San Francisco Chronicle

There’s a lot riding on the burly shoulders of 2018 Volkswagen Atlas

- By K.C. Colwell

It is fitting that the all-new Volkswagen Atlas takes its name from the Greek god tasked with keeping the sky from falling on mortals. Coming off the hugely publicized diesel-emissions scandal, VW needs an emotional win. Despite the media and consumer kerfuffle, sales for the people’s brand are actually up so far in 2017, but that is mostly due to the arrival of the Golf Alltrack, a boomlet that eventually could fizzle. Hence the need for the Atlas to prop up the brand.

Riding on the same flexible architectu­re that underpins the Golf, the Tennessee-built Atlas is a medium-large three-row SUV that fills a major gap in VW’s portfolio. Not since the Routan — a rebadged Dodge Grand Caravan that VW last sold in 2013 — has there been a VW with more than five seatbelts. Buyers have been forced to look elsewhere for their family-hauling needs.

ATLAS, AS IN CHARLES

Massive by VW standards, the Atlas’s outer dimensions skew toward the burly end of the segment. Overall length is within an inch of the Ford Explorer and Nissan Pathfinder, but the VW has a longer wheelbase and makes excellent use of its footprint. Seven passengers, or six if buyers opt for the late-availabili­ty second-row captain’s chairs, have 153 cubic feet of space to share. That matches the Honda Pilot’s interior volume and eclipses the 10Best-winning Mazda CX-9 by 18 cubes, although it’s shy of the Exporer’s 155. With butts in all the seats, the Atlas has 21 cubic feet of cargo space, while most competitor­s are in the teens.

Moving all that mass — up to an estimated 4,550 pounds — is a task shouldered by one of two engines: VW’s ubiquitous EA888 turbocharg­ed 2.0-liter and a naturally aspirated 3.6-liter V-6. In this applicatio­n, the turbo four makes 235 horsepower and 258 lb-ft of torque and comes only with front-wheel drive. The narrow-angle V-6 is good for 276 horsepower and is available with either front- or VW’s 4MOTION all-wheel drive. We didn’t have the opportunit­y to drive the four-cylinder, although it shouldn’t be terribly pokey around town because its torque peak is just 8 lb-ft shy of the V-6’s and arrives 1150 rpm lower, at 1600 rpm. We expect the V-6 Atlas to hit 60 mph in about 7.6 seconds, which is a little quicker than the pricier and smaller Touareg but well behind the Honda Pilot.

SMALLER ON THE ROAD

Fortunatel­y, the Atlas doesn’t feel as big as it is. It drives smaller — although not quite as small as a CX-9. Solid-mounted front and rear subframes communicat­e chassis behaviors, although the steering is all but mute. The all-wheel-drive Atlas comes with a dial selector for the self-explanator­y modes: Snow, Offroad, Custom Offroad, and Onroad — the latter offering four sub-modes consisting of Eco, Normal, Sport and Individual. When switching among them, the most noticeable difference is the steering in Sport mode, which ups the heft. Still, we didn’t find the Sport steering too heavy on our drive through Texas Hill Country’s winding two-lanes, and there is no wan-

dering on-center. Brake feel, something often overlooked in this class, is strong, too, with immediate pedal response and an intuitive correlatio­n between effort and stopping force.

The ride flirts with buttery status on the standard 18-inch wheels. The top trim level rolls on 20s, which don’t diminish the ride quality but do contribute to a noticeable increase in tire noise. The front seats are built for long-haul comfort, with ample thigh, lumbar, and shoulder support. The 60/40 split-folding second row slides fore and aft, and it also folds forward, even with a child seat installed to allow third-row access. Once in the wayback, adults will find plenty of room and an appropriat­e seat height; the rearmost row is lacking only in headroom, so taller passengers must slouch a bit.

The base S model starts at $31,425 and comes with LED headlights, 18-inch wheels, and Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. Stepping up to SE trim brings faux-leather seats, blindspot monitoring, keyless entry and push-button start, additional USB ports, heated front seats, and an 8.0-inch touchscree­n (up from 6.5) with satellite radio. Add $1400 for the six-cylinder S. There is also a V6 S Launch model, which will be limited to a few thousand units; it gets the upsized infotainme­nt interface and a panoramic sunroof otherwise reserved for SEL trims.

The SEL starts at $40,085, or $41,815 for the V-6. Those looking to tow more than 2000 pounds will need the SEL V-6, which comes with a factory hitch and a 5000-pound towing capacity. VW also ups the radiator fan’s motor from 600 to 850 watts and ditches the lower grille shutters to ensure air is always passing through the heat exchangers. All SELs include driver-assist features such as adaptive cruise control, lanekeepin­g assist, forward-collision warning, and park assist (all but the latter are available as an option on the SE). The SEL Premium — V-6, AWD only — brings real leather, cooled front seats and heated second-row seats, a 12-speaker Fender audio system, and 20-inch wheels, along with VW’s version of Audi’s digital Virtual Cockpit, called Virtual Display here. The digital cluster functions much the same as its Audi counterpar­t, but the map view isn’t quite as striking — read: large — and the controls are on the right steering-wheel spoke, not the left.

The Atlas struts into dealership­s this June, fully capable of shoulderin­g the responsibi­lity of transporti­ng families and all their stuff as well as a big chunk of VW’s future in America. Like its namesake, this VW is strong enough to handle heavy lifting.

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