Photo Coverage: More Corner Carvers Front And Center At LSFest West In Las Vegas!

New, old, weird, common, you name it and they had it on hand at Holley’s LSFest West in Las Vegas. And there was no shortage of weird and wacky and fun and awesome going around the autocross, track cross, 3S challenge and more during this insane event. We call it insane because the size, scope, and variety are unlike any other event in the world, which has become a staple in the LSFest world. Check these photos out and tell us which ones are your favorites.

IF YOU MISSED ANY OF OUR PREVIOUS PHOTOS FROM LSFEST WEST, CLICK HERE

LSFest is a spectacle people and that was never more apparent than in Las Vegas during the 2021 LSFest West event held at The Strip at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. With thousands of cars, and tens of thousands of spectators, it was an event of epic proportions even during these COVID times. Thanks to a great partnership between Holley’s production team, track staff at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, along with local, county and state health organizations, this event was able to happen. And happen it did. There were cars, trucks, SUVs, vans, buggies, exotics, pre-runners, race trucks, and everything in between on site to celebrate everything you can do with LS power. We’re talking Drag Racing, Autocross, 3S Speed Stop, Donuts, Burnouts, Drifting, Sideshow, Truck Jumps, Dyno pulls, Manufacturers Midway and tons of food and drink. This is an event like none other and has a very different personality than LSFest East in Bowling Green Kentucky. If you have only been to one, you definitely need to get to the other.

Everyone that’s anyone wants to be at LSFest and this weekend was no different. YouTube stars from B is for Build, Cleetus McFarland, Blake Wilkey, and more were on hand to throw down, have fun, and cut loose in Vegas. After having to cancel the 2020 show, despite trying to reschedule, there were fans, racers, and enthusiasts from all over the country clamoring to get to Las Vegas for this year’s event. Because no on site ticket sales were allowed, all entries were pre-entry and everyone had to buy their spectator tickets ahead as well. After a bustling Friday, Saturday morning started with record numbers coming through the gates for an actual sold out crowd. And we’re not talking about the BS sold out claims you get from some promoters, we’re talking actually sold out crowd and it was epic to see.

For GREAT deals on a new or used Nissan check out Nissan of Sumter TODAY!

It’s Indoor Car Show Season, And We’ve Got More Photos From The Omaha Autorama


It’s Indoor Car Show Season, And We’ve Got More Photos From The Omaha Autorama

We told you we were going to share all of Scott’s photos from the Omaha Autorama, so here is the second gallery for you to enjoy. This is a cool show and had an interesting and cool selection of hot rods, customs, classics and race cars. Below is the writeup from Scott, and his 2nd gallery. If you missed the first one, don’t worry the link for it is below.

(Words and Photos by Scott Liggett) On the one year anniversary of Covid shutting down everything to “flatten the curve” we hit up the Omaha Autorama to get back into the reopening of car show season here in Nebraska. If you remember, we were at this show last year when everything was going crazy with the Covid virus running rampant. The governor of Nebraska called to have this show shut down the day we were there. It was a surreal experience last year and we were not able to go to another car show until October.

It’s a year later, Covid is getting under control. People are itching to get out and live again. The people who love classic and custom cars are no different. This year’s turn out was definitely proof of that. So, we donned our masks, grabbed our camera and headed down to CHI Heath Center in downtown Omaha, Nebraska to check out a bunch of beautiful automobiles.

This particular auto show has a lot of meaning to your author as this was the World of Wheels Omaha Autorama was the first custom car show I ever went to way back as a budding gearhead in the 1970’s. And, I continued to go to this show until the late 1980’s when my family moved to California. The Omaha Autorama officially kicks off the car show season in Nebraska, and we are hoping to go to a lot more this year. And, we will share those experiences with you here.

Scott Liggett


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Our First Gallery Of Photos From Lone Star Throwdown Is Here And Is Nothing But OBS 1988-1998 GM Trucks!


Our First Gallery Of Photos From Lone Star Throwdown Is Here And Is Nothing But OBS 1988-1998 GM Trucks!

Lone Star Throwdown, or LST as it’s referred to, is one of the premier custom truck shows in the country. It also happens to be one of a few of those that happen in the state of Texas. This show draws folks from all over the country, along with Canada and Mexico during Non Covid times. With just a few days until the show, Charles Wickam and I decided we were going to head down and take a look, and boy are we glad we did. There were insane numbers of trucks and some really cool stuff we loved. We didn’t shoot every single truck there, but we got hundreds and hundreds of them for you to check out, that’s for sure.

After getting up at 4am, and leaving the house with my main dude Otis The Shop Dog at 4:45, we hit the road to drop Otis off for a play date with Mom and Dad and their dog Baxter in Waxahachie. The roads were wet, the fog was nuts, and I headed to pickup Wickam after leaving mom and dad’s around 6:15. More fog, some rain, and with a Wickam on board we headed toward Conroe for the show around 8:15. A couple hours later we were eating lunch at Whataburger, duh, and then a primo parking spot had us walking through the show in just a few minutes.

I snapped photo after photo, Wickam and I dreamed and schemed and planned fantasy trucks in our heads, we talked to racers and truck guys and gals we knew at the show, and when our feet felt like they were going to fall off we jumped back in the truck and headed for home. 5 hours or so later I pulled in the driveway with Otis and started organizing photos. It was fun, but man I’m tired.

So, here is your first gallery. I’ll have more coming over the next few days, but figured I’d make this first one nothing but OBS, 1988-1998 GM trucks since everyone loves them so much and they were out in force at LST 2021.

Enjoy, let us know which ones are your favorites, and check back for more tomorrow!


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Test Drive: 2021 Chrysler Pacifica Pinnacle

2021 Chrysler Pacifica Pinnacle, Velvet Red

2021 Chrysler Pacifica Pinnacle in Velvet Red Pearl-Coat

Consumer Guide Automotive

Class: Minivan

Miles Driven: 267

Fuel Used: 12.2 gallons

CG Report Card
   
   
Room and Comfort A
Power and Performance A-
Fit and Finish A
Fuel Economy B
Value B
   
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
   
Big & Tall Comfort
   
Big Guy A
Tall Guy A
   
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
   
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 287-hp 3.6 liter
Engine Type V6
Transmission 9-speed automatic
Drive Wheels AWD

Real-world fuel economy: 21.9 mpg

Driving mix: 20% city, 80% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 17/25/20 (mpg city/highway/combined)

Fuel type: Regular Gas

Base price: $53,390 (not including $1495 destination charge)

Options on test car: none

Price as tested: $54,885

Quick Hits

The great: Added capability of all-wheel drive; excellent array of family-friendly convenience features

The good: Spacious cabin with upscale trimmings; pleasant road manners

The not so good: Bottom-line price is almost $55K

More Pacifica price and availability information

John Biel

In the midst of what to all the world looks like a midcycle freshening of its Pacifica minivan, Chrysler seems to have slipped in something almost completely new. That is the Pinnacle, a line leader with essentially everything that’s been done for the rest of the 2021 Pacifica family, but with some features that are wholly its own.

2021 Chrysler Pacifica Pinnacle

The entire Chrysler Pacifica lineup undergoes a refresh for 2021, gaining freshened styling, a new infotainment system, available all-wheel drive, and a luxuriously trimmed, line-topping Pinnacle trim level.

Almost anything that can be packaged in a Pacifica comes standard in the Pinnacle, which has a starting price (with delivery) of $54,885. The only way the van sampled by Consumer Guide could have come from the factory any costlier would have been if it had been built with the Trailer-Tow Group, a $995 package that gives Pacificas a 3600-pound capacity. On top of that the Pinnacle adds luxury upholstery and cabin appointments, and its own front console design.

First Spin: 2021 Toyota Sienna

2021 Chrysler Pacifica Pinnacle

Pacificas have a clean dashboard layout with easy-to-use controls, and Pinnacles get extra-ritzy trim. Higher-line Pacificas have a satin-metal trim ring on the face of the steering-wheel rim that gets uncomfortably cold to the touch on frigid winter days. Even with the standard heated steering wheel on, it takes a while for the trim ring to warm up.

Throughout the ’21 line, the CG “Best Buy” Pacifica wears a new fascia with a larger upper grille opening, reshaped headlights, and more-defined bumper cover. Infotainment is relayed by a new-generation Uconnect 5 system with wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto smartphone integration (with the ability to connect two phones simultaneously), Amazon Alexa voice control, Uconnect Market, and more, plus a 10.1-inch touchscreen. On the driving-dynamics front, all Pacifica models are available with fully automatic all-wheel drive—indeed, it is standard on Limited and Pinnacle models.

The Minivan as a Limo: What is the Lexus LM?

2021 Pacifica Seating Area

Quilted Nappa-leather upholstery comes standard in the Pinnacle model, as do lumbar-supporting throw pillows for the second-row passengers. The second-row seats slide and tilt forward for easier access to the third row.

Where the Pinnacle reaches its peak is inside. Caramel-colored Nappa-leather seats with a quilted surface pattern welcome up to seven passengers. Middle-row captain’s chairs are complemented with matching throw pillows that function as lumbar supports. The seats’ upscale look would be wasted if they weren’t comfortable, which they are—even in the third row—though the height of the middle seats struck this tester as a tiny bit low. Other cabin details of the new model are Caramel contrast stitching on dark surfaces like the dash pad, leather-wrapped steering wheel, and console; satin-chrome accents; woodgrain bezels around the instrument cluster and door releases; Berber carpet; and suede headliner.

Quick Spin: 2020 Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid Limited

2021 Chrysler Pacifica Pinnacle

The third-row seats can accommodate average-sized adults if second-row passengers cooperate by sliding their seats forward a bit.

The Pinnacle’s Integrated Ultra Console is distinct from the front-seat storage units found on other Pacificas. Along with a padded-top covered bin between the seats, there’s an open-side space at floor level that’s big enough to hold a purse. Behind the lid for the central bin is a slot that middle-row occupants can use, and a drawer with tray and two cup holders slides out of the back of the console at floor level.

Extensive standard equipment found in the new premium model includes heated and ventilated 8-way power-adjustable front seats, heated steering wheel and second-row seats, wireless charging pad in the console, navigation, Wi-Fi hotspot, 18-speaker Harman Kardon sound system, SiriusXM satellite radio and connected services, triple-pane panoramic sunroof, integral “Stow ’n Vac” vacuum cleaner, second-row streaming entertainment system with screens built into the front seats, and brand-new “FamCam.” A tap on the touchscreen activates an interior wide-angle overhead camera that allows front-seat occupants to see what is going on in the rows behind them—handy for adjudicating territorial disputes of the “he keeps touching me” variety.

Exterior features are 20-inch polished alloy wheels with gray-painted pockets, LED projector headlamps, hands-free liftgate and sliding side doors, and a platinum-chrome “Stow ’n Place” roof rack. Safety/driver-assistance technologies run to parallel and perpendicular parking assist, surround-view camera, adaptive cruise control with stop-and-go function, blind-spot and rear cross-traffic detection, lane-departure warning, and forward-collision warning with pedestrian/cyclist emergency braking.

To be a stickler, Pacifica’s all-wheel drive isn’t technically a new feature because some AWD Launch Editions were produced late in the 2020 model year. However, its wide availability is new. (AWD costs $2995 to add to the otherwise-front-drive Touring and Touring L models.) The Toyota Sienna is the only other minivan with an available all-wheel drivetrain but the Pacifica is the only one that can transfer 100 percent of available engine torque to whichever wheels have more available traction, even the rear ones. Chrysler notes that its AWD system primarily operates in front-wheel drive for the sake of fuel economy, but automatically redistributes power when the front wheels slip, when the throttle is tromped, and even preemptively when temperatures are low or the windshield wipers are activated.

Forgotten Concept: Oldsmobile Silhouette OSV

2021 Pacifica Cargo Area

The Pacifica continues to offer excellent cargo space. There’s 32.3 cubic feet of volume behind the third-row seats, which grows to 87.5 cubic feet with the third-row seats folded into the floor.

Working with the carryover 3.6-liter V6 and 9-speed automatic transmission, the AWD Pacifica is rated at 17 mpg in city driving, 25 mpg in highway operation, and 20 combined by the EPA. This driver got 18.8 mpg from a stint of 69 miles, 40 percent of which were under city-style conditions. The engine, which develops 287 horsepower at 6400 rpm and 262 lb-ft of torque at 4000 rpm, displays pleasing standing-start acceleration and is hardy enough for worry-free highway cruising. (Note that every trim level is available as a front-wheel-drive plug-in hybrid.) A quiet and composed ride continues to be one of the Chrysler van’s strengths.

Forgotten Concept: Ford Aerovan by Ghia

2021 Pacifica Pinnacle Wheels

The Pacifica’s powertrains carry over for 2021. Non-hybrid models are powered by a 287-hp 3.6-liter V6. Pinnacle models come standard with 20-inch polished aluminum wheels with gray-painted pockets.

Naturally, there is plenty of room for passengers and cargo. Unlike other non-hybrid Pacificas, the Pinnacle lacks the “Stow ‘n Go” second-row seats that fold into the floor, but its captain’s chairs have the “Easy Tilt” feature that clears access to the third row. (Passage between the seats is easy, too.) Middle seats track fore and aft, which can open up enough legroom for a couple of adults to contentedly occupy the third row. In the Pinnacle, a power assist gets the 60/40-split rear seats to jackknife and drop down to form a capacious flat-floored cargo area. Though infotainment functions can be worked fairly directly through the touchscreen on the new rig, external volume and tuning dials are handy for radio operation, while external buttons and a dial for fan speed permit hands-on operation of the dual-zone climate system.

In the minivan world, Pacifica’s all-wheel drive gives snow-belt shoppers something new to consider while the Pinnacle provides luxury lovers with something to long for. How refreshing.

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2021 Chrysler Pacifica Pinnacle

The Chrysler Pacifica has been a Consumer Guide Best Buy since its introduction as a 2017 model, and it gets even better with its nicely executed refresh for the 2021 model year.

Listen to the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2021 Chrysler Pacifica Pinnacle Gallery

(Click below for enlarged images)

Meet the 2021 Consumer Guide Best Buys

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Quick Spin: 2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer RS

2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer RS

2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer RS in Oasis Blue with Mosaic Black roof

Quick Spin, Consumer Guide Automotive

2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer RS AWD

Class: Subcompact Crossover

Miles driven: 187

Fuel used: 7.0 gallons

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B+
Power and Performance C+
Fit and Finish B-
Fuel Economy A
Value B
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy B+
Tall Guy A-
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 155-hp 1.3-liter
Engine Type Turbo 3-cylinder
Transmission 9-speed automatic
Drive Wheels AWD

Real-world fuel economy: 26.7 mpg

Driving mix: 45% city, 55% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 26/30/28 (mpg city/highway/combined)

Fuel type: Regular gas

Base price: $26,900 (not including $995 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Technology Package ($1720), Convenience Package ($620), Driver Confidence Package ($345)

Price as tested: $30,580

Quick Hits

The great: Fine passenger and cargo room within tidy exterior dimensions; good selection of available safety and convenience/technology features

The good: Unique appearance features; decent ride and handling

The not so good: Some so-so cabin materials; a bit noisy in highway driving

More Trailblazer price and availability information

CG Says:

The Chevrolet Trailblazer RS may be the official vehicle of the power of positive thinking. It looks like the most sporting version of Chevy’s all-new subcompact crossover SUV so, the positive thinker might reason, it must truly be sportier than the rest.

2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer RS

Trailblazer RS models get sporty appearance touches such as blacked-out exterior trim, a unique mesh grille pattern, and dual exhaust outlets with chrome tips. Eye-catching Oasis Blue paint is another RS exclusive.

There’s a slight bit of truth to that if you are comparing a front-wheel-drive RS to an FWD Trailblazer L, LS, or LT. The RS gets a standard 155-horsepower 1.3-liter turbocharged 3-cylinder engine in place of the 137-horse 1.2-liter turbo three used in the L-series models. But change the driveline to all-wheel drive and that little advantage disappears because every AWD Trailblazer—LS, LT, RS, and ACTIV (a mild off-roader)—gets the 1.3 engine and 9-speed automatic transmission.

With that in mind, the all-wheel RS that Consumer Guide tested behaved very much like the AWD LT that it sampled earlier. The 1.3 is no paragon of smoothness or quiet, but it’s kind of peppy from a standing start and benefits from the 9-speed trans (which replaces the FWD models’ continuously variable transmission) in building up to highway speeds. Selectable “Sport” mode changes shift points and firms steering up. Ride and handling are good for a relatively inexpensive crossover, though some road noise intrudes in highway driving. Tested fuel economy ranged from the mid 20s mpg to almost 30 mpg.

First Spin: 2021 Nissan Kicks

2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer RS

The RS’s sporty interior touches include red trim elements and accent stitching, unique gauge graphics, and a leather-wrapped flat-bottomed steering wheel. The $1720 Technology Package adds features such as Chevy’s Infotainment 3 Plus touchscreen system, Bose 7-speaker audio, wireless Apple CarPlay/Android Auto connectivity, and wireless charging.

At $27,895—with delivery—to start, the RS and ACTIV all-wheelers share the top rung of the Trailblazer price ladder. (Subtract $1500 for front drive.) That’s a jump of $1300 over an AWD LT. In the case of the RS, that buys the following additional standard equipment:

  • dual-outlet exhaust
  • 18-inch alloy wheels
  • diamond-pattern grille
  • black lower fasciae, front and rear
  • black bowtie, badging, and roof rails
  • contrast-color roof (either Mosaic Black Metallic or Scarlet Red Metallic depending on body color)
  • LED taillights
  • leather-wrapped flat-bottom steering wheel and shifter knob
  • cloth-and-leatherette seat upholstery
  • rear center armrest

Test Drive: 2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer LT

2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer RS

The Trailblazer offers decent space for adults in both the front and rear seats, thanks in part to its tall-ish body height.

No matter which of the seven model-specific exterior color combinations a 2021 RS comes in—ours was Mosaic Black over an eye-catching, almost-aqua Oasis Blue—the interior will be Jet Black with red cabin details like stitching, vent bezels, and console and shift-lever highlights. The “mixed-media” seats and the applications of leather slightly raise the luxe level in an interior that is short on attractive soft-touch surfaces. You’ll have to shell out for option packages to get things like automatic single-zone air conditioning and an 8-inch touchscreen for the convenient Chevrolet Infotainment 3 system to replace the standard manual air conditioner and 7-inch screen. (CG’s test RS had three option groups that brought its final price to $30,580.) Like the LT, it has standard LED fog lamps, heated power mirrors, remote starting, keyless access, 10-way power-adjustable driver’s seat, heated front seats, forward-collision alert, automatic emergency braking (including for pedestrians), lane-keeping assist, automatic headlight high-beam control, and teen-driver monitoring.

Test Drive: 2020 Fiat 500X Sport

2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer RS

RS models don’t get an exclusive engine; they’re powered by the same 155-hp 1.3-liter turbocharged 4-cylinder as other all-wheel-drive Trailblazers. RSes do get upsized wheels–18-inch alloys, versus the 16s and 17s on other Trailblazers.

Trailblazers provide good leg- and headroom for four adults. There is 25.3 cubic feet of flat-floored cargo space behind the 60/40-split second-row seats that fold almost flat for more room, and all but the L have a front passenger seat that retracts to make way for long objects. In-cabin storage space is somewhat limited—though the RS’s standard rear armrest does raise the cup-holder count by two. Controls are conveniently placed.

The best way to appreciate the RS compared to other Trailblazers is for its looks. Considering it a step up in performance would require some positive—better yet, wishful—thinking.

Test Drive: 2020 Buick Encore GX Essence

2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer RS

The RS and the light-off-road-themed ACTIV models are the topline models of the new-for-2021 Trailblazer lineup, and they’re priced the same in either front-wheel-drive or AWD form. The RS amps up the sporty style of this likeable subcompact SUV, but the enhancements it brings are almost entirely cosmetic.

(Click below for enlarged images)

Listen to the very entertaining Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer RS Gallery

Chevrolet Trailblazer RS

Meet the 2021 Consumer Guide Best Buys

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Forgotten Concept: Ford SYNus

Forgotten Concept: Ford SYNus

Ford SYNus Concept

Forgotten Concepts, Forgotten Concepts

This is an installment in a series of posts looking back on show cars that we feel deserved a little more attention than they got. If you have a suggestion for a Forgotten Concept topic, please shoot us a line or leave a comment below.

Ford SYNus Concept

First Seen: 2005 Detroit Auto Show

Description: Compact crossover

Sales Pitch: “An urban sanctuary.”

More Forgotten Concepts

2005 Ford SYNus

Ford SYNus

Details:

First seen at 2005 Detroit Auto Show, the SYNus Concept was a compact crossover that featured a tough, armored-vehicle exterior with a comfort-themed cabin. The vehicle was a collaboration between Spanish designer Jose Paris (exterior) and industry veteran Joe Baker (interior).

The bank-vault-esque exterior included bullet-resistant glass and armored shielding for the windshield and side glass which appeared when the vehicle was in “Lockdown Mode.” The modern cabin featured seating for four, and included a hideaway rear bench seat and front bucket seats that could be rotated 180 degrees to face the rear of the vehicle. In place of a rear window, the SYNus featured a large TV monitor.

The SYNus’s drivetrain, borrowed  from the European Ford Mondeo, was a 2.0-liter “Duratorq” turbodiesel engine coupled to a 5-speed manual transmission.

Pronounced “sin-u-ehs,” the SYNus name was a pairing of syn—sort for synthesis—and us—for urban sanctuary. Ford had initially considered calling the concept Armadillo, but discovered that Fiat had used the name for a concept in 1996.

Review Flashback: 2001 Hummer H1

Ford SYNus

Ford SYNus

CG Says:

It’s hard to pick the best dystopian landscape for this rolling exercise in vehicular paranoia, but I’m going to go with that of Robocop. I saw this vehicle in the flesh when it first made the rounds, and still wonder how a concept car designed for the bleakest of realities made for good, happy, move-the-sheetmetal fun. Strange that Ford stopped with the armor cladding. Why not include a solar-powered dehydrated-meal reconstituter, and a water purification system? I am happy to report that nothing this depressing or paramilitary-looking has made its way into Ford showrooms since the SYNus debuted, so we’ll just call this odd exercise a one-off and forget about it.

Cars of Cuba: A Gallery

Ford SYNus Concept

Ford SYNus

Click below for enlarged images

Listen to the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

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Ford SYNus Gallery

 5 Vehicle Shopping Tips for Tall Guys

Ford SYNus Concept

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First Spin: 2021 Cadillac Escalade

2021 Cadillac Escalade

2021 Cadillac Escalade Platinum in Crystal White Tricoat

Consumer Guide Automotive Cadillac’s trademark “Standard of the World” tagline was first employed by the luxury brand after winning the 1908 Dewar Trophy, an honor presented by Britain’s Royal Automobile Club to recognize carmakers for “furthering the interests and advancements of the industry.”

More Consumer Guide First Spins

Though use of the Standard of the World slogan has lapsed from time to time over the past century, Cadillac’s marketing team has kept the familiar words handy, applying them mostly to print advertising at irregular intervals.

2021 Cadillac Escalade Platinum

Measuring in at 211.9 inches, the standard-length 2021 Escalade is 8 inches longer overall than the previous-gen model.

Sadly, it has been several decades since anyone would claim with any degree of sincerity that Cadillac was, indeed, the Standard of the World. One reason for this is that Cadillac is now positioned as a mainstream premium brand, generally priced and cross-shopped against products from Lincoln and lower-priced offerings from the likes of BMW and Mercedes-Benz. This puts Cadillac in a difficult place from which to make claims of absolute global superiority. Additionally, a generation of lackluster product offerings, including most models designed and sold in the Eighties and Nineties, did considerable damage to Cadillac’s reputation.

At least initially, the first Escalades seemed poised to be another blight on Cadillac’s good name. Though a sales success from its inception in 1998, the big, brash, overtly trucky Escalade was initially regarded by the automotive media—and much of the buying public—as a cheap, easy, and cynical way for Cadillac to cash in on America’s budding hunger for SUVs.

Test Drive: 2017 Cadillac Escalade

2021 Cadillac Escalade platinum

Given the plethora of available features, the Escalade’s control layout is laudably simple. Drivers unwilling to use the infotainment touchscreen may avail themselves of the rotary controller located aft of the shift lever on the center console, which can be used for most infotainment functions instead.

Literally a re-trimmed Chevrolet Tahoe with an upscale price tag, the chrome-laden Escalade became a rolling tribute to indulgent living and was quickly embraced by both hip-hop culture and spend-happy suburbanites. Any concern regarding the impact of selling a giant, fuel-thirsty, arguably garish SUV to Cadillac’s reputation as a purveyor of refined luxury vehicles became moot as the Escalade quickly became the single most profitable vehicle in the entire General Motors lineup.

Test Drive: Lincoln Navigator Reserve

Curved OLED

The Escalade’s massive OLED dash display screen is notable for its image clarity (twice the pixel density of a 4K TV, according to Cadillac) and for being the first curved LED display used in an automobile.

Funny thing about the Escalade, though: With each new generation, the big Cadillac became less and less a showroom sore thumb, and more the core element by which the brand was defined. Though the Escalade is still closely related to the Chevrolet Tahoe—and Chevy Suburban, as well as the similar GMC Yukon and Yukon XL—Cadillac designers have taken care to see that the Escalade stands alone among GM’s big trucks, by giving it unique interiors, more powerful standard engines, and the sort of premium features that customers would expect to find on true luxury vehicles. And now that crossovers and SUVs account for roughly two thirds of all light-duty vehicle sales, the Escalade seems exactly like the kind of thing you might find at an American luxury-vehicle dealership.

First Look: Jeep Grand Wagoneer Concept

Escalade 2nd-row seating

There’s big-adult-friendly space in the second-row seats, which also flip forward for access to the third row.

And, as this is published, Cadillac dealers are welcoming the first wave of fifth-generation Escalades into their showrooms, likely encouraged by the seemingly countless advancements and new features the big profit generator boasts. More importantly, perhaps, the 2021 Escalade represents Cadillac’s best effort in at least a generation to produce a vehicle that is arguably best in class.

The Escalade, like its downmarket Chevrolet and GMC cousins, is a larger vehicle for 2021. The standard-length Escalade rides on a 120.9-inch wheelbase and measures 211.9 inches long overall—respectively, that’s 4.9 inches and 8 inches longer than the previous-gen model. The long-wheelbase Escalade ESV now rides on a 134.1-inch wheelbase (up 4.1 inches) and stretches 227 inches overall (up 2.7 inches). Both variants are now 2.4 inches taller as well.

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2021 Cadillac Escalade Platinum

The Escalade’s wheelbase stretch for 2021 greatly improves passenger space in the third-row seats–legroom grows by 10 inches.

The added length pays off in terms of passenger room and comfort. Except for front-row head- and legroom, both of which decline by less than an inch for 2021, passenger room is more generous. Standard-length Escalades now boast up to 42 inches of second-row legroom (a 3-inch improvement) and 35 inches of third-row legroom (up 10 inches.) The ESV shares the standard-length Escalade’s second-row dimensions, but boasts 37 inches of third-row legroom, up 2 over the ’20 ESV.

Predictably, cargo volume has expanded for 2021 as well. The big news (pun intended) is the added cargo volume aft of the third-row seatbacks. Standard-length models now accommodate up to 25.5 cubic feet of stuff (up from 15.2), and ESVs up to 42.9 feet (up from 39.3).

Also new for 2021 is Escalade’s rear suspension. Replacing the previous generation’s solid-axle/coil-spring arrangement is a sophisticated independent multilink system which, in part, allowed Cadillac to lower the cargo-area load floor, creating some of that additional cargo space discussed above.

Returning for 2021 is GM’s Magnetic Ride Control (MRC) adaptive suspension system. Found also on other GM vehicles (including the Chevrolet Corvette), MRC uses sensors to “read” the road and make real-time shock-absorber adjustments accordingly. The MRC is supplemented on higher trim levels by Cadillac’s new Air Ride Adaptive Suspension, which, among other functions, lowers the vehicle for easy entry and exit, and raises the vehicle for added off-road clearance when needed.

Also returning for 2021 is Escalade’s burly 6.2-liter V8, which is again rated at 420 horsepower and 460 lb-ft of torque. Newly optional is a 3.0-liter turbodiesel six, which is rated at 277 horsepower and matches the V8 exactly for torque. Both engines mate to a 10-speed automatic transmission and a limited-slip rear axle, and offer available all-wheel drive. The EPA rates Escalades equipped with the V8 engine at 15 mpg in the city, 20 on the highway, and 17 combined. Those numbers each drop by one on AWD models. Diesel-engine estimates are not yet available.

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Cadillac AKG Audio

The new Escalade marks the first time AKG–a maker of high-end microphones, headphones and audio systems–has ventured into automotive audio. A 12-speaker system is standard, and a 36-speaker system is available.

If you’ve heard any of the buzz preceding the launch of Caddy’s new big rigs, you’ve liked heard about the “OLED” curved instrument panel. The OLED (Organic Light Emitting Diode) screens cover a whopping 38 inches of dashboard space, and include a trip-computer panel to the left of the instrument panel, the instrument panel itself, and the console infotainment screen in what looks convincingly like a single flowing panel. The “organic” part of OLED is the curve of the panels, which wrap gently around the driver, providing better sightlines and arguably easier touch operation. Per Cadillac, the Escalade is the first vehicle to employ a curved LED panel.

All of this tech is used to good effect. Cadillac boasts that the resolution of the OLED display is sharper than that of a 4K TV, a claim which seems reasonable to us; the screens also seem nearly impervious to washing out in bright sunlight.

The infotainment-touchscreen look and operation will feel familiar to anyone who has experienced either earlier versions of Cadillac’s CUE operating system or Apple CarPlay. For drivers unwilling to smudge the touchscreen, a BMW iDrive-like rotary knob can be employed for most functions instead.

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2021 Cadillac Escalade

As expected, the Escalade offers excellent cargo space, and it’s especially improved in the regular-length models for 2021. There’s 25.5 cubic feet behind the third row, 72.9 behind the second row, and 121.0 behind the first row.

It’s the huge instrument panel (IP) which impresses most. The IP can be used in any of four modes, two of which present various combinations of information. Another appears as a conventional gauge cluster, including a large, round speedometer. The fourth mode allows the driver to view the same navigation-screen map as displayed on the main infotainment screen, but at a different scale—which proved surprisingly handy when this editor chose to sneak through a subdivision in search of a shortcut around traffic during one especially challenging commute.

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2021 Cadillac Escalade Platinum

The right-side cargo-area wall is home to a handy electrical outlet, seat-back-fold release-latch buttons for the second-row seats, and power folding/raising buttons for the third-row seats.

Also available is Augmented Reality Navigation, which displays a forward-facing camera view on the IP screen and overlays the real-time video image with graphic—and very easy to follow—navigation arrows and prompts. This can be especially helpful when trying to determine what lane on the highway to stay in, or which off-ramp to take. The Augmented Reality system can also be handy when driving directly into the sun, as the filtered image is free of haze and glare.

Other controls are largely convenient and easy to manipulate. Kudos to Cadillac for keeping the console area clean and uncluttered.

Speaking of the interior, Consumer Guide’s access to the new Escalade thus far has been limited to a standard-length Platinum model with 4WD. The top-line trim level’s cabin presents well, with plenty of high-grade leather, luxurious-looking real-wood trim, and tastefully applied bright accents. We did notice a few spots—the lower seat sides when viewed from outside the truck—where some materials cost-cutting seems to have taken place, but from a seated position in the vehicle, the cabin looks, well, world class.

On the road the V8 engine shines, providing plenty of power and working well with the polished 10-speed automatic transmission. The once-prominent exhaust note seems to have been squelched a bit for 2021—though a welcome burble can he heard when taking off from a stop, or when passing or merging. Otherwise, the Escalade cabin is impressively quiet; in fact, it is among the quietest vehicles we’ve reviewed in some time.

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2021 Cadillac Escalade Platinum

It took us a minute to find the Escalade’s power-rear-liftgate button–it’s “hidden” in the Cadillac crest badge.

Ride quality, too, is impressive. The Escalade offers four drive modes: Tour, Sport, Off-Road, and Tow/Haul. Tour is the default standard mode, and in this setting the Escalade’s ride quality is sublime. Selecting the Sport mode firms things up a bit, with little detriment to ride quality. In Sport mode, the Escalade is surprisingly easy to hustle through traffic, and the reduced lean in corners is welcome. We would be loath to suggest this big Caddy is actually sporty, but it gets around well given its mass. We suggest keeping the Escalade in Sport mode until you hit the highway, and falling back to Tour mode for optimal ride comfort. Note that our experience is limited at this point to an Escalade equipped with the Air Ride Adaptive Suspension. We hope to report on a less-well-equipped example sometime soon.

The Escalade list of safety and driver assistance features is almost too long to list, but in addition to the expected features are front pedestrian detection and braking, rear pedestrian alert, automatic emergency braking, rear camera mirror, rear cross-traffic alert, lane-change alert with blind-spot alert, and lane-keep assist with lane-departure warning. Also, a high-definition surround-view camera can be activated at any time to assist with low-speed, tight-spot maneuvering.

Cadillac’s enhanced Super Cruise semi-autonomous driving system will also be available on the 2021 Escalade, but was not included on our test truck. You can read about our experience with an earlier version of this system here.

Cadillac claims it has largely held the line on Escalade pricing, but that doesn’t prevent us from wincing a little when reading the window sticker. The Escalade is offered in five trim levels for 2021: Luxury ($76,195), Premium Luxury ($82,995), Sport ($85,595), Premium Luxury Platinum ($99,995), and Sport Platinum (also $99,995). All of these starting prices are sans options and the $1295 destination charge.

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Escalade Wheels

The Escalade’s standard 6.2-liter V8–which is essentially carried over from the previous-gen model–is rated at a healthy 420 horsepower. Twenty-two-inch 10-spoke polished wheels are standard on the Premium Luxury Platinum.

For each trim level, moving to the long-wheelbase ESV adds exactly $3000 to the bottom line; adding all-wheel drive also tacks on a $3000 premium. The Sport models are new for 2021; they don’t include any performance upgrades, but do add specific trim elements such as a unique mesh grille texture, black grille surround, and black bodyside moldings.

Consumer Guide’s well-equipped 4WD Platinum came to $110,565. For the record, we averaged a reasonable 17.7 mpg in a test that consisted of a slight majority of highway driving. So, we were right on par with the Escalade’s EPA-estimated economy.

A quick note about the new AKG audio system: We’re not audiophiles, but to this editor’s ears, this is one of the best car-audio systems currently available. Note that we’ve only been exposed to the top-line 36-speaker Studio Reference system, and not the standard 19-speaker arrangement found in lower trim levels.

So, is Escalade the large-luxury-SUV Standard of the World? Having spent little time with SUVs such as the Bentley Bentayga and Rolls-Royce Cullinan, we’re not entirely comfortable passing that judgement. That said, the 2021 Escalade is certainly the vehicle in Cadillac’s lineup most worthy of a “best-in-class” nomination.

The new Escalade is certainly everything returning shoppers could want in a huge Cadillac SUV. For 2021, the truck is now brimming with high-tech features and a heightened level of refinement that may well lure European big-truck intenders out of their rides. Color us impressed.

Quick Spin: 2020 Cadillac XT6 Sport

2021 Cadillac Escalade platinum

The redesigned-for-2021 Escalade brings a whole new level of technology, luxury features, and all-around refinement to Cadillac’s biggest, bling-iest SUV.

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2021 Cadillac Escalade Platinum Gallery

2021 Cadillac Escalade

Photo Feature: 1950 DeSoto Custom Station Wagon

1950 DeSoto Custom Station Wagon

1950 DeSoto Custom Station Wagon

Note: The following story was excerpted from the February 2017 issue of Collectible Automobile magazine

The wood-bodied station wagon was in its twilight years by 1950. It had progressed from commercial depot hack in the Teens and Twenties to something of a status symbol in the Thirties and Forties. Station wagons were just the thing for hunting trips or carrying riding tack to and from the stables. In the 1939 movie Dark Victory, Bette Davis’s socialite-horsewoman character describers herself as part of the “station wagon crowd.”

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By then wagons were well styled and crafted. The fine wood suggested yachts and required almost as much maintenance. Proper care meant yearly varnishing but even then the wood could rot, and sections needed to be replaced. Changes in temperature caused wood to expand or contract. Screws and bolts had to periodically be tightened to avoid squeaks and rattles.

1950 DeSoto Custom Station Wagon

1950 DeSoto Custom Station Wagon

Meanwhile, families of more average means noticed that wagons would be good to carry a growing family and its gear. However, the station wagon was often the most expensive bodystyle in a make’s lineup, and nobody wanted to add varnishing the family car to the list of household chores. The steel-bodied station wagon changed that. A new kind of station wagon crowd was more likely to be seen at Scout jamborees or PTA meetings than at horse shows. 

Woodie Madness! Classic Ads Featuring Small Wood Sided Wagons

1950 DeSoto Custom Station Wagon

1950 DeSoto Custom Station Wagon

Willys and Crosley built the first steel station wagons, but the Crosley was a tiny subcompact and the Willys was more of a sport-utility vehicle. The first mainstream full-size steel wagon was the 1949 Plymouth Suburban. By 1953, Buick was building the last American wagon with structural-wood construction. However, many people liked the “woodie” look and woodgrain appliqués were applied to steel wagons to evoke a bygone era.

The 1950 DeSoto Custom featured here was among the last DeSoto wagons with real wood. DeSoto followed Plymouth’s lead and replaced its woodie with a steel-bodied wagon late in the 1950 model year. Only 600 wood wagons were built in 1950.  Perhaps only two or three restored examples remain.  

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1950 DeSoto Custom Station Wagon

1950 DeSoto Custom Station Wagon

The upright styling beloved by Chrysler Corporation President K. T. Keller worked well on the DeSoto station wagon. For 1950, there was a new variation of the brand’s toothy grille, and a new hood ornament that featured the helmeted head of Hernando de Soto with a plastic face that glowed when the headlights were lit. Underhood was a 236.6-cid L-head six that developed 112 horsepower. The engine was more impressive than its specifications. The six was smooth and a good hill climber. It included a high-compression head, well-engineered
ignition system, and low-friction Superfinish internal parts to reduce wear. A three-speed manual transmission was standard on base DeLuxe models, while Customs had a semiautomatic transmission dubbed “Tip-Toe Hydraulic Shift with Gyrol Fluid Drive.” 

Photo Feature: 1953 Chrysler New Yorker Town & Country

1950 DeSoto Custom Station Wagon

1950 DeSoto Custom Station Wagon

This car is owned by Jim Edwards of Valley Center, California. He bought it restored, but went through it thoroughly to get it into the condition seen here. The DeSoto won the San Diego Automotive Museum Director’s Choice Award at the La Jolla Concours d’Elegance. Edwards says the wagon is good to drive and climbs hills with ease. “The engine is so smooth it’s crazy. At idle, you don’t know that it’s running,” he says.

Just Your Average 1948 Chrysler Town and Country Convertible…with a V10

1950 DeSoto Custom Station Wagon

1950 DeSoto Custom Station Wagon

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1950 DeSoto Custom Station Wagon Gallery

Test Drive: 2020 Hyundai Venue Denim

2020 Hyundai Venue Denim Edition

2020 Hyundai Venue Denim in “Denim” metallic blue with white roof

2015 Audi Q52020 Hyundai Venue Denim

Class: Subcompact Crossover

Miles driven: 519

Fuel used: 14.4 gallons

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B
Power and Performance C
Fit and Finish B+
Fuel Economy A
Value A-
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy C
Tall Guy B+
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 121-hp 1.6-liter
Engine Type 4-cyl
Transmission CVT automatic
Drive Wheels FWD

Real-world fuel economy: 35.7 mpg

Driving mix: 35% city, 65% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 30/34/32 (city/highway/combined)

Fuel type: Regular gas

Base price: $22,050 (not including $1120 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Carpeted floor mats ($135)

Price as tested: $23,305

Quick Hits

The great: Excellent observed fuel economy; value for the money

The good: Extra-tidy exterior dimensions and slightly elevated driving position make parking and close-quarters maneuvering easy

The not so good: So-so acceleration; all-wheel drive is not available

More Venue price and availability information

John Biel

It may have been decades since you last heard the expression “population explosion.” It always came up in serious discussions of the expanding count of humankind and what would be required to sustain it. Demand for food, shelter, and energy naturally topped all concerns. Somewhere way, way down the list was “how will all these people run errands?” In our time, the answer to at least that question has become clear: Crossovers.

Hyundai Venue Denim Edition

The Venue competes most directly with the Nissan Kicks–both are value-focused crossovers at the small end of the subcompact SUV class, and both are front-wheel drive only–all-wheel drive is not available.

Sort-of-almost sport-utility vehicles have undergone their own population explosion, with brand after brand fruitfully multiplying and seemingly filling every crevice the market affords. Is it any wonder, then, that for 2020 Hyundai is adding the Venue as its fifth crossover (sixth if you count the California-only Nexo fuel-cell vehicle)?

The Venue supplants the 5.1-inch-longer Kona as the entry-level SUV in Hyundai’s lineup. It is one of two newcomers to the subcompact class (the Buick Encore GX is the other) and is one of the smallest, most affordable vehicles in a segment that has ballooned to 16 entries—plus eight more hoity-toity premium jobs.

Test Drive: 2020 Hyundai Kona Ultimate

2020 Hyundai Venue Denim Edition

Even in topline Denim trim, the Venue’s cabin ambiance isn’t plush, but it’s surprisingly pleasant considering the bottom line is just a bit more than $23K. Controls are nicely laid out and easy to use, and welcome equipment such as heated seats and keyless entry/push-button start are standard along with a suite of active safety features.

Anything under the general heading of SUV conjures up visions of off-road—or at least rough-road—prowess, but the Venue is part of a subcompact subgenre that leaves that kind of tough stuff to others. It is a front-wheel-drive vehicle, period. We’ll defer to the Venue’s Consumer Guide “Best Buy” report to explain how it stacks up against some other leading vehicles in the class, but it is inexpensive. Starting prices (with delivery) for the three-tiered model lineup run from $18,470 to $23,170. CG testers sampled a top-level Denim model that came to $23,305 with the addition of a set of carpeted floor mats.

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2020 Hyundai Venue Denim Edition

The Denim’s exterior color and interior upholstery and both exclusive to the model, and they’re mandatory–no other colors are offered. Front-seat space is good for average size adults, but big and tall drivers will need to put their seats far back–where the front seatbacks can significantly intrude into the rear door apertures, as seen here.

Hand-me-downs are a fact of life in lots of big families, but baby Venue’s powerplant is all its own within the Hyundai crossover clan. It is a 1.6-liter 4-cylinder engine joined to a continuously variable automatic transmission (CVT)—though base SE models can also be had with a 6-speed manual gearbox. With just 121 horsepower and 113 lb-ft of torque (that doesn’t peak until 4500 rpm), acceleration is modest and hardly exciting. There is a selectable “Sport” mode because this is 2020, and everybody does it. In the Venue this means delayed “upshifts” from the CVT that are none too satisfying in street driving. Out on the highway, Sport seems to deliver a bit more midrange vim and vigor, but the setting mostly just leaves the little engine to work harder, not necessarily better.

The silver lining is fuel economy. The 1.6/CVT pairing is EPA-rated at 30 mpg in city driving, 34 mpg on the highway, and 32 combined. When this driver topped off after 50 test miles, 65 percent of them covered in city conditions, he recorded 30.6 mpg, but CG editors’ collective mileage neared 36 mpg.

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2020 Hyundai Venue Denim Edition

Given its extra-small exterior dimensions, the Venue offers more cargo room than you might expect–18.7 cubic feet behind the rear seats and 31.9 cu. ft. with the rear seats folded. One clever touch: the hard rear cargo cover (not shown) can be slid down to rest vertically behind the rear seats, enabling you to carry tall cargo without removing the cover entirely.

Ride is pleasantly smooth, with no vibration or looseness. Hit a bump, though, and it will be heard and felt in the cabin. The Venue steers easily, but without much feedback to the driver. Where are the limits when cornering? Take your best guess.

Where this new Hyundai truly earns its stripes is in the areas of passenger comfort and cargo room. There’s good front-seat headroom and legroom on seats with a pleasingly upright position for a good view of the road. Headroom is also generous in the second row, where legroom is a nice surprise in a vehicle this small. Two adults (or maybe three teens) will fit comfortably on the rear bench seat. Behind-the-seat cargo space is modest, but the 60/40-split rear seats fold flat to open up considerable load space—and absent all-wheel drive, liftover is fairly low to ease loading. There is lots of informal storage space under the floor around the spare tire.

The Denim Edition is available in one color scheme: a white roof over a particular shade of blue called—surprise!—Denim. The same shade appears in the interior, including on the fabric-and-leatherette seats. Off-white plastics and leatherette on the armrests, upper console, and lower dash provide a crisp contrast. The vast areas of unpadded plastic are grained and finished to a degree that makes the vehicle seem more premium than it really is—a nice trick. There are honest-to-goodness upmarket touches on hand, though. Standard equipment includes navigation, Android Auto/Apple CarPlay smartphone connectivity, heated front seats, and a leather-wrapped steering wheel and shifter knob to match the interior color.

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2020 Hyundai Venue Denim Edition

All Venues have a 1.6-liter 4-cylinder engine that puts out 121 horsepower. Seventeen-inch alloy wheels are standard on the topline Denim Edition and optional on the midline SELs in place of their standard 15-inch alloys.

Inputs to the audio system (with standard satellite radio) are easy to make on the 8-inch touchscreen. The climate-control system has big, convenient dials, one for setting temperature and another for selecting fan speed, with buttons for front and rear defrosters. Cabin storage rests with a big glove box, small console box under a sliding armrest, and a mesh pouch on the back of the front passenger seat. There are dual cup holders in the console and storage pockets in all four doors with bottle holders in the rear ones.

Standard safety features include forward-collision warning with automatic emergency braking and pedestrian detection, lane-keep assist, a driver-attention monitor, and blind-spot and rear cross-traffic alerts. The Venue Denim rolls on 17-inch alloy wheels, and boasts heated external mirrors, body-color mirror shells and door handles, LED projector headlights, roof rails, keyless entry and starting, dual USB charging ports, and Hyundai’s Blue Link connected services.

The population explosion of crossovers has opened the field to all shapes and sizes of vehicles. With the Venue, Hyundai seems to be making the case that there’s still at least a little room for another one.

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2020 Hyundai Venue Denim Edition

Hyundai’s new-for-2020 Venue impressed us enough that we’ve made it a mid-year addition to our 2020 Best Buy list. The Venue doesn’t have a surplus of power, space, or comfort/convenience features, but it does offer more of those virtues than you might expect at its penny-pinching prices–along with great fuel economy and a charming personality.

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2020 Hyundai Venue Denim Edition