San Francisco Chronicle

QUICK-TAKE REVIEW

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seats will get.

Both the Escalade and the $3000-pricier ESV are available in four trims: base, Luxury, Premium Luxury, and Platinum. Rear-wheel drive is standard throughout the lineup; all-wheeldrive models cost an extra $3000. For this review, we drove an Escalade Premium Luxury with a base price of $84,090. Thanks to a handful of options such as a $595 coat of Dark Adriatic Blue Metallic paint, $1750 for power-retractabl­e running boards, $2000 in Kona Brown leather seats, $2695 for the dealer-installed Radiant package (special 22-inch wheels, chrome exhaust tip, and a more garish grille), and $3000 for all-wheel drive, the as-tested price swelled to $94,130.

What’s new: The Escalade and ESV see a smattering of changes for 2017. Superficia­lly, Cadillac renamed some trim levels. Last year’s Luxury Collection and Premium Collection are this year’s Luxury and Premium Luxury. Of more substance is the addition of Cadillac’s rearviewmi­rror camera system on the Luxury, Premium Luxury, and Platinum trims. With a flip of a switch, the reflective rearview mirror displays a video feed from a camera mounted at the rear of the SUV, virtually eliminatin­g blind spots caused by pillars, headrests, and the like. Other new items include an automatic parking system that can steer the Escalade into a parallel or perpendicu­lar parking space, the addition of automated emergency braking to the Luxury trim’s list of standard features, and a new 22-inch wheel design.

What we like: Despite weighing well over two and a half tons, the Escalade doesn’t struggle to build speed. We’ve yet to strap our test equipment to the ESV, but a regular Escalade Platinum ran from zero to 60 mph in 5.8 seconds, 0.4 second quicker than the Infiniti QX80, 0.7 second quicker than the Lincoln Navigator, and 1.4 seconds ahead of the Lexus LX570. The Escalade and Escalade ESV are able haulers, capable of towing up to 8300 pounds (8100 for the ESV), be it a boat, a camper, or a track-prepped Acura Integra. Finally, there’s no denying the Escalade’s immense visual presence — a quality we’d imagine sits high on the wish lists of buyers in this vehicle segment.

What we don’t like: While the Escalade is equipped with Cadillac’s magnetorhe­ological dampers, which should improve ride quality, we’ve found that the Escalade still suffers from a rather harsh ride, especially when wearing the 22-inch wheels and tires that come standard on Luxury, Premium Luxury, and Platinum models. Additional­ly, Cadillac’s CUE touchscree­n infotainme­nt system continues to be a thorn in the Escalade’s side. Although it is somewhat improved over earlier versions, we still prefer the HVAC and infotainme­nt setups found in the Escalade’s siblings from Chevrolet and GMC, which use knobs and physical buttons rather than CUE’s capacitive proximitys­ensing switches. Finally, the cabin’s overabunda­nce of General Motors parts-bin switchgear is disappoint­ing in a vehicle of this price.

Verdict: Flashy and iconic, but we’d save $7330 and buy a GMC Yukon Denali instead.

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