Ford launches first
hybrid SUV
Hybrids are all the rage, and by
2006 some 30-plus hybrids are expected
to be on the market from various
manufacturers. With its Escape Hybrid
now available, Ford Motor Company
joins Honda and Toyota in the elite
hybrid club with a gasoline/electric-powered
vehicle. Honda has been selling hybrids
since December 1999 and Toyota’s
Prius has been available since mid
2000. Toyota’s luxury division,
Lexus, will introduce its midsize
RX330 SUV (the 400h) early next year
and Honda will introduce a hybrid
Accord before year’s end. But
for now, Ford is the first to offer
a hybrid SUV.
Consumers I’ve
spoken with say they would be interested
in purchasing a hybrid for one or
both of two reasons: to do their
part for cleaner vehicle emissions
and to significantly increase fuel
economy. The hybrids will certainly
meet the cleaner emissions expectation,
but don’t expect 40, 50 or
60 miles to the gallon. I recently
tested the Escape Hybrid, and while
fuel mileage is rated at 36 miles
per gallon in the city and 31 on
the highway, the best I achieved
was a considerably less 29.2 miles
per gallon. Expect the four-wheel-drive
version to get less mileage.
For comparison purposes,
the base 2.3-liter non-hybrid Escape
is rated at 24 miles per gallon for
city driving and 29 miles per gallon
on the highway. The base price for
the front-wheel drive Escape Hybrid
is $26,970 ($28,595 for all-wheel
drive); the 2.3-liter gasoline-powered
version starts at $19,855. In other
words, my Escape Hybrid returned
about the same mileage per gallon
as you can expect from the 2.3-liter
Escape, and it costs a whopping $7,000
more. Of course the mileage you get
depends, in part, on how you drive,
but at that rate the Hybrid will
never pay for itself if in fuel economy.
You may qualify for
a one-time federal tax deduction
of $1,500 on the Hybrid, which is
worth about $420 if you are in the
28 percent tax bracket. But again,
Ford is currently offering a $2,000
rebate on non-hybrid Escapes. It
seems the only reason to choose the
hybrid is for environmental concerns,
which for many consumers is reason
enough.
The Escape Hybrid
is propelled by 2.3-liter four-cylinder
gasoline engine, augmented by a 65-kilowatt
electric motor. When the vehicle
is at a stop, or near to it, the
gas engine shuts off instead of idling
inefficiently at a stoplight or in
stop-and-go traffic. It is quietly
propelled by the electric motor until
the vehicle reaches the 20 to 25
mile per hour range, or until the
driver stomps on the accelerator.
Then, the gasoline engine automatically
kicks in. It takes a gentle touch
of the accelerator to get the vehicle
to 20 to 25 mph without engaging
the gasoline engine. The combined
hybrid horsepower is 155, comparing
favorably to 153 horsepower in a
regular four-cylinder Escape.
Acceleration is quite
responsive, and on the highway, the
hybrid drives pretty much like the
non-hybrid. The battery pack sends
power to the electric power steering
and power brakes so the driver feels
no difference in either. That isn’t
the case, however, for the engine-belt-driven
air-conditioning compressor that
shuts down when the vehicle is in
battery mode. That won’t do
for hot Arizona summers and the Escape
interior gets uncomfortable quickly.
To keep the AC running, you have
to choose the “Max AC” setting
or direct the air to windshield defog.
This completely defeats the advantage
of the hybrid mileage, since these
measures keep the gasoline engine
operating with the vehicle stopped.
The vehicle’s
battery pack, consisting of 250 D-size
nickel-metal-hydride cells, is located
behind the rear seats under the cargo-area
floor. Several times I heard an unexpected
sound that I later discovered to
be a fan that keeps the battery pack
at the proper temperature. A huge
advantage of the hybrid is that the
Escape never needs plugging in. Regeneration
occurs as the vehicle slows, and
the motor becomes a generator.
The only available
transmission is the continuously
variable transmission (CVT) that
employs belts on variable-diameter
pulleys (rather than gears) to keep
the engine running in its most fuel-efficient
range.
The exterior of all
Escape models has been freshened
up for ’05 and has a cleaner
look. The hybrid is identical in
appearance to the standard-issue
Escape, with the only visual differences
being a hybrid emblem with a tiny
green leaf adorning each front fender
and rear lift-gate, and a rear vent
window on the driver’s side
that automatically opens to help
cool the battery pack.
Inside the cabin, the
Escape is rather plain and plasticky.
Nothing about the interior, including
build quality, is more than average.
Our tester had the optional $1,850
in-dash hybrid energy display system,
which includes audiophile and navigation
systems. This hybrid display gives
real-time and continuous average
mileage readouts on a small screen
in the center of the dash. The color
screen graphically shows how power
is flowing between the gas engine
and electric motor, and when the
battery pack is recharging. I found
it easier to tell when the vehicle
was in electric or gasoline mode
by watching the tachometer; when
the needle dropped to below zero
rpm and rested at the battery icon,
electric power was engaged. Push
a button and you’re returned
to a graph showing fuel economy for
any continuous fifteen-minute period
with the actual mileage indicated
on the center of the screen.
Ford covers all of
the hybrid components and the CVT
with an eight-year/100,000-mile warranty
with the balance of the vehicle covered
with a bumper-to-bumper three-year/36,000-mile
warranty.
Escape earned four
out of five stars for frontal crashworthiness
from the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration and it got
a perfect five stars for its side-impact
protection. It scored mid-pack for
rollover resistance.
In the final analysis,
the Escape Hybrid won’t make
economic sense for many buyers, especially
those who aren’t concerned
with the social responsibility of
cleaner air. For those who are, the
cleaner emissions outweigh the increased
cost of the vehicle.
Ford plans to produce
20,000 Escape Hybrids for 2005 and
more than 40,000 buyers have expressed
strong interest to dealers. I would
like to have seen better fuel economy,
but in general the Escape Hybrid
is a very nice package with an impressive
driving experience.
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