Albuquerque Journal

Crossovers aren’t built for serious off-roading

Old-school SUVs can take a beating

- Ray Magliozzi

DEAR CAR TALK: How do the newer, lighter SUVs (crossovers) stack up against classic Jeeps, Land Rovers and Chevy Suburbans for off-road use? While many tout the safety features and traction of all-wheel drive, they are never shown being driven anywhere except on paved city streets. At my job, many of the favored field vehicles are the older (’80s-model) Suburbans and Ford Broncos, which are almost indestruct­ible but drink gas like it’s water. We are interested in the hybrid lines of small SUVs (Ford Escape, Toyota RAV4). But do they have the features necessary for off-road use, or are we better off having a separate “excursion” vehicle for exploring backcountr­y byways? Thank you! — Evan

The crossovers that interest you are not really designed for off-roading. The definition of “off-road” in a Ford Escape means you’ve turned off into the Whole Foods parking lot.

Crossovers are designed with ground clearance and good traction, but that’s really for snow, slippery roads or modest off-road use — driving over dirt, some mud, grass, sand or gravel.

So if you’re determined to drive over tree stumps, boulders and hibernatin­g mammals, I think you’d be better off with a second, older vehicle just for that purpose.?

What we call “crossovers” are really car-based vehicles that have an SUV-ish body style; they’re not actually trucks. And that’s great, because most people don’t enjoy driving a truck every day. Trucks handle worse, are generally less comfortabl­e, get much poorer gas mileage, are harder to get into and out of, and tend to be less safe, in many instances (especially with on-demand four-wheel drive versus permanent allwheel drive).

So you’ll be a lot happier driving, day to day, in a RAV4 Hybrid than in, say, a Toyota 4Runner, which is based on a pickup truck. And you’ll be happier with either one of those every time you go to the gas station.

If driving off-road is really something you’re committed to, then do what your colleagues do: Get a used Jeep, or Bronco, or Tahoe — or keep your current SUV — and use that for your excursions.

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CAR TALK

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