First Look: 2022 Chevrolet Bolt EV and 2022 Chevrolet Bolt EUV

2022 Chevrolet Bolt EUV (left) and EV

2022 Chevrolet Bolt EUV (left) and Bolt EV

Today Chevrolet unveiled its redesigned-for-2022 Bolt EV electric vehicle, and also took the wraps off the Bolt EV’s all-new, SUV-like sibling: the 2022 Bolt EUV.

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The Bolt EUV shares its powertrain and basic architecture with the Bolt EV, but it’s about 6 inches longer overall, which gives it 3 inches more legroom than the EV in the back seat. However, the EUV’s cargo room is not improved over the EV. It’s actually a shade less, measuring at 16.3 cubic feet behind the rear seat and 56.9 cu. ft. with the rear seat backs folded, compared to the EV’s respective measurements of 16.6 and 57.0 cubic feet.

2022 Chevrolet Bolt EV

2022 Chevrolet Bolt EV

The Bolts’ all-electric powertrain is a single-motor drive unit that makes 200 horsepower. It has a 65 kWh lithium-ion battery that enables a Chevrolet-estimated driving range of 259 miles for the Bolt EV, and 250 miles for the slightly larger, heavier Bolt EUV.

The front-end design of both vehicles is highlighted by “high-eye” daytime running lamps (which also function as sequential turn signals) perched above the headlamps. Interior features include an 8-inch configurable digital gauge cluster, 10.2-inch infotainment touchscreen, and space-saving push-pull gear-selector buttons in place of a traditional shifter. A driver-selectable one-pedal driving mode increases regenerative braking to the degree that the driver can speed up, slow down, and come to a complete stop using only the accelerator pedal. Also included is a Regen on Demand feature, which enables the driver to initiate regenerative braking by pulling on a steering-wheel-mounted paddle.

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2022 Chevrolet Bolt EUV

2022 Chevrolet Bolt EUV

Heated/ventilated front seats and heated outboard seats are available on both Bolts, as are a 360-degree surround-view monitor, rearview-mirror camera display, wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto connectivity, 4G LTE Wi-Fi hotspot, and wireless charging.

The Bolt EUV is available with GM’s Super Cruise semi-autonomous hands-free driver-assistance system. It’s the first Chevrolet to offer the feature, which is currently offered only on select Cadillac models. The EUV gets the base version of Super Cruise—not the enhanced version offered at Cadillac, which includes hands-free lane-change capability.

DC fast-charging capability, which enables the Bolt EV to add up to 100 miles of driving range in 30 minutes of charging (up to 95 miles for the Bolt EUV), is standard. The myChevrolet smartphone app has an Energy feature that enables users to locate charging stations across the country to plan for a road trip. A Dual Level Charge Cord, which has a changeable plug that allows charging on a standard 120-volt three-prong outlet or a 240-volt outlet, is standard on the EUV and available on the EV. And, in partnership with EV home-charging company Qmerit, Chevrolet will cover the installation of Level-2 charging capability in the homes of eligible buyers/leasers of a Bolt EV or EUV.

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2022 Bolt EV

2022 Chevrolet Bolt EV

Both Bolts are slated to go on sale in all 50 states this summer. The Bolt EV starts at $31,995, and the Bolt EUV starts at $33,995 (both prices include destination). The Bolt EV’s sub-$32K base MSRP represents a price reduction of more than $5000 over the 2021 model. A limited-production Launch Edition version of the Bolt EUV, which includes Super Cruise, a panoramic sunroof, unique wheels, an illuminated charge port, and special badging, will start at $43,495. Even though the federal tax credit of $7500 is no longer offered on General Motors vehicles, there may be other state and local incentives that could lower the actual transaction price a bit more.

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CG Says:

The redesigned Chevrolet Bolt EV and new Bolt EUV represent a further commitment to an all-EV future from General Motors, but neither vehicle feels like a full step forward at this point. The electric powertrain is essentially carryover technology, and the Bolt EUV isn’t radically different from its Bolt EV sibling. The EUV’s additional passenger room and added features are welcome enhancements that may nab customers who wouldn’t have considered a Bolt EV, but all-wheel drive is not on the menu, and even Chevrolet calls the EUV “SUV-like”—not an SUV—in its official press materials.

However, the pricing of both 2022 Bolts is very aggressive—even without a federal tax credit—and the other new features and enhancements should help these vehicles attract more first-time EV buyers and bridge the gap to when GM’s forthcoming, next-generation Ultium battery technology hits the market.

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2022 Chevrolet Bolt EV and 2022 Chevrolet Bolt EUV Gallery

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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.”

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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

First Look: 2021 Lexus IS

2021 Lexus IS

2021 Lexus IS

The COVID-19 pandemic may have put the kibosh on traditional auto shows for the near future, but automakers still have new and redesigned products poised to hit the market, and those manufacturers are increasingly turning to the Internet to debut their soon-to-arrive new vehicles. Today there were two online unveilings, in fact—Nissan took the wraps off its redesigned 2021 Rogue compact SUV this morning, and this evening Lexus debuted a revamped version of its rear-drive-based compact sport sedan via a Facebook Live webcast.

2021 Lexus IS

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The 2021 Lexus IS soldiers on its existing platform, but gets freshened styling, increased structural rigidity, updated suspension components, and some new tech features. Save for minor increases of a little over an inch in overall length and width, and a fractional decrease in height, the car’s dimensions are unchanged. The new bodywork sports crisper lines all around, a dramatic full-width taillight, and slimmer headlights that integrate the signature checkmark-shaped daytime running lights, which were previously separate. Chassis updates were aimed at reducing unsprung weight, and include 20-percent-lighter coil springs and forged-aluminum A-arms in place of the previous steel units.

2021 Lexus IS

2021 Lexus IS

The IS’s powertrains and model-naming structure carry over from the 2020 model. The rear-drive IS 300 is powered by a turbocharged 2.0-liter 4-cylinder paired with an 8-speed automatic transmission, while the all-wheel-drive IS 300 gets a 260-hp 3.5-liter V6 paired with a 6-speed automatic. The IS 350 is powered by a 311-hp version of the same 3.5-liter V6, paired with an 8-speed automatic in rear-drive form and a 6-speed automatic with AWD.

The performance-oriented F Sport trim level will now be available only on the IS 350; it had previously been offered on the IS 300 as well. F Sports get unique bodywork elements such as a front bumper with functional aerodynamic enhancements, distinctive grille, rear bumper, rear lip spoiler and rocker-panel moldings. Other F Sport exclusives include 19-inch wheels, cool-air intake with sound generator, sport pedals, and F Sport exhaust and diffuser.

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2021 Lexus IS

2021 Lexus IS

A Dynamic Handling Package for F Sport models adds a Torsen limited-slip differential, Adaptive Variable Suspension, unique carbon-fiber rear spoiler and rearview mirror caps, and a unique BBS-brand 19-inch wheel. (Eighteen-inch wheels replace the previous 17s on non-F-Sport IS models.)

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2021 Lexus IS

2021 Lexus IS

The interior is freshened with trim updates and a new infotainment system that features Apple CarPlay, Android Auto, and Amazon Alexa compatibility, as well an available 10.3-inch touchscreen. The available Mark Levinson Premium Surround Sound Audio System is upgraded from 17 speakers from 15, and gets a substantial boost in wattage—to 1800 watts from 835. The Lexus Safety System+ suite of active safety features is upgraded to version 2.5, which means it gets enhanced radar and camera capabilities, and an updated adaptive cruise control system that can accelerate automatically when the turn signal is activated to overtake a vehicle moving slower than the preset speed.

The 2021 Lexus IS is scheduled to go on sale late this fall. Pricing info will be released closer to that time; we expect those numbers to stay close to the 2020 IS’s base-MSRP range of $39,000-$45,000.

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2021 Lexus IS

2021 Lexus IS

CG Says:

Hmmm. Not a whole lot new here, but perhaps that’s to be expected. Premium compact sport sedans aren’t the hottest category in the market right now, so it makes sense that Lexus would take a conservative approach to the IS’s re-do. The IS’s basic platform dates back to the 2014 model year, and the 3.5-liter V6 goes back even further. Even though it doesn’t bring any substantial revisions, the 2021 revamp should keep the IS fresh in Lexus’s lineup for at least a couple more years.

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2021 Lexus IS

2021 Lexus IS

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2021 Lexus IS