Times Colonist

Sporty SUV has power in spades

- HENRY PAYNE

Ford Explorer, you had me at ST.

I’m a big believer in “halo” cars, those goosebump-inducing, chart-topping performanc­e variants that speak volumes about a car model’s aspiration­s and engineerin­g, and bring people into showrooms. Think Dodge Hellcat, Jeep Rubicon, BMW M3, GMC Denali, Volkswagen GTI.

For the first time, the familiar ol’ Explorer three-row SUV has adopted Ford’s hellion ST badge — and it’s like tossing Roger Federer an oversize graphite racket. It gives Explorer a better allaround game. It’s got 400 horsepower, has more black makeup than Alice Cooper and will land dad in jail if he takes it to a back road.

And that’s a good thing in the ferociousl­y competitiv­e three-row SUV rugby scrum, where you either stand out or get ground into the turf.

The Explorer, of course, is — along with the Jeep Grand Cherokee — one of the pioneers of the midsize SUV segment. They dominated the class for years, selling zillions and printing more money than Daddy Warbucks thanks to building on an existing pickup chassis.

Then Ford woke up a decade ago and realized that every other automaker had jumped into the segment.

There were unibody-based Toyota Highlander­s and stonkin’ Dodge Durango R/Ts and spacious Chevy Traverses. Heck, even Jeep had sprouted a Trackhawk variant with something like 15,000 horsepower and a V-8 mating call that made every grown male howl at the moon.

So Dearborn got busy, and the all-new 2020 Explorer is the result. It advances on Ford’s first 2011 unibody SUV in every conceivabl­e way. It would take five columns to cover the highlights of this car, but let me sum the Explorer up this way: It’s a handsome, rear- and all-wheel drive, nicehandli­ng 4,700-pound school bus. It’s off-road capable, roomy, high-tech, detail-rich and ergonomica­lly smart.

It’s a powerful, quiet, connected crossover with a one-touch autonomous self-parking feature that will have your neighbour who just bought an Audi for $20,000 more running over for a demo.

Even with all that, sales champ Explorer was going to be under pressure to hold off value plays such as the Kia Telluride and Toyota Highlander.

So, like Federer watching tape between matches, Explorer went out and augmented its core design and technology strengths by adopting the competitio­n’s best features.

For years, Explorer has been the fashion plate of SUVs. Like the lovely Fusion sedan copying Aston’s face, Ford knows a beaut when it sees one. Explorer cribbed SUV heartthrob Range Rover’s wardrobe, right down to the Brit’s stylish bonnet lettering, E-X-P-L-O-R-E-R.

Taking Rover’s lesson one step further, the 2020 Explorer adopts a luxury-class longitudin­al engine architectu­re that pushes the wheels out to the front corners. That creates a dramatic silhouette with long snout, scalloped shoulders and big haunches.

Nice … but then the designers took the rest of the day off.

Where Range Rover’s design (check out the Velar, and bring a drool bucket) is lean and Applespare, the Ford is a bit over-designed in the front.

Like Detroit rival Dodge Durango — another SUV in class with a rear-wheel-drive-based bod — the Explorer is engineered to be an athlete from the ground up.

The 2020 model is 80 kilograms lighter than the 2019. Mated to Ford’s base 2.3-litre workhorse turbo four (also found in the speedy Mustang and European Focus RS), the volume XLT Explorer can cut some rug on the dance floor and does a pretty good imitation of a Jeep off-road.

Bolt in the 400-horse twin-turbo V-6, and the Explorer transforms into a rhino in ballet slippers. I like the Mazda CX-9’s nimble bod, but there’s no high-horse performanc­e variant. Only the R/T and SRT versions of the Durango play in this league.

Stomp the pedal and the Explorer thinks it’s a Focus ST in an SUV body. They should require a racing licence to operate this Frankenste­in’s monster. Taut and responsive with the Explorer’s standard 10-speed tranny throwing off quick upshifts, the three-row ST gulped pavement at an alarming rate in the hills of Portland’s Columbia River valley. Not bad for a three-row ute. And it’s a usable three rows. Yes, Grand Cherokee’s Hellcat-fuelled, 707-horse Trackhawk has no peer. But you can only make three other adults sick in its two-row configurat­ion. Thanks to that RWDbased architectu­re, Explorer has gained a healthy 10 centimetre­s of legroom behind the front seat, meaning you can put two six-footers in the third row.

The Explorer isn’t all looks and muscle. It’s taken Ergonomics 101 from the Honda Pilot.

The three-row Pilot is homely compared with its glamorous classmates, but it geeks out on interior detail with its space-saving trigger shifter, console storage and one-button third-row access. Veteran Explorer chief engineer Bill Gubing and his team watched and learned.

The Explorer will win over the family with its attention to detail: Rotary shifter. Horizontal-orvertical touchscree­ns. Single-button access to third row seats. Sub-cargo storage for muddy cleats. Rocker-panel footsteps for Christmas tree-tying roof access. Standard automatic rear-hatch. Sportscar-like, 2X hood release to save you from fishing for the release under the bonnet.

Like a luxury car, you’ll be showing it off to your friends. There’s the FordPass app that can remotely start your car, look in on tire pressures and vacuum Cheerios from under the seats (just kidding about that last part). And then there’s self-park assist, part of Ford’s must-have Co-Pilot360 driver-assist package. I spent an evening effortless­ly parallel parking a giant, three-row SUV all over town by touching nothing but a button.

Which was relaxing after a day of wringing the Explorer ST’s neck all over Oregon.

 ??  ?? The new Explorer ST uses a specially tuned 3.0-litre EcoBoost engine projected to achieve 400 horsepower.
The new Explorer ST uses a specially tuned 3.0-litre EcoBoost engine projected to achieve 400 horsepower.

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