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Ford Escape Hybrid

IronWing

No Lifer
I got to drive an Escape hybrid for the first time today. It was a combination of city, highway, and dirt road driving. Overall it seems to be a pretty nice car. It has great pickup and responsive steering for an SUV. IMHO, automakers aught to put electric helper motors in sports cars for improved jack rabbit starts.

It is a bit noisy with a very noticeable whine if the windows are down.

The automatic 4WD system worked well for the most part however wasn't doing so good in deep sand. Since I didn't have any recover gear with me I decided to bail out before finding out exactly how much it didn't like deep sand. The electric motor shines on steep inclines where one can come to a dead stop in mid-slope and start up again with no revving and no sliding backwards. The truck didn't handle steep descents very well though with quite a bit of sliding. I didn't try it in low gear but my assumption is that it would have done better.

Fit and finish was much better than I had come to expect from Ford, on par with Toyota or Honda.

The lack of temperature gauge was annoying as was the lack of instantaneous mpg readout. There was a bizarre graphic in the info screen that looked like a bar graph with a down arrow on the left, a stairstep bar graph in the middle, and an up arrow on the right labeled mpg that might have been some type of gauge but it never changed and its meaning defeated me.

The auto climate control works but it isn't my thing. I prefer hotter/colder dials to temperature setting dials.

The radio/CD player is poorly laid out. It is time for car companies to give up on the six CD player. They are too awkward for use in a car.

26.5 mpg for the 200 mile trip. Car had 12k on it.
 
I rented a V6 Escape a couple years ago and over 4 days I put about 400 miles on it. I liked it but for such a small SUV the gas mileage was abysmal. I was lucky to average 17mpg on mostly rural 45-50mph roads in NC.

Otherwise, for a 2WD SUV it did about as well at hauling me around as pretty much any sedan would. There really is nothing that would make this vehicle any more useful for most than a Ford Taurus.
 
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
I rented a V6 Escape a couple years ago and over 4 days I put about 400 miles on it. I liked it but for such a small SUV the gas mileage was abysmal. I was lucky to average 17mpg on mostly rural 45-50mph roads in NC.

Otherwise, for a 2WD SUV it did about as well at hauling me around as pretty much any sedan would. There really is nothing that would make this vehicle any more useful for most than a Ford Taurus.

why single out the Escape? That's every other small SUV in this class.
 
Originally posted by: foghorn67
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
I rented a V6 Escape a couple years ago and over 4 days I put about 400 miles on it. I liked it but for such a small SUV the gas mileage was abysmal. I was lucky to average 17mpg on mostly rural 45-50mph roads in NC.

Otherwise, for a 2WD SUV it did about as well at hauling me around as pretty much any sedan would. There really is nothing that would make this vehicle any more useful for most than a Ford Taurus.

why single out the Escape? That's every other small SUV in this class.

Because that's the car this thread is about and it's pretty much the only small SUV I've driven? 😕
 
Was curious what year you test drove??? '08??

The '09 is supposed to include the revamped motor (the 2.5L from 2.3) & some NNH refinements.

Actually looking very forward to that.


???
 
Originally posted by: redgtxdi
Was curious what year you test drove??? '08??

???

It was an 08. Also that weird bar graph gauge is an instantaneous mpg indicator of sorts, it is just very slow responding and doesn't display numbers.
 
Out of curiosity, does anyone know how much Ford and GM spend on advertising "green" vehicles compared to their actual R&D costs developing them? Call me skeptical, but I have a hunch that they're doing the bare minimum just to avoid government regulation.
 
Originally posted by: ultimatebob
Out of curiosity, does anyone know how much Ford and GM spend on advertising "green" vehicles compared to their actual R&D costs developing them? Call me skeptical, but I have a hunch that they're doing the bare minimum just to avoid government regulation.

I think they advertise it more the developing, the Escape/Mariner is a very good hybrid, nothing like the Vue Greenline or Civic Hybrid and former Honda Accord with the weak hybrid systems that don't increase MPG too much because the electric motor is so weak(19hp in the accord).

The Escape/Mariner and Altima licenses Toyota's Hybrid Synergy Drive to use in the cars so minimal development is needed. It's more expensive in implementation but increases mileage more and can power the vehicle on it's electric motor alone.

As for whoever asked about real suv Hybrids, too many people forget about the Tahoe Hybrid. It's an excellent Full Hybrid system that increases mileage quite a bit and is still an SUV with body on frame construction and 21/22mpg is nothing to sneeze at in a 6000lb 4WD suv.
 
Originally posted by: mwmorph
Originally posted by: ultimatebob

The Escape/Mariner and Altima licenses Toyota's Hybrid Synergy Drive to use in the cars so minimal development is needed. It's more expensive in implementation but increases mileage more and can power the vehicle on it's electric motor alone.
Not exaclty. Ford's is Ford's. Ford licensed 21 of Toyotas 350 hybrid patents because Ford came up with pretty much the same stuff in those areas and Toyota beat them too it. In return Toyota licensed some of Ford's direct injection and diesel stuff.
 
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