Las Vegas Review-Journal

Flagship SUV gets early refresh

2019 Acura MDX A Spec looks sporty but still acts like a three-row crossover

- By Robert Duffer Chicago Tribune

Lmoves pretty fast. If you don’t stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it. Acura seems to have channeled Ferris Bueller’s sage advice in refreshing its best-selling MDX a year before it’s due for a redesign: The three-row crossover segment moves pretty fast, and Acura wants consumers to look at the MDX yet again.

For the first time in three generation­s, Acura’s flagship SUV gets a sport element to its luxury utility with the A Spec trim level.

A Spec blacks out the usual chrome trim, uses a buffer lower fascia, features a sleeker rear spoiler, blows up the exhaust tips into canonlike cylinders and replaces 18-inch wheels with wider 20-inchers.

None of it makes the 290-horsepower V-6 engine any quicker, but the cosmetic packaging makes this not-minivan look all the less like a minivan substitute. It also lets Acura charge an extra $3,500.

Functional­ly, the nine-speed transmissi­on has been smoothed

Standard on the MDX is Acurawatch, which includes adaptive cruise and other advanced driver assistance systems. It’s a deal, especially since the upmarket luxury marques option all the tech all the time.

Adaptive cruise goes down to a stop, then the driver taps the accelerato­r to resume it. The gap between the lead car and the MDX is large, even in the shortest setting, and the automatic braking is smooth for the most part. The accelerati­on can be slow and uneven, possibly provoking certain gestures from trailing drivers.

The lane-keep system centers the MDX in the lane after a gentle pinball as it reads the lane lines. It’s easy to use and assuringly comfortabl­e and convenient.

The multimedia controls take getting used to, as in any car with two screens. The top embedded display screen is for navigation, phone and vehicle info. Toggle through those options with buttons below the small lower touch screen, then use a controller dial on the center stack to go through the menus and to convenient­ly zoom in or out on the map.

The lower touch screen, which is equally small and narrow, is for audio and climate. It’s not as refined and unified as the redesigned RDX, but we got the hang of it after a few drives.

Third-row seats each use a handle in the center of the seat back to lower or raise it. It requires quite a lean to get them back up. Straps would be less of a reach, or latches in the side of the cargo area. The handles do flip the headrests, though, which is good.

Getting in and out of the third row couldn’t be easier: From the third row, push a button on the top of the middle seat and the seat back folds and slides forward. Same thing with the button on the side of the seat when getting in. Kids of just about any age can do it themselves. Now to just get them to buckle. Third row is cramped and narrow but much larger than Lexus RX 350L.

A Spec trim in the 2019 Acura MDX is sharp in the way of superficia­l things, but the technology package and SH-AWD that comes with A Spec are more important. But Ferris might not think it is so choice. The overall package is solid, and the cosmetic flourishes give it a little something.

 ?? Acura ?? The 2019 Acura MDX gets refreshed with A Spec trim to give the best-selling three-row crossover a more sporting appearance.
Acura The 2019 Acura MDX gets refreshed with A Spec trim to give the best-selling three-row crossover a more sporting appearance.

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