Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Chevrolet Equinox — Change is only skin-deep

- SCOTT STURGIS Scott Sturgis is a freelance auto writer; mrdriverss­eat@gmail.com.

2022 Chevrolet Equinox RS AWD: Hey, look, a pretty new Equinox!

Price: $35,970 as tested. Advanced Safety Package added $650; more options noted throughout.

Convention­al wisdom: Car and Driver likes that it has tons of passenger space, agile on-road behavior, “generous infotainme­nt features,” but not the weak fourcylind­er engine, pricier than most rivals, largest wheel size reduces ride quality.”

Marketer’s pitch: “Life is better in a Chevy SUV.”

Reality: Unfortunat­ely, the changes are mainly on the surface.

What’s new: The handsome new Equinox exterior gave a strong first impression, and interior upgrades also appear inviting. But down deep, the Chevrolet Equinox is pretty much the same since the 2018 model. And that wouldn’t be so bad if the 2018 model were breaking new ground. But it wasn’t.

At first glance, I hoped the Equinox had gone the way of the redone GMC Canyon midsize pickup, which made a nice impression in recent Mr. Driver’s Seat testing.

Up to speed: The Equinox 1.5-liter turbo four-cylinder creates 170 horsepower, on the low side for any modern vehicle. It gets the midsize SUV to 60 mph in a lazy 9.6 seconds, according to Consumer Reports.

The Equinox could feel reasonably peppy, though, and the accelerati­on doesn’t fall off a cliff in the 30-50 range like some vehicles, but I never did have the chance to load up the Equinox with passengers or cargo.

I’d recommend adding all the people and stuff you might ever pack in during a test drive.

Shifty: On the bright side, the PRNDL uses an old-fashioned gearshift lever. But there’s no way to control gear selections and no special driving modes.

What’s worse — underneath it all is a 6-speed automatic. Another nostalgia piece.

On the road: Handling from

the Equinox started out disagreeab­le, but eventually we found a way to work together. Still, there’s a strong sense of three-generation­sCorolla in the Equinox, with lots of steering play and no feedback.

Highway handling is not bad, though, as a trip to Philadelph­ia attested.

Driver’s Seat: The seat is short and narrow, with lumbar that won’t retract all the way in.

The leather seats come courtesy of the $1,580 RS Leather Package, which also added Bose Premium 7-speaker sound.

Friends and stuff: Rear-seat passengers should be pleased with the accommodat­ions. The floor sits low, the seat high, and no hump is there to engender any fights about whose feet are sliding into whose space, something I’m still attuned to after raising Sturgis Kids 1.0 through 4.0 for all those years.

While the seat offers plenty of room, the leather seat is on the firm side, and the seat back leans in an awkward way, without the option to adjust it.

Cargo space is 29.9 cubic feet behind the rear seat and 63.9 behind the front seat, and the seat folds flat.

Play some tunes: Another entrant in the category “things that are not new and definitely could be improved” comes this circa2010 stereo interface that’s pretty standard in GM vehicles. It has a small volume dial in the center, a couple of helpful buttons stuck underneath the touchscree­n, and no discernibl­e rhyme or reason to any of it.

The 8-inch touchscree­n is part of the $895 Infotainme­nt Package, which also added heated steering wheel, some data ports, and Chevrolet Infotainme­nt 3 Plus with Navigation.

Getting around the system is fairly simple, though, and sound from the unit is about a B+. Adjusting treble down leaves too much bass and vice versa.

Keeping warm and cool: The HVAC system features a bevy of buttons for most controls, with dials for temperatur­e.

Manufactur­ing issue: Seat heaters were deleted for a $50 credit, to be retrofitte­d later. It’s a strange time in automobile manufactur­ing — chip shortage, said a GM rep.

Fuel economy: All this hohum driving would be almost tolerable if the Equinox provided 30 mpg or better. But 21 is nowhere near good enough.

Where it’s built: Ingersoll, Ontario.

How it’s built: Consumer Reports gives this reliabilit­y rating of 3 out of 5, as middling as everything else about this vehicle.

In the end: This is such a wellserved market segment — the Honda CR-V, Toyota Rav4, and Subaru Forester among them — that practicall­y any other offering would do better.

 ?? Chevrolet ?? Above: The 2022 Chevrolet Equinox gets a new look up front that dresses the vehicle up nicely. Below: The interior of the 2022 Chevrolet Equinox is pretty when equipped the right way. Comfort was not more than before, though.
Chevrolet Above: The 2022 Chevrolet Equinox gets a new look up front that dresses the vehicle up nicely. Below: The interior of the 2022 Chevrolet Equinox is pretty when equipped the right way. Comfort was not more than before, though.
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