Well we did the deed. 2017 Outback. Has all the goodies. Went with the normally aspirated 4 banger. Had right at 30K miles on it. Lease return. Turned in a few months early.
Pretty impressive little machine and playing with the adaptive cruise and climbing and descending the roller coaster hills on the county road to home was impressive. Never seen a cruise control nail a speed like that up and downhill. It clearly uses the CVT to slow without revving. Interesting.
CVT is a tad odd. Their fake “shift points” are fine, if unnecessary, but you can make it hunt a bit if you mess around. If you drive normally it just feels like any normal auto.
Typical pilot. Went back outside for an hour with the POH in hand and sat in it looking up every button knob and switch and worked through every menu in the touchscreen.
Did get a tip from a fellow owner. He pointed out a software bug. If you get in and the stereo is loud and you put it in reverse to back up (activating the rear camera), the push to power on and off physical volume control stops working. You can twist volume up and down but slapping the power off is impossible with the backup camera displayed.
I mentioned the steering wheel mute button and he said he forgets that one is there and it’ll probably work but neither of us have tested it yet.
The Yukon went away at just under 190,000 miles and 16 years old. I drove it for 12. It had more miles in it but climbing on running boards in snow or ice was somewhat frightening now.
Karen already loves the thing and wants to find its twin to replace her truck “sometime soonish”. LOL. She’ll happily drive it if my stupid medical condition continues downhill.
With so much gadgetry on board we extended the manufacturer bumper to bumper to the full. 7yr/100,000 of the drivetrain.
We test sat or drove...
Mazda CX-30. It’s REALLY nice. Too low for me getting in and out and slightly too small for the giant dog but damn. Nice machine. Was very tempted.
Mazda CX-5. Correct height and size. Just didn’t spark any feelings at all. It’s a boredom bubble.
Honda CR-V: This was literally perfect in size and height and everything but the giant moving box Honda put around the tilt steering height adjustment constantly got in the way of my right knee getting in and out. You couldn’t leave the seat in the correct driving position for me at 5’ 11” with longer legs than torso and not whack your kneecap swinging the leg in. I really thought I must be doing something wrong and tried various seat positions. Nope. It just doesn’t work for me. Highly annoying.
Honda Pilot : Sat in it. Too tall. Had a huge running board and easier than any full sized truck but nope.
Honda Odyssey : Great if I get worse. But we decided not to go there yet. Cavernous. Too big for a daily driver kinda like the Yukon was. FWD only was a minus also for now where we live. Found an excellent used one and thought hard about it.
Subaru Forester : Nearly perfect. We were leaning toward a new one heavily but the dealer had over 30 lease returned Outbacks. Really hard to justify new over used with that much used selection only a few years old to choose from. Also the distinct lack of lighter interior colors being ordered and on the lot was a turn off. Minor but we ended up with a white exterior with creme leather. Not really available in the Forester inventory.
Subaru Ascent : If you need to haul people this was impressive. Since I have no reason to haul anyone, it got to the short list but got axed for just not needing the space. Just don’t need a family hauler but it gives the Odyssey a run for the money if you don’t need sliding doors.
We simulated stuff like getting into all of them with a big truck parked right against your door and such. The Odyssey and Forester won that demo hands down with the Outback in close second place. We decided we could live with that.
Karen likes the thing so much she started calling it “ours” before they’d even unburied it enough on a crammed lot to test drive it. LOL.
The tech is super impressive without being overwhelming. The 2020 Outback with the 18” touchscreen is overdone and ridiculous. They screwed up in removing manual climate controls IMHO. They kept real volume and tuning knobs though. Weird. Trying too hard to look like a Tesla. It’s a utility vehicle.
Anyway... Only complaint is we had an appointment but a walk in had the sales guy tied up and they were severely understaffed in finance and final paperwork. We waited almost four hours for paperwork completion after inking the initial deal. Mostly had to stick around because only the finance guy has the warranty numbers.
Sales guy is a student pilot and is going to Metro State for aviation in the fall. So at least we had something to talk about to pass the time. Karen just shook her head when she realized I had found another pilot to talk to. Hahaha.
Karen even ran into a patient who was buying a car Friday night! Haha. Not quite as entertaining as the propane farm across the highway exploding like when we bought her truck, but we’ve managed to have two very eclectic dealership experiences in a row now. Explosions and fireballs at one, and aviation and talking about blowing up turbocharged things at the next.
Oh yeah the sales guy married his wife in a drive thru chapel in Vegas. They wanted the Elvis chapel but it was Elvis’ day off. LOL!