Ottawa Citizen

Ridgeline returns in style

2017 model is all pickup, but with a car-like ride and very quiet interior

- COSTA MOUZOURIS Driving.ca

OK, the 2017 Honda Ridgeline sports a new silhouette that says it’s all pickup truck. Gone are the previous-generation’s sloping bed sides, replaced by a sharp, more distinct transition between cab and bed.

Body lines are straighter, it’s longer, and it has a very trucklike payload. Rated at more than 1,550 pounds (703 kilograms) on the base LX trim, the payload is higher than on the Nissan Frontier, on par with the Toyota Tacoma, and equals the full-size Ram 1500 equipped with the 5.7-litre V8. It even comes standard with a Class III trailer hitch and seven-pin harness, and boasts a towing capacity of 5,000 lbs. (2,268 kg).

But there’s some trickery going on here, because despite its truck-like outline and spec sheet, its unibody undercarri­age is nonetheles­s all SUV. This second-generation Ridgeline, which returns to market after a three-year hiatus, is still built on Honda’s global light-truck platform, so what you’re essentiall­y looking at is a longer Honda Pilot with the roof lopped off behind the rear seats. There’s even a body cutline demarking the bed from the cab to complete the illusion, though there is also a practical reason for this: The rear quarter panels are bolted on and can be replaced to facilitate damage repair.

This also means that, unlike traditiona­l body-on-frame pickups, which are based on reardrive platforms, the Ridgeline uses a front-drive platform with the engine transverse­ly mounted under the hood. The U.S. gets a base version with front-wheel drive (a term that was completely avoided during the technical presentati­on, Honda reps preferring the more truck-friendly twowheel drive). Canadian drivers, however, won’t have to put up with such nonsense; we get allwheel drive as standard throughout the five trim levels (LX, Sport, EX-L, Touring and Black Edition). The base LX model starts at $36,590, and you can spec all the way up to the Black Edition, which adds blackout trim and wheels to the Touring version, for $48,590. For those keeping track, the starting price is just $1,600 more than it was in 2014.

Under the hood is a new 3.5-L i-VTEC direct-injection V6 that claims 280 horsepower and 262 pound-feet of peak torque, an increase of 30 hp and 15 lb-ft over the previous-generation Ridgeline. The new engine is bolted to active engine mounts to reduce vibration, and it can run on three cylinders to reduce fuel consumptio­n when cruising at light throttle. Honda rates the fuel consumptio­n at 11.3 L/100 km, combined city and highway.

The automatic transmissi­on has gained a cog, and is now a six-speed with a wider spread of ratios that includes a lower first and higher top gear. It drives the wheels through Honda’s i-VTM4 full-time all-wheel-drive system, which constantly varies torque between the front and rear wheels, while applying brakeless torque vectoring at the rear wheels, sending more torque to the outside wheel to assist cornering. Four selectable drive modes (Normal, Snow, Mud, and Sand) adjust front-to-rear torque distributi­on, as well as throttle and transmissi­on mapping, to suit the varying driving conditions. The transmissi­on selects gears efficientl­y, with almost seamless gear changes that are well matched to what your right foot is doing.

The Ridgeline has grown, with eight centimetre­s more wheelbase and seven cm more overall length, though the roof is 1.2 cm lower. Despite the Ridgeline’s larger dimensions, it has dropped 36 kg, while gaining 28 per cent more torsional rigidity. The longer wheelbase hasn’t changed the interior space that much, which still offers ample room for front and rear passengers, but there is a larger bed, which is 10 cm longer and 14 cm wider than before.

Returning are a couple of very handy bed features that are unique to the Ridgeline: the dualaction tailgate, which swings down like a convention­al tailgate or to the side like a door, and the in-bed trunk that holds 207 L of cargo, as well as a spare tire. The 5-foot-4 (163-cm) bed also has a small cargo box in the right panel.

Honda added another unique feature to the Touring and Black Edition: a musical truck bed. These models are equipped with sound exciters in the bed, which turn the bed liner into a speaker that pipes music from the audio system. There’s no groundshak­ing bass pumping out the back, but the sound is better than simply leaving the doors open.

The interior is very much Pilot, which is somewhat understate­d but very comfortabl­e. You’ll find the same gauges, the same eight-inch touch screen, and climate and steering-wheel controls, and the same materials and finish. The biggest difference is that the Ridgeline uses a gearshift lever, as opposed to the Pilot’s push-button gear selector. Glass is thicker all around to deaden sound, and on the EX-L and higher trim levels there’s an acoustic windshield.

Available safety features include blind-spot warning, lane-keep assist, lane-departure warning, rear cross-traffic alert, adaptive cruise control, LaneWatch, which displays the passenger-side blind spot in the screen when the right turn signal is activated, and hill start assist.

A brief drive in a Toyota Tacoma and a Chevrolet Colorado — provided for comparison — instantly revealed where the Ridgeline trumps all convention­al pickup trucks: It drives very much like a car, with a very quiet interior, and composed, communicat­ive handling. There’s no reverberat­ion through the body after hitting bumps, which is common on body-on-frame designs. And the chassis is taut and responsive on twisty roads, benefiting from the rigid chassis structure, as well as all-around independen­t suspension. You’re also sitting lower to the ground. The ride is so well controlled that if you were to enter the Ridgeline blindfolde­d, you’d think you were driving in a full-size sedan.

The former Ridgeline was pretty much in a class by itself, but this redesigned version will be competing with the Colorado and the Canyon, the Frontier and the class-leading Tacoma. However, this is a light truck done Honda’s way, designed for drivers who want the utility of a pickup truck but don’t want a compromisi­ng truck-like ride. And in those respects, the Ridgeline delivers big time.

 ?? PHOTOS: COSTA MOUZOURIS/DRIVING ?? The new Honda Ridgeline is a light truck for those who want the utility of a pickup without the truck-like ride.
PHOTOS: COSTA MOUZOURIS/DRIVING The new Honda Ridgeline is a light truck for those who want the utility of a pickup without the truck-like ride.
 ??  ?? The new Ridgeline features a dual-action tailgate and an in-bed trunk that holds 207 lites of cargo and a spare tire.
The new Ridgeline features a dual-action tailgate and an in-bed trunk that holds 207 lites of cargo and a spare tire.
 ??  ?? The Ridgeline’s interior is somewhat understate­d, but comfortabl­e.
The Ridgeline’s interior is somewhat understate­d, but comfortabl­e.

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