The Honda Pilot shares its platform with the
Acura MDX sport-utility and
Odyssey minivan, both highly successful vehicles. Like the MDX and
Odyssey, the Pilot is a joy in daily use. While its flexible
and roomy interior belies its official status as a compact
SUV, its maneuverability, handling and ease of parking quickly
remind you what an extraordinarily efficient package Honda
has created.
The Pilot shares virtually all its key mechanical systems
"engine, transmission, all-wheel-drive system, and brakes"
with the more expensive Acura MDX, and it shows. Everything
about the way the SUV behaves on the road feels just a little
better than was necessary to beat the competition.
The 240-horsepower 3.5-liter V6 is more than adequate to
propel the Pilot. (Curb weight is 4416 pounds for LX, 4439
pounds for EX.) Acceleration performance is excellent, particularly
in the 40-60 mph passing range that matters most in a quick
run to the grocery store or when running late on the way
to soccer practice. The Pilot outguns the V6-powered
Toyota Highlander by 20 horsepower. More important, the engine produces 245
pounds-feet of torque from 3000 rpm to 5000 rpm. That compares
to 222 pounds-feet at 4400 rpm for the V6 Highlander. GM's
midsize SUVs, the
Chevrolet TrailBlazer,
GMC Envoy and
Oldsmobile Bravada, offer a 4.2-liter straight-six producing 270 horsepower
and 275 pounds-feet of torque, but those truck-based SUVs
are about 200 pounds heavier than the Pilot.
The automatic transmission shifts smoothly and precisely,
even under hard acceleration. The five-speed electronically
controlled automatic benefits from Honda's electronic Grade
Logic Control system, which monitors throttle position,
speed and acceleration to avoid hunting between gears. The
transmission's computer controller holds lower gears longer
than normal for better performance going up hills and to
provide engine braking on downhill grades. The all-wheel-drive
system is Honda's VTM-4 (Variable Torque Management 4WD)
full-time four-wheel drive with an electronically locking
rear differential.
The speed-variable rack-and-pinion steering provides
excellent feedback and adjusts assistance smoothly as the
SUV accelerates. The steering wheel returns to center comfortably
and intuitively for maneuvers in parking lots and tight
driveways.
Ride and handling compares well to the best midsize cars.
It is stable at highway speeds, nimble in parking lots,
and sufficiently well-damped to run over winter-buckled
and pothole-laden urban streets without discomfiting its
passengers. The steering wheel transmits road conditions
enough to keep the driver informed without jerking the wheel
at every pavement disruption. Passengers in the second-row
seats found the ride equally comfortable, but the third
row suffered somewhat from being right over the rear wheels.
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Unlike many SUVs, the Pilot has enough sound insulation
to prevent bumps in the road from being transmitted to the
interior as noise. Given their cavernous interiors, it's
not uncommon for SUVs to become booming echo chambers on
rough roads. Even on Michigan's notoriously ragged freeways,
the Pilot's interior remained quiet enough to carry on a
normal conversation.
The Pilot felt stable and secure in simulated emergency
maneuvers carried out in an empty parking lot. The suspension
behaved with aplomb under both hard braking and acceleration.
The nose does not dive overmuch on sudden
deceleration, nor does the Pilot squat back on its haunches
in a fast start.
The anti-lock brakes (ABS) performed equally well
in simulated panic stops. The brake response is linear,
and smooth, providing a reassuring feeling of control even
under maximum braking. Pedal feedback from the ABS was minimal,
removing one possible distraction that a driver really doesn't
need in an emergency. The electronic brake distribution
system (EBD), designed to reduce braking distances, performed
transparently, as it should. Honda has not provided braking
distance figures for the Pilot, but our test vehicle felt
on a par with its competition.