the sole powertrain is a 181-hp 2.5-liter 4-cylinder paired with a continuously variable automatic transmission. SEL models come standard with 20-inch alloy wheels.

Cargo space with the third-row seats in use is tight—just 11.7 cubic feet (there is some organized small-item storage under the floor). It expands to 33.5 cubic feet with the seats down. The rearmost seats fold flat, but you’ll have to remove the tall, paddle-like headrests. Sidewall flipper levers make it possible to remotely drop the 40/20/40-split second-row seats for more than 70 cubic feet of cargo capacity.

While the reduction in engine choices appears to be a shortcoming for the new Outlander, it has gained other features that should tickle the fancies of today’s car buyers (and a new plug-in-hybrid version is slated to return soon, probably as a 2023 model). Its passenger room and seating/cargo flexibility add another layer of appeal.

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2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

The redesigned-for-2022 Mitsubishi Outlander inherits plenty of strengths from its Nissan Rogue platform, and tops them off with distinctive looks, an upscale interior, and an occasional-use third-row seat–all at competitive prices.

2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL Gallery

Click below for enlarged images.

2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

Test Drive: 2021 Nissan Rogue Platinum

2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

Car Stuff Podcast

Flash Drive: Lucid Air Dream Edition R

A Quick Drive and More Tech Announcements

The ride was short, but provided the essentials—time split between the driver’s seat and the spacious back seat, the two defining spaces in the Lucid Air, the latest luxury electric car to arrive on the market.

This was a pre-production Dream Edition Range model, the actual car used by Lucid execs and Motor Trend magazine staff to demonstrate the car’s range by driving from LA to SF on a single charge. Customer cars are now flowing off the production lines at Lucid’s Arizona factory, so real world test drives are coming soon. Consider this a quick preview.

Lucid Air Dream Edition
Compact outside; spacious inside

Quick is the operative word. Lucid’s two motors and 966 horsepower (in the Range model; the Performance version boasts more than 1,000 horsepower) move the Air smoothly and swiftly to the maximum speed allowed on any road. Road feel is solid and my relatively low-speed run barely teased the potential out of the car.

Lucid Air Dream Edition

Real luxury feel and giant glass 

That’s from the front seat. The ride in back is another world. It’s designed for comfort, part of the car’s goal of making a market in China, where chauffeured high end cars (the initial Lucid models will retail for more than $160,000) are relatively common. Lucid makes a point of the Air having a full-size car’s interior packaged in a midsize car’s exterior. That design sleight of hand, made possible by an electric car’s flat floor reduced need for engine space, is evidently in the spacious leg and headroom.

An additional comment I would add is that the Lucid presents itself as a traditional luxury with full instrumentation in front of the driver and auxiliary controls and information on a hidden tablet that can be summoned with a quick touch. The trim pieces have all the right look and feel to impart to the buyer that he/she has purchased a six-figure car.

One feature struck me as particularly distinctive. While panoramic glass rooms are becoming quite common in the automotive community, the Lucid takes a slightly different approach to the idea. The sweep of the glass from the touchdown point on the hood is uninterrupted (other than by two seemingly floating sun visors) until it reaches a crossbar above and slightly behind the driver. It made for an expansive view of the exterior and enhanced the spacious feeling of the car’s interior.

More Tech

The battleground for the next round of EVs (the Lucid is only one of a dozen either just introduced or coming soon) has numerous fronts. Lucid has addressed two of those with its 1,000+ horsepower performance model and its companion 528-mile range model. The third area, another one in which Tesla has set the bar, is advanced driver assistance technology (ADAS).

The week after my brief test drive Lucid Group announced details on its DreamDrive driver assistance platform, a suite of technologies that will be standard on the high-end models like the Dream Edition I drove and optional on other models. Like Tesla’s misnamed Autopilot, it’s designed to allow hands-free driving under certain conditions. Unlike Tesla, which appears to be moving to a completely camera-based system, Lucid’s systems uses 32 on-board sensors, including the first use of lidar on a production vehicle.

Lucid Air DreamDrive

Surrounded by sensors

The extensive variety of sensors will allow Lucid to offer more than 30 driver-assistance features, including collision avoidance, Traffic Jam assist and Highway Assist.

The sensors feeding the system include 14 visible-light cameras, five radar units, four surround view cameras, ultrasonic sensors around the vehicle’s exterior and a solid-state lidar sensor. Lucid describes the ultimate system, which will be able to grow in capability via over-the-air software updates, as an “invisible co-pilot.”

The DreamDrive system relies on the car’s proprietary on-board Ethernet Ring to enable quick response and will use the Lucid Air’s 21-speaker audio system to deliver directional alerts while presenting information on the graphic display.

Story by Michael Coates. Photos courtesy of Lucid Group.

More Lucid News:

News: Range Milestones Hit by Lucid

Feature: Lucid’s Studio Approach to Sales

News: Lucid Finally Unveils the Whole Air Package

News: Lucid Announces 500+ Mile Range

For GREAT deals on a new or used Chevrolet check out Allen Gwynn Chevrolet TODAY!

Quick Spin: 2021 BMW M4 Competition Coupe

2021 BMW M4 Competition Coupe

2021 BMW M4 Competition Coupe in Isle of Man Green (a $550 option)

Quick Spin, Consumer Guide Automotive

2021 BMW M4 Competition Coupe

Class: Premium Sporty/Performance Car

Miles driven: 212

Fuel used: 10.5 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 20.1 mpg

Driving mix: 50% city, 50% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 16/23/19 (mpg city, highway, combined)

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B-
Power and Performance A
Fit and Finish A-
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 B-
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 503-hp 3.0-liter
Engine Type Turbo 6-cylinder
Transmission 8-speed automatic
Drive Wheels RWD

Fuel type: Premium gas required

Base price: $74,700 (not including $995 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Isle of Man Green metallic paint ($550), Silverstone/Black Full Merino Leather ($2550), M Drive Professional ($900), 19-inch-front/20-inch-rear M double-spoke bi-color wheels style 826M with performance non-run-flat tires ($1300), M carbon ceramic brakes ($8150), M carbon bucket seats ($3800), carbon fiber trim ($950), M Carbon Exterior Package ($4700), M Driver’s Package ($2500)

Price as tested: $101,095

More 4-Series price and availability information

Quick Hits

The great: Thrilling acceleration; tenacious handling; serious stopping power; upscale interior

The good: Better-than-expected rear-seat space; better-than-expected ride quality for a track-ready super-performance machine

The not so good: Racetrack-ready optional front seats aren’t optimal for everyday driving; polarizing front-end styling; options drive up bottom-line price past the six-figure mark

CG Says:

Now here’s a BMW that feels like a BMW from behind the wheel.

The M4 Competition, the raucous Type-A personality of the 4-Series coupes, shows that the Bavarians have not, after all, misplaced the old family recipe for exhilarating drivers’ cars. A little earlier in the 2021 model year Consumer Guide sampled another 4, an entry-level 430i with xDrive all-wheel drive that left us longing for the rewardingly communicative ride and handling that had been synonymous with BMWs. If you’ve got the money—and it will take a bunch more of it—you can find them in the high-performance M4.

2021 BMW M4 Competition Coupe

Along with the rest of the BMW 4-Series coupe and convertible lineup, the super-performance M4 is redesigned for 2021 with provocative new styling and several new technology features.

Of course, aside from chassis improvements, a big difference-maker in the M4 is a turbocharged 3.0-liter straight-6 engine that makes 503 horsepower in Competition guise—30 more than are harnessed to a “base” M4. With 479 lb-ft of torque, ready and abundant power bursts into bloom with help from the 8-speed automatic transmission that sails smoothly through the gear ranges and delivers sharp kickdown when extra speed is called for. (A 6-speed manual gearbox remains standard with the lower-power M4 engine.) The manufacturer claims the rear-wheel-drive M4 Competition can go from stopped to 60 mph in 3.8 seconds. Top speed is capped at 155 mph unless the buyer springs for the $2500 M Driver’s Package that enables another 25 mph. In any case, the M4 sounds great under load without rattling windows at start-up. Though CG’s Isle of Man Green M4 had the package we did not test those limits, which is probably why we averaged 20.1 mpg even with 50 percent city-type driving. EPA fuel-economy estimates are 16 mpg in the city, 23 on the highway, and 19 mpg combined.

Test Drive: 2021 BMW 430i xDrive Coupe

Quick Spin, Consumer Guide Automotive

The M4’s cabin gets several trim enhancements that give it an appropriately upscale feel. The “standard” M4 is available with a 6-speed manual transmission, but the M4 Competition comes only with an 8-speed automatic.

With a chassis beefed up with an M Sport rear differential, adaptive suspension dampers, and performance tires on 19-inch-front/20-inch-rear wheels, the M4 Competition rides with a buttoned-down firmness but it’s not a constant jiggle-and-jolt fest. Steering is pleasingly precise, not overly heavy in base “Comfort” mode, and with more feel than in the 430i. Body control is great through quick little bends in the road. The low-profile tires are somewhat noisy on the highway and there’s a little bit of a thwacking sound over small cracks and highway expansion joints. The extra-cost (and $8150 is extra cost) carbon-ceramic brakes are strong; on the test car, they behaved in a more linear fashion than the optional M Sport brakes on the 430i we tested.

6 Cool Things about the 2021 BMW M5 Competition

2021 BMW M4 Competition Coupe

The M4 has better rear-seat space than you might expect for a high-performance sports coupe.

Of course, at $75,695 (delivery included) to start, one has a right to expect a driving experience better than a car that costs $27,100 less can deliver. In fact, the test car wasn’t done until it ascended to $101,095, taken aloft on the wings of some of the aforementioned extras plus things like M Drive Professional (for track-day tinkerers who want to chart lap times, drift angles, and other performance data) and M carbon bucket seats.

Test Drive: 2021 Toyota Supra 3.0 Premium

2021 BMW M4 Competition Coupe

Likewise, trunk space is better than in the typical high-end sports coupe–there’s 12.0 cubic feet of cargo volume here.

The $3800 seats provide so much secure grip on torso and bottom that we almost felt the need to file a complaint with HR. As an added performance benefit the seats take some weight out of the car. However, the built-up bolstered areas don’t allow for easy slide-in/slide-out movement, there is an odd raised structure in the front center of the cushion, and shorter passengers may find that the fixed headrests are too high for their comfort.

The hard-shell premium seats also lack pouches on back for rear-seat storage. However, they do not compromise the adult-compatible back-seat space that is a 4-Series coupe virtue. In line with others in the line, the M4 also has a practical trunk, a virtual gauge display that some find difficult to read easily, menu-happy remotely controlled iDrive 7.0 infotainment system, and Apple CarPlay/Android Auto smartphone connectivity. Safety features standard across the series include automatic emergency braking with pedestrian detection, lane-keep assist, blind-spot detection, rear cross-traffic alert, rear-collision preparation, speed-limit monitoring, and automatic high-beam headlights.

Test Drive: 2020 BMW M8 Competition Convertible

The M4 Competition is powered by a twin-turbocharged 3.0-liter inline 6-cylinder that pumps out 503 horsepower and 479 lb-ft of torque. Staggered 19-inch-front/20-inch rear wheels come standard on the Competition–an upgrade over the base M4’s 18-inch fronts and 19-inch rears. The M double-spoke wheels on our tester are a $1300 option.

Price of admission to get at the best stuff that BMW has to offer may be a deal-breaker for some people, and anybody who can’t tolerate the thought that someone could at any moment be making snide comments about the looks of their 6-figure automobile might not be a good fit for an M4. (Did we mention the grille that everybody mentions?) However, folks undeterred by those challenges may have the right feel for this BMW.

Test Drive: 2020 BMW M340i

2021 BMW M4 Competition Coupe

Controversial schnoz aside, the new BMW M4 steps up its game over the previous-generation model. It delivers racetrack-ready performance with better day-to-day practicality and tractability than its superhero specs suggest.

Check out the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2021 BMW M4 Competition Coupe Gallery

(Click below for enlarged images

6 Cool Things about the 2021 BMW M5 Competition

Car Stuff Podcast

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

Muscle-Car Face-Off: 2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

Don’t look now, but the retro-styled pony cars from the Detroit Three have now been around long enough that it’s almost time to start getting nostalgic for the first examples of the breed. Ford kick-started this genre with the bold retro styling of the fifth-generation Mustang, which was unveiled way back in 2004 and went into production for the 2005 model year. Ford’s success with its new/old ‘Stang inspired Chevrolet and Dodge to relaunch their dormant pony cars along a similar throwback theme: A reborn Dodge Challenger (inspired by the original 1970 Challenger) debuted for 2008, and a revived Chevrolet Camaro (which put a new-age spin on 1969 Camaro cues) followed for 2010. The Challenger has been soldiering on with clever updates to that same basic platform ever since, while the Mustang and Camaro both received redesigns—for 2015 and 2016, respectively—that continued with heritage-inspired design.

All along the way, Ford has been keeping things fresh with several retro-themed special editions. Let’s take a look at two of the latest of these, and compare them head to head. The current iteration of the ferocious Shelby GT500 debuted as a 2020 model. As with the earlier versions of the modern GT 500, it represents the racetrack-ready, high-performance pinnacle of the Mustang lineup. The Mach 1 was re-launched for 2021 as an essential replacement for the outgoing Bullitt in the Mustang lineup—stronger, nimbler, and flashier than a GT, but not all the way up at Shelby GT500’s level. And with the recent departure of the Shelby GT350 model (it was discontinued after the 2020 model year), there is nothing in between these two muscle Mustangs.

Both vehicles are packed with Mustang heritage. The Mach 1 dusts off a well-loved Mustang nameplate that debuted for 1969, ran through 1978, and reappeared briefly for 2003-’04 on a nostalgia-themed model. The 2021 Mach 1 takes its visual inspiration from the original 1969 car, but with a notably modern spin. The Shelby GT500 pays homage to the original 1967 Shelby GT500 Mustang, though you’ll have to pay at least $2000 extra if you want the signature Shelby-style dorsal racing stripes and rocker-panel stripes.

There are no major changes to the GT500 for 2021; a couple new paint colors join the palette, and a $10,000 Carbon Fiber Handling Package, which adds 20-inch carbon-fiber wheels, adjustable strut-top mounts, and aerodynamic body add-ons, joins the options list. Even without the big-ticket carbon-fiber package, a healthy load of options pushed the bottom line of our Shelby GT500 test vehicle to a cool $81,190… a $19,255 premium over our Mach 1 tester.

For that money, you’ll get a track-ready super-performance machine, with the expected compromises in everyday comfort. The low-slung front bodywork is prone to scraping on steep driveways and the like. The turning radius feels wider than other Mustangs’, no doubt because of the meatier tires. Those Pilot Sports are plenty noisy on the highway too, with copious amounts of road roar and patter. The overall ride is stiff and “nervous,” but it’s never punishing… the standard MagneRide shocks are doing their job here. The Mach 1’s driving character isn’t as extreme, at least in the basic form of our test vehicle. It’s mostly on par with the departed Bullitt special-edition Mustang we’ve previously tested.

For well-heeled fans of good ol’ American V8 muscle, both of these cars are worth their substantial price premium over a garden-variety Mustang GT and its 460-hp 5.0-liter V8… and both will likely be collectors’ items in the future.

More Mustang news and reviews

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

Test Drive: 2020 Ford Mustang EcoBoost

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

Future Collectibles: 2019 Ford Mustang Bullitt

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

The $222 Mach 1 Appearance Package adds an exclusive Fighter Jet Gray paint color, Ebony/Orange interior, orange brake calipers, and unique hood and bodyside stripes. The Shelby GT500 offers a variety of body-stripe and other appearance options—the only one our test vehicle had was the $695 painted black roof, but the standard vented hood, rear spoiler and aggressively styled front and rear fasciae gave it a menacing look nonetheless.

Snake Eyes: A 2020 Ford Mustang Shelby GT500 Gallery

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

The Mach 1 gets a naturally aspirated 5.0-liter V8 that makes 480 horsepower and 420 pound-feet of torque—this same basic powerplant was used in the special-edition Bullitt Mustang of 2019-’20.The Shelby GT500 is powered by a supercharged 5.2-liter V8 that puts out 760 horsepower and 625 pound-feet of torque. Both the Mach 1 and GT500 engines feel every bit as strong as their ratings suggest—to really use all of the GT500’s copious power, you’ll need a racetrack. A brawny V8 rumble is part of the deal with both cars too; the GT500’s exhaust note might wake your neighbors even when it is set to “Quiet” mode.

First Spin: 2020 Ford Mustang Shelby GT500

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

The GT500’s interior is a step above even an optioned-up Mach 1. Among its exclusive features are a steering-wheel rim wrapped in grippy Alcantera synthetic suede (with a centering stripe at the top of the rim—useful as an orientation aid in track driving). On both the GT500 and Mach 1, elements of the core Mustang’s relatively basic interior materials are apparent despite the trim upgrades.

Test Drive: 2019 Ford Mustang Shelby GT350

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

The Mach 1 offers the choice of a 6-speed manual transmission (standard) or a 10-speed automatic (a $1595 option, which our test vehicle was equipped with) but the GT500’s only transmission is a 7-speed dual-clutch automatic with a rotary-dial gear selector. The dial works well, but it doesn’t exactly scream “fire-breathing muscle car.” The consolation is that the 7-speed gearbox itself is wonderful—it delivers quick, responsive shifts in aggressive driving while remaining impressively smooth and refined in everyday cruising.

Pony-Car Madness! 10 Classic Mustang Ads

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

A pair of Recaro seats is a $1595 option for the Mach 1, but our test vehicle wasn’t so equipped. The GT500 can also be equipped with Recaro seats like our tester was—they’re a $1595 option as well, though they’re a different design than the Mach 1’s Recaros. The GT500’s Recaros offer excellent support in fast cornering. They’re quite snug—even for slender folks—but not uncomfortable. Both the Mach 1 and GT500 Recaros have pass-throughs in the seatbacks for aftermarket racing seat belts.

Photo Feature: 1963 Ford Mustang II Concept Car

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

All Mach 1s come with 19-inch wheels. Our test vehicle wore these Magnetic (metallic gray)-painted aluminum wheels, a $450 option. Choosing the $3750 Handling Package nets wider wheels and tires, revised chassis tuning, larger rear spoiler, and a front “aero splitter” spoiler. The GT500 comes standard with 20-inch high-gloss-black flow-formed aluminum wheels on grippy Michelin Pilot Sport 4 S tires; carbon-fiber wheels on even grippier Michelin Pilot Cup Sport 2 tires are optional.

Future Collectibles: 2015 Ford Mustang 50 Year Limited Edition

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 Premium

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 Premium in Fighter Jet Gray

Class: Sporty/Performance Car

Miles driven: 174

Fuel used: 11.7 gallons

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B
Power and Performance A
Fit and Finish B
Fuel Economy D+
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 B-
Tall Guy B-
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 480-hp 5.0 liter
Engine Type V8
Transmission 10-speed automatic
Drive Wheels Rear-wheel drive

Real-world fuel economy: 14.9 mpg

Driving mix: 75% city, 25% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 15/23/18 (city, highway, combined)

Fuel type: Premium gas recommended

Base price: $55,300 (not including $1195 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: 10-speed automatic transmission ($1595), 19-inch Magnetic-painted aluminum wheels ($450), Mach 1 Elite Package ($1550),  Mach 1 Appearance Package ($1250), voice-activated touchscreen navigation system ($595)

Price as tested: $61,935

Quick Hits

The great: Classic muscle-car power and attitude; crisp handling

The good: V8 burble; decent ride, front-seat room, and trunk space for a performance-oriented sporty coupe

The not so good: Fuel economy; significant price premium over a Mustang GT

More Mustang price and availability information

2021 Ford Mustang Shelby GT500

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 Premium

2021 Ford Mustang Shelby GT500 in Velocity Blue

Class: Sporty/Performance Car

Miles driven: 91

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B
Power and Performance A
Fit and Finish A-
Fuel Economy D
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 B-
Tall Guy B-
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 760-hp 5.2 liter
Engine Type Supercharged V8
Transmission 7-speed dual-clutch automatic
Drive Wheels Rear-wheel drive

Fuel used: 7.2 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 12.6 mpg

Driving mix: 75% city, 25% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 12/18/14 (mpg city, highway, combined)

Fuel type:Premium gas required

Base price: $72,900 (not including $1195 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Recaro leather-trimmed seats ($1650), Technology Package ($3000), Handling Package ($1750), painted black roof ($695)

Price as tested: $81,190

Quick Hits

The great: Ferocious acceleration; track-ready brakes and suspension; slick-shifting dual-clutch automatic transmission 

The good: Aggressive, heritage-inspired styling; lusty exhaust note; decent front-seat room and trunk space for a high-performance sports machine

The not so good: Fuel economy; taut ride; as pricey as a nicely equipped mid-engine Corvette

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Check out the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2021 Ford Mustang Mach 1 vs Shelby GT500 Gallery

(Click below for enlarged images

Snake Eyes: A 2020 Ford Mustang Shelby GT500 Gallery

Car Stuff Podcast


Quick Spin: 2021 Genesis GV80 3.5T Advanced

2021 Genesis GV80 3.5T Advanced

2021 Genesis GV80 3.5T Advanced Plus in Cardiff Green (a $500 option)

Quick Spin, Consumer Guide Automotive

2021 Genesis GV80 3.5T AWD Advanced Plus

ClassPremium Midsize SUV

Miles driven: 496

Fuel used: 29.5 gallons

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort A-
Power and Performance B
Fit and Finish B+
Fuel Economy C
Value B
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 B
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 375-hp 3.5L
Engine Type Twin-turbo V6
Transmission 8-speed automatic
Drive Wheels All-wheel drive

Real-world fuel economy: 16.8 mpg

Driving mix: 65% city, 35% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 18/23/20 (mpg city, highway, combined)

Fuel typePremium gas required

Base price: $65,550 (not including $1045 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Cardiff Green metallic paint ($500)

Price as tested: $67,095

Quick Hits

The great: Posh, comfortable cabin; quietness; long list of available comfort and convenience features

The good: Satisfying acceleration; confident, distinctive styling

The not so good: Mediocre observed fuel economy; steering and ride composure aren’t quite at the level of class leaders

More Genesis GV80 price and availability information

CG Says:

When Korean automaker Hyundai launched its Genesis luxury division for the 2017 model year with a lineup of traditional passenger cars, many industry observers thought that the lack of SUV offerings hampered the fledgling brand’s chances for success. The Genesis G90, G80, and G70 sedans are all fine vehicles that stack up very well to pricier rival models, but the bottom line is that cars just aren’t selling as well as crossover SUVs are, and a brand can’t be a serious player in the luxury or mainstream categories without an SUV lineup.

2021 Genesis GV80 3.5T Advanced

Hyundai’s Genesis luxury brand gets its first SUV in the form of the new-for-2021 GV80–a midsize crissover aimed at established competitors such as the BMW X5, Lexus RX, and Mercedes-Benz GLE-Class.

It didn’t take too long for Genesis to remedy that situation. The new-for-2021 GV80 launched as Genesis’s first SUV, and the smaller GV70 is launching as a 2022 model. We got our first taste of the GV80 as a 2.5T Prestige AWD model, which is the top version of the GV80 with the standard 300-horsepower turbocharged 2.5-liter 4-cylinder engine—you can check out our review of that vehicle here.

First Spin: 2022 Jeep Wagoneer and Grand Wagoneer

2021 Genesis GV80 3.5T Advanced

The GV80 boasts a clean, sophisticated dashboard layout with classy materials and an extra-wide infotainment screen. The center console is home to a rotary-dial gear selector and an unusual circular infotainment control interface. (The infotainment screen itself also has touchscreen functionality, which we found easier to use than the console interface).

This time around, we got to sample the GV80’s step-up engine choice—a 375-hp 3.5-liter turbo V6—in an all-wheel-drive Advanced+ model. We’ve experienced this engine before in the 2021 Genesis G80 sedan, and appreciated its authoritative acceleration and all-around refinement. In terms of quietness and smoothness, as well as acceleration, it’s a notable upgrade from the base 2.5 four. However, rear-world fuel economy declines from the 4-cylinder GV80’s already mediocre numbers. In tests that consisted of a similar mix of city/highway driving, we averaged just 16.8 mpg in our V6 GV80 tester, compared to 19.2 mpg in the 4-cylinder version. The majority of the GV80’s comparable class rivals do better.

Test Drive: 2021 BMW X5 xDrive45e

Quick Spin, Consumer Guide Automotive

The front seats and second-row seats are comfortable and nicely trimmed, with plenty of space for most adults.

Genesis is following a curious strategy for the GV80’s available third-row seat—it’s available only on the 3.5T Advanced+ model. So, if you want third-row seating with a 4-cylinder engine, or with the premium full-lux features of the Prestige trim (which include 22-inch wheels, soft-close doors, 3D digital gauge cluster, power-adjustable ventilated second-row seats, and upgraded leather upholstery), you’re out of luck.

Test Drive: 2021 Infiniti QX80 Premium Select

2021 Genesis GV80 3.5T Advanced

The GV80 offers a third-row seat, but only in the 3.5T Advanced+ model, where it’s standard. Space in the third row is rather cramped, so it’s best suited for kids or occasional short-trip use.

For many buyers, that won’t be a big issue. That third-row area is rather cramped, so the seats are best suited for children or occasional use for short trips. And when the third-row seats are in use, the rear cargo area isn’t particularly spacious—it’s big enough for a medium-sized grocery run and not much more. Still, we appreciate having the passenger/cargo-hauling versatility of a third row for situations when an extra seat or two is necessary, like giving your kid’s classmate a ride to baseball practice.

Test Drive: 2022 Acura MDX Advance

Quick Spin, Consumer Guide Automotive

The turbocharged 3.5-liter V6 engine pumps out a healthy 375 horsepower, for satisfyingly robust acceleration. Twenty-inch alloy wheels are standard on Advanced models; Prestige models get flashier 22-inch wheels.

Comparing the as-tested prices of our two GV80 test vehicles is illuminating. Aside from the Advanced and Prestige trim-level upgrades, the only options are extra-cost paint colors and accessory items such as a reversible cargo tray and a rear bumper applique. So, even though it forgoes the Prestige-trim features of our two-row 4-cylinder GV80 test vehicle, the bottom-line price of this three-row V6 is $2270 more: $67,095, compared to $64,825. The prodigious V6 power and third-row seat should be worth that premium to a good number of shoppers, and overall, the GV80 compares favorably price-wise with its European competition.

First Spin: 2021 Lincoln Nautilus

2021 Genesis GV80 3.5T Advanced

It took a while to arrive, but the Genesis GV80 is an attention-getting entry in the premium midsize SUV class. It offers distinctive styling, a nicely trimmed cabin, and a generous selection of luxury features, along with strong acceleration in the 3.5T models. However, fuel economy is subpar, and the ride composure is a step behind class rivals.

Check out the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2021 Genesis GV80 3.5T Advanced Gallery

(Click below for enlarged images)

2021 Genesis GV80 3.5T

Test Drive: 2021 Genesis GV80 2.5T Prestige

2021 Genesis GV80 3.5T

Car Stuff Podcast

For GREAT deals on a new or used Nissan check out Gulfport Nissan TODAY!

Test Drive: 2021 Volkswagen ID.4

2021 Volkswagen ID.4 First Edition

 

2021 Volkswagen ID.4 1st Edition in Dusk Blue with Black roof

Consumer Guide Test Drive

2021 Volkswagen ID.4 1st Edition

ClassElectric Vehicle

Miles driven: 430

Battery capacity: 82 kWh

CG Report Card
   
   
Room and Comfort A-
Power and Performance B-
Fit and Finish B-
Fuel Economy A
Value B-
   
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 201 horsepower
Engine Type Electric motor
Transmission Automatic
Drive Rear-wheel drive

EPA-estimate MPGe: 104 city/89 hwy/97 combined

EPA-estimated driving range: 250 miles

Consumer Guide range estimate (ideal conditions): 250+ miles

Base price: $43,995 (not including $1195 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: none

Price as tested: $45,190

Quick Hits

The great: Excellent passenger and cargo room within tidy exterior dimensions; generous selection of standard safety and technology features

The good: Competitive driving range; pleasant everyday driving manners

The not so good: Relentlessly unconventional control layout with non-intuitive infotainment interface; potential for first-of-its-kind teething problems; some so-so interior materials

More ID.4 price and availability information

John Biel

From the fine folks who made diesel a dirty word now comes electricity.

Volkswagen charges—pun intended—headlong into its future with the 2021 ID.4, the first vehicle built from its modular EV “toolkit” to reach America. While bigger and smaller IDs are available in other markets around the world, the 4 dives right into that current hotbed of U.S. auto retailing, the compact-crossover-SUV segment. It is roomy and decently rangy, but the most memorable thing that Consumer Guide editors took away from the ID.4 driving experience (and not in a good way) was from the infotainment interface.

2021 Volkswagen ID.4 First Edition

 

The new-for-2021 ID.4 is the first designed-from-the-ground-up electric vehicle that Volkswagen has offered in the United States. It’s a space-efficient compact crossover SUV that offers about the same amount of passenger space as Volkswagen’s conventional Tiguan SUV, despite being 4.6 inches shorter in overall length.

The ID.4 is not the first EV-dubya to make landfall in the States. That, of course, was the e-Golf, which was sold here from 2015 to 2019. But it is the first to come on a platform—the MEB—designed from scratch for electrics, and the first to be sold nationally. Even then you won’t be trolling dealer lots for one with your pick of colors and equipment. ID.4s are built on a “reservation” basis—somewhat like Teslas—with future owners being notified of their vehicle’s progress from assembly through to arrival at the dealership. (Unlike Tesla, VW continues to involve its network of local dealers in the ID sales process.)

ID.4 launched in rear-wheel-drive Pro and limited 1st Edition versions, at respective base prices, with delivery, of $41,190 and $45,190. A Pro S starts at $45,690, and twin-motor all-wheel-drive for the two Pro models adds $3680. CG tested a Black-over-Dusk Blue 1st Edition with no extra-cost additions.

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2021 Volkswagen ID.4 First Edition

 

All ID.4s get a fully digital gauge cluster. The launch-special 1st Edition models come standard with a 12-inch infotainment touchscreen, along with exclusive trim touches such as white interior accents (including the steering wheel and gauge cluster), and cheeky “play” and “pause” emblems on the throttle and brake pedals.

A wheelbase of 108.9 inches is long for the class. The expanse between the wheel centers is occupied by a lithium-ion battery pack of 82 gross kWh and a 201-horsepower electric motor that drives the rear wheels directly behind it. (With AWD, output is 302 horsepower.) Though one of the oft-mentioned benefits of electrics is the instant availability of their maximum torque, the rear-drive ID.4 doesn’t pack gobs of it—a modest 229 lb-ft. It’s enough for safe and sound operation and a towing capacity of 2200 pounds, but no real excitement. It is, of course, deathly quiet in operation. Ride on the fully independent suspension—moderately firm—and handling—easy and direct—seem at the higher end for compact sport-utes, which is almost damning the ID.4 with faint praise.

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VW ID.4 Review

 

The ID.4’s gear selector is unusual–it’s a twist knob that sprouts out of the right side of the instrument panel. The slim center console houses configurable cupholders, a pair of USB data/charging ports, and a wireless charging pad.

The EPA estimates full-charge range at 250 miles and MPGe at 104 in city driving and 89 on the highway. This driver’s test stint, unfortunately cut short at 62 miles by a flat tire that sidelined the vehicle for a couple days, started with an indicated 96-percent charge and 247 miles of range. With air conditioning in use and 55 percent of driving in city-type conditions, he burned off 23 percent of the available charge, with remaining range just below 200 miles when the vehicle had to be parked—though switching off climate control returned indicated range to 212 miles, leaving open the possibility of overshooting the estimates. A full 240-volt “Level 2” charge should take 7.5 hours. A 120-volt “household” charge cord is a standard-equipment item, but buyers are also provided with three years of free DC “fast charging” through the network of Electrify America stations in which VW invested in recent years as penance for the sin of rigging the emissions testing of its once-beloved turbodiesel engines.

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VW ID.4 Review

 

There’s excellent space in both the front and rear seats, with good headroom and legroom for big and tall adults.

Where Volkswagen chose to make the ID.4’s performance feel conventional it did the opposite with the user interface. The Discover Pro Max infotainment system in the test vehicle concentrates audio, climate, navigation, and more on a 12-inch display screen that’s hard to decipher and seems fairly random. (An unlabeled square outlined in purple is the key that unlocks many secrets for those curious enough to wonder, “What does this do?”) Setting radio presets is a game of 3-dimensional chess. Indeed, it’s far easier to undo choices than to make them. Virtually everything happens via haptic contacts that don’t always deliver reassuring feedback. Quick-reach controls for the defrosters aren’t located near the central screen where you might expect; they’re on the pad that holds the light controls to the left of the steering column. The driver has just two power-window buttons. Lowering the rear windows requires activating a haptic button marked “Rear” first. Perhaps the VW Group Vice President for April Fool’s Day Jokes had a hand in this.

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VW ID.4 Review

 

There’s 30.3 cubic feet of cargo volume behind the ID.4’s second-row seats, which grows to 64.2 cu. ft. with the rear seats folded–those numbers are on par with the smaller entrants in the compact SUV class.

We would gladly trade interface weirdness for one-pedal driving. Higher-level regenerative braking—but not enough to fully stop the vehicle—is available by activating “B” mode on the drive selector that sprouts from the instrument pad in front of the driver. Other standards include “ID. Light”—a multicolored LED light strip at the base of the windshield that uses glowing visual and acoustic cues to call attention to things like incoming calls, brake warnings, and charge level—and an “IQ.DRIVE” suite of driver-assist features that includes adaptive cruise control, lane-keeping assist, forward-collision assist with autonomous emergency braking, and blind-spot and rear cross-traffic alerts.

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VW ID.4 Review

 

Unlike the Ford Mustang Mach-E, there’s no supplemental “frunk” storage space under the ID.4’s hood. The 1st Edition model comes with 20-inch alloy wheels in place of the 19s that are standard on other ID.4s.

There is good head- and legroom in both rows, the flat floor lets you entertain thoughts of squeezing three lithe adults—certainly three kids—across the back seat. The low console has a bin for storage, USB ports, and wireless charging under a retracting cover. There are pouches on the backs of the front seats, pockets in the doors, and cup holders in the console and pull-down rear armrest. Still, the cabin is a little stark with large-grain plastics and little soft-touch material. (A white steering wheel/column and armrests put some spark in the test truck, but these details are peculiar to the sold-out 1st Edition model.)

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Touchscreen and error messages

 

The ID.4 uses an infotainment system that’s completely different from other VWs, and not always for the better. We found the interface non-intuitive, and the touch-sensitive controls finicky. The infotainment system’s functions were often slow to load as well (the purple lights below the screen in these photos are the touch sensors).

Generous cargo space—as much as 64.2 cubic feet with the rear seats folded—exists on a floor that can be set at bumper height or inserted into a lower track for additional load-space depth. Rear 60/40 seats fold flush with the floor when at bumper height, and there is a central pass-through behind the rear armrest. Cubbies at the sides of the cargo floor restrain small items.

Volkswagen hopes it has made an electric compact SUV that behaves the way consumers expect a compact ute to behave for a price—after federal EV credits—that will seem “normal” too. But there’s enough different going on in the ID.4 to make it clear it’s not from out of the past.

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2021 Volkswagen ID.4 First Edition

 

The ID.4 boasts a comfortable, space-efficient cabin and pleasant, everyday-commuter driving manners that make it a practical package. However, it’s plagued by several “unconventional for the sake of unconventional” control interfaces that we found frustrating and annoying, and didn’t fully acclimate to during our two-week test period.

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Check out the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2021 Volkswagen ID.4 1st Edition Gallery

(Click below for enlarged images)

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Quick Spin: 2021 Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat Redeye

2021 Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat Redeye

2021 Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat Redeye in “Smoke Show” gray

Quick Spin, Consumer Guide Automotive

2021 Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat Redeye Widebody

Class: Large Car

Miles Driven: 209

Fuel Used: 16.6 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 12.6 mpg

Driving mix: 70% city, 30% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 12/21/15 (mpg city/highway/combined)

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B
Power and Performance A+
Fit and Finish B+
Fuel Economy D-
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 B
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 797-hp 6.2 liter
Engine Type Supercharged V8
Transmission 8-speed automatic
Drive Wheels Rear-wheel drive

Fuel type: Premium gasoline

Base price: $69,995 (not including $1495 destination charge)

Options on test car: Customer Preferred Package 2BZ ($8600; includes Redeye instrument-panel badge, 220-mph primary speedometer, satin-black Dodge taillamp badge, Redeye decklid badge, satin-black Charger decklid badge, Redeye fender badges, Redeye grille badge, SRT Power Chiller), Carbon/Suede Interior Package ($1595), Navigation & Travel Group ($995), Black/Demonic Red seats ($295), 305/35ZR20 front and rear 3-season tires ($695), 20-inch x 11.0-inch Brass Monkey wheels ($1095), Gas Guzzler tax ($2100)

Price as tested: $86,865

Quick Hits

The great: Brawny muscle-car styling; super-sedan performance

The good: Spacious cabin and trunk; broad range of personalization options; competent handling for the size and heft

The not so good: Aged basic design; seriously thirsty for premium gas

More Charger price and availability information

CG Says:

Can you put a price on horsepower? Specifically, insane levels of it? If you’re Dodge, the answer is yes, and the figure is $107.50. That’s how much per pony you’ll pay to move up from a 717-horsepower Charger SRT Hellcat Widebody to a 797-horse Hellcat Redeye Widebody.

2021 Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat Redeye

The Dodge Charger gets yet another horsepower infusion for 2021 in the form of the Hellcat Redeye Widebody model. The engine is plucked from the Charger’s Challenger coupe sibling, which added a Redeye trim level for 2019. Unlike the Challenger, the Charger Hellcat Redeye comes standard with the Widebody fender flares.

Introduced on the 2019 Challenger coupe, the Redeye package is extended to the Charger large sedan for 2021. It’s no surprise, considering that the two platform siblings have been wearing each other’s clothes during much of their long existence. Dodge claims this makes the Charger Hellcat Redeye the most powerful and fastest mass-produced sedan the world—“fastest” defined by a claimed top speed of 203 mph and “mass-produced” seemingly what sliver of the tens of thousands of ’21 Chargers will be Redeyes. (Calendar-year sales of Chargers from 2018 through 2020 averaged 84,862 according to figures reported in Automotive News.)

Test Drive: Dodge Challenger SRT Hellcat Redeye

2021 Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat Redeye

You won’t mistake it for a BMW or a Mercedes-Benz, but a good selection of upscale trim touches and comfort/convenience features give the Charger Hellcat Redeye an appealing luxury-sport ambiance.

The Redeye—with a starting price of $82,190 that includes delivery and Gas Guzzler Tax—is effectively created out of an $8600 package added to the Hellcat Widebody. In addition to the 80 extra horsepower, Redeyes incorporate the SRT Power Chiller (it diverts air-conditioning refrigerant from the cabin to a chiller unit linked to the supercharger heat exchangers), a 220-mph speedometer with red-tinged graphics, Redeye-specific identification inside and out, and satin-black “Dodge” and “Charger” badges on the decklid.

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Dodge Charger Redeye

The UConnect 4C infotainment system has a 8.4-inch touchscreen. “SRT Performance Pages” displays enable dialing in specific drive-mode and launch-control settings, and include helpful readouts for high-performance driving.

The gap in horsepower is what it is because the non-Redeye ’21 Hellcat gets a boost of 10 steeds to the 717 first made available for the limited-edition 2020 Charger Daytona Fiftieth Anniversary Edition. All Hellcats come with the Widebody 3.5-inch fender flares that clear room for 20×11-inch wheels in a number of available styles shod with 305/35ZR20 Pirelli P-Zero performance tires. Both ’Cats feature a newly designed performance hood with a functional induction scoop and dual heat-extraction vents.

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2021 Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat Redeye

Appropriately enough, the Charger Hellcat Redeye’s snarling-cat fender badges have a red eye to let sharp-eyed viewers know there’s 797 hp under the hood.

With 707 lb-ft of torque at 4500 rpm, the Charger Redeye sloughs off its nearly 4600-pound curb weight for instant, rumbly action. Launch Control to manage tire slip, Launch Assist to tamp down wheel hop, and Line Lock to brake the front wheels while the rears are free to do a tire-heating burnout are included for the benefit of drivers thinking of drag racing the family car. (Dodge cites 0-to-60-mph acceleration of 3.6 seconds and quarter-mile capability of 10.6 seconds.) The transmission is an 8-speed automatic with quick-responding paddle shifters.

In overall look and layout, the 2021 Charger is much the same as it has been since the nameplate’s last freshening for 2015. Adding the Redeye is just the latest trick Dodge has pulled from its bag full of them to keep the big fellow on enthusiasts’ radar.

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2021 Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat Redeye

It’s a predictable formula, but it appears to be working for Dodge: Throw more horsepower at it, and give it big, meaty tires and brawny-looking fender flares. The basic Dodge Charger platform is quite long in the tooth, but it continues to deliver one-of-a-kind muscle-car attitude and, in top-line Hellcat Redeye trim, truly blistering performance.

Check out the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2021 Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat Redeye Gallery

(Click below for enlarged images)

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