Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 65; 2020 Auto Sales Analysis, 2021 Industry Forecast

2021 Industry Forecast

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

Whether you drive a car, need a car, or just occasionally bum a ride with friends, you’ve come to the right place. Join the editors of Consumer Guide Automotive as they break down everything that’s going on in the auto world. New-car reviews, shopping tips, driving green, electric cars, classic cars, and plenty of great guests. This is the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast.

Episode: 65

Broadcast date: January 24, 2021

Guest: Sam Fiorani

2020 Auto Sales Analysis, 2021 Industry Forecast

Host Tom Appel and co-hosts Jill Ciminillo and Damon Bell kick off the show by discussing the auto industry’s sales results for the 2020 calendar year, and examining a few of the winners and losers. Sam Fiorani, Vice President of Global Vehicle Forecasting for AutoForecast Solutions, joins us to delve deeper into the year that was, and talk about what industry trends are on the horizon for 2021. Tom has a sales-results quiz for Damon and Jill, and Damon runs down the latest articles on the Consumer Guide Daily Drive blog–including a First Spin review of the all-new 2021 Kia Sorento.

The Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast is broadcast every Sunday on Chicago’s WCPT AM 820 at 1:00 PM CST.

Discussed this week:

AutoForcast Solutions

AFS Vision YouTube channel

Meet Kia’s New Logo

First Spin: 2021 Kia Sorento

Forgotten Concept: Ford Forty-Nine

Forgotten Concept: Cadillac Voyage

Follow the crew:

The CG Daily Drive Blog

Car Stuff Facebook Page

Consumer Guide on Twitter

Sam Fiorani on Twitter

Tom on Twitter

Damon on Twitter

Jill on Twitter

Drive, She Said (Jill’s blog)

Tom on the radio:

Tom on WGN Radio

Tom on Green Sense Radio

Tom on the Stan Milam Show

The Crew

2021 Industry Forecast,

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 57; 2021 Consumer Guide Best Buys

For GREAT deals on a new or used Toyota check out Right Toyota TODAY!

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 62; GM’s Cars of 1961, Top Auto Stories of 2020

Top Auto Stories of 2020

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

Whether you drive a car, need a car, or just occasionally bum a ride with friends, you’ve come to the right place. Join the editors of Consumer Guide Automotive as they break down everything that’s going on in the auto world. New-car reviews, shopping tips, driving green, electric cars, classic cars, and plenty of great guests. This is the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast.

Episode: 62

Broadcast date: January 3, 2021

Guest: John Biel

GM’s Cars of 1961, Top Auto Stories of 2020

Host Tom Appel and co-hosts Jill Ciminillo and Damon Bell start off the show by discussing  their test-drive experiences in the Mercedes-Benz AMG E53 midsize sedan. Collectible Automobile magazine Editor-in-Chief John Biel joins us to chat about the great features in the February 2021 issue, including a profile on Bill Mitchell’s Corvette Stingray racer and an overview of GM’s cars of 1961. John sticks around for the third segment to help us review the top automotive stories of 2020, such as the effect of COVID-19 on the industry and automakers’ increasing focus on pure-electric vehicles.

The Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast is broadcast every Sunday on Chicago’s WCPT AM 820 at 1:00 PM CST.

Discussed this week:

Collectible Automobile Magazine

Corvettes

COVID-19

Electric Vehicles

Follow the crew:

The CG Daily Drive Blog

Car Stuff Facebook Page

Consumer Guide on Twitter

John Biel on Twitter

Tom on Twitter

Damon on Twitter

Jill on Twitter

Drive, She Said (Jill’s blog)

Tom on the radio:

Tom on WGN Radio

Tom on Green Sense Radio

Tom on the Stan Milam Show

The Crew

Top Auto Stories of 2020


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

Test Drive: 2020 Kia Forte GT

2020 Kia Forte GT

2020 Kia Forte GT in Fire Orange

VW Golf2020 Kia Forte GT

Class: Compact Car

Miles driven: 177

Fuel used: 5.8 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 30.5 mpg

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B
Power and Performance A-
Fit and Finish B
Fuel Economy B
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 B+
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 201-hp 1.6L
Engine Type 4-cyl
Transmission 7-speed automatic
Drive Wheels Front-wheel drive

Driving mix: 60% city, 40% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 27/35/30 (city, highway, combined)

Fuel type: Regular gas

Base price: $22,290 (not including $925 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Automatic Climate Control Package ($200), GT2 Package ($2200), GT 18-inch summer tires ($200), cargo mat ($95), carpeted floor mats ($135), cargo net ($50), auto-dimming mirror with HomeLink and compass ($350)

Price as tested: $26,445

Quick Hits

The great: Zippy acceleration from turbocharged engine; nicely balanced ride and handling; excellent level of performance and features for the money

The good: Decently spacious, nicely finished interior

The not so good: Occasionally quirky behavior from dual-clutch automatic transmission; folded rear seatbacks rest above trunk floor, which can complicate the loading of large items

More Forte price and availability information

John Biel

So now everyone at Kia is a hot-rodder all of a sudden? The folks behind the ballyhooed Stinger from a few years ago targeted the 2021 model year for a new midsize K5 sedan including a GT model. Before that happened, though, even the inexpensive Forte was gifted with a sports model.

A year after the compact sedan was fully redesigned, it adds a GT version as a 2020 line extender. It has a multi-link rear suspension and a 201-horsepower turbocharged 1.6-liter 4-cylinder paired with a 6-speed manual or 7-speed dual-clutch automatic transmission. At $23,215 with delivery to start, the GT is priced up in “luxury” Forte EX territory. Throw in a set of high-performance summer tires, a tech and audio package, and a few other stand-alone goodies and you’ll wind up with a $26,445 job like the one that Consumer Guide tested.

2020 Kia Forte GT

The sporty GT model is a new addition to the Forte lineup for 2020–it comes standard with a turbocharged engine, fully independent rear suspension, larger front brakes, and dual exhaust tips.

The GT should not be confused with the GT-Line, another new-for-’20 Forte. The latter appropriates some of the GT’s interior and exterior cosmetic touches but sticks with the 147-horse 2.0-liter 4-cylinder engine found in all other Fortes, and its automatic-trans option is a continuously variable unit without stepped gears. In addition to its engine, 7-speed autobox, and rear suspension, the GT also has a distinct sport-tuned dual-exhaust system (that terminates in bright tips), slightly bigger front brakes, and 18-inch alloy wheels with a machined finish. LED projection headlights with high-beam assist, an interior with ambient lighting and red accent stitching, and Kia’s UVO eServices telematics are other GT standard features. Note that the costlier manual-transmission GT includes a few more standard items, some of which were contained in the $2200 GT2 option package that was applied to the 7-speed car CG tested.

Meet the 2021 Consumer Guide Best Buys

2020 Kia Forte GT

The Forte’s dashboard layout is excellent, and the GT gets a number of trim features, such as a flat-bottomed sport steering wheel and contrast-stitching accents, that lend a sportier ambiance. A wireless charging pad is included in the extensive GT2 Package, which also adds a Harmon Kardon audio system and several active safety features.

Thanks to its 201 horsepower at 6000 rpm and 195 lb-ft of torque at a fairly immediate 1500 rpm, the Forte GT likes to get away with some spring in its step, even if it won’t throw you back in your seat. The ostensibly sportier exhaust setup does not raise an objectionable racket. The dual-clutch automatic, which can be shifted manually via steering-wheel paddle shifters, knocked out prompt downshifts for merging and passing on the highway—but getting off said roadway in “Sport” driving mode induced slurred downshifts as the car adjusted to slower surface-street speeds. EPA fuel-economy estimates for the GT automatic’s powerteam are 27 mpg in city use, 35 mpg on the highway, and 30 combined. When this driver went 66 miles, with 50 percent of that in city conditions, he logged 28.9 mpg.

Test Drive: 2021 Toyota Corolla SE Apex Edition

2020 Kia Forte GT

Also included in the GT2 Package are heated and ventilated front seats (the driver’s side is power adjustable) and “SOFINO” premium leatherette seat trim. The Forte’s rear-seat space is respectable for the compact-car class.

With a rear suspension that’s more sophisticated than the torsion-beam axle found on other Fortes, the GT provides a good balance of ride and handling characteristics. While the 18-inch wheels are the largest available and the 225/40R18 tires have the lowest profile in the vehicle line, ride comfort wasn’t dramatically different from what we saw from a 2019 Forte EX with a 17-inch wheel/tire package. Steering is easier than it is precise but roll control in turns is perhaps a little better than you might assume for a mass-market car. The 12-inch-diameter front brake rotors are one inch bigger than the discs used on other Fortes. Braking is responsive and predictable.

First Spin: 2021 Mazda 3 2.5 Turbo

2020 Kia Forte GT

There’s 15.3 cubic feet of cargo space in the Forte’s trunk–on par with most class rivals. Pull handles at the top edge of the trunk release the seat backs.

GT and GT-Line cars share a distinct leather-wrapped flat-bottom steering wheel and standard cloth-and-leatherette seats (though the test car had optional full-leatherette upholstery), but are much like any other Forte from a passenger’s perspective. Good rear-seat legroom is one of its bonuses, and a minimal floor hump makes possible three-adult occupancy of the back seat. Even the optional sunroof doesn’t detract too much from the fine headroom in both rows. Soft surfaces are distributed on the upper half of the instrument panel, the tops and centers of the front doors, the console lid, and all armrests.

Controls, be they for driving or operating comfort features, are legible and accessible. We like that the 8-inch touchscreen is accompanied by external tuning and volume knobs for the audio system, even with the Harman Kardon premium outfit that was added to the tester. Both the manual single-zone and automatic dual-zone climate units use handy rotating dials to make temperature settings, and the simpler unit also has dials for fan speed and mode.

There’s useful space to the glove box but the console cubby box is on the small side, and some of its space is given to a USB port. An open area ahead of the console contains USB, auxiliary, and power outlets on a bottom level, with a top level available for the optional wireless device charger. Front-door pockets each house a bottle holder, and two open cup holders are found in the console. Rear storage consists of a net pouch on the back of the front-passenger seat, bottle holders in the doors, and cup holders in the pull-down center armrest.

The trunk holds 15.3 cubic feet of cargo, and it’s useful space on a well-shaped, flat-floored load area. A little additional space resides around the spare tire under the trunk floor. For more capacity, the 60/40-split rear seats fold almost flat, but they rest a little above the level of the trunk floor, which may complicate loading. Also, a bulkhead between the trunk and cabin slightly limits the size of items that can be loaded onto the folded seats.

First Spin: 2021 Hyundai Elantra

2020 Kia Forte GT

The Forte GT’s turbocharged 1.6-liter 4-cylinder puts out 201 horsepower and 195 lb-ft of torque. Eighteen-inch machine-finished alloy wheels are standard; Michelin Pilot Sport summer performance tires are a $200 option.

Additional standard features that help round out the Forte GT are “smart key” entry and push-button starting, forward-collision warning and mitigation, lane-departure warning and lane-keeping assist, driver-attention warning, satellite radio, Android Auto and Apple CarPlay compatibility, a rearview camera with dynamic parking guidance, and LED daytime running lights and taillights. As such, Kia provides a decently equipped and competitively priced car while it scratches a sporty-car itch that it hopes you have, too.

6 Cool Things About the 2020 Nissan Versa

2020 Kia Forte GT

The GT is the priciest model in the Kia Forte lineup, but it still counts as a solid value among similarly powerful class rivals–if you’re looking for a daily-driver compact sedan with some extra spice, it’s well worth a test drive.

(Click below for enlarged images)

Follow John on Twitter

Listen to the very entertaining Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2020 Kia Forte GT Gallery

Meet the 2021 Consumer Guide Best Buys


For GREAT deals on a new or used Buick or GMC check out Motor City Buick GMC TODAY!

Test Drive: 2020 Chevrolet Traverse High Country

2020 Chevrolet Traverse High Country AWD

2020 Chevrolet Traverse High Country AWD in Black Cherry Metallic

Crossovers 2020 Chevrolet Traverse High Country AWD

Class: Midsize Crossover SUV

Miles driven: 161

Fuel used: 9.7 gallons

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort A
Power and Performance B+
Fit and Finish B
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 310-hp 3.6L
Engine Type V6
Transmission 9-speed automatic
Drive Wheels AWD

Real-world fuel economy: 18.5 mpg

Driving mix: 45% city, 55% highway

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

Base price: $53,200 (not including $1195 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: none

Price as tested: $54,395

Quick Hits

The great: Ample passenger and cargo room; nicely sorted road manners for a vehicle this large

The good: Standard 3.6 V6 supplies smooth, satisfying power

The not so good: Cabin materials aren’t as nice as they should be on a $50K-plus top-line model; some desirable safety features are restricted to high-end trim levels

More Traverse price and availability information

John Biel

Chevrolet builds a roomy and convenient midsize crossover SUV in the 3-row Traverse. It appeared in its present form starting with the 2018 model year, and has been “massaged” since with some changes in model offerings and equipment.

2020 Chevrolet Traverse High Country

At 204.3 inches long overall and 78.6 inches wide, the Chevrolet Traverse is one of the largest three-row SUVs in the midsize segment. Black Cherry Metallic is a new-for-2020 color.

For 2020, a new infotainment system finds its way into all models. With the deletion of the turbocharged 2.0-liter 4-cylinder engine formerly reserved for the front-wheel-drive Traverse RS, there is just one engine/transmission combination for the entire model line. Meanwhile, the top-line High Country now comes two ways, with a front-wheel-drive version added as a companion to the existing all-wheel-drive job.

Consumer Guide editors tested a ’20 Traverse High Country, albeit an AWD-equipped example. With no options added to it, the test vehicle stickered for the base price of $54,395, including delivery. That is $2300 more than the front-driver costs.

Quick Spin: 2020 Cadillac XT6 Sport

2020 Chevrolet Traverse High Country

Some of the Traverse High Country’s interior materials are a bit disappointing for a top-line trim level, but at least a full compliment of comfort and convenience features–including a wireless cellphone charger, heated and ventilated seats, heated steering wheel, navigation system, and adaptive cruise control– comes standard.

High Country is the only Traverse trim level that starts above $50,000. Its version of the easy-to-use new Chevrolet Infotainment 3 system includes an 8-inch touchscreen (some lesser models have a 7-inch screen) navigation, voice recognition, Bluetooth audio streaming, and Apple CarPlay/Android Auto smartphone compatibility. Other tech features include adaptive cruise control, keyless entry and starting, remote starting, wireless device charging, WiFi hotspot, satellite radio, and a 10-speaker Bose sound system. A thorough complement of driver-assistance and safety monitors counts rear parking assist, rear-camera mirror, rear cross-traffic alert, blind-spot alert, forward-collision alert, enhanced automatic emergency braking (with front pedestrian detection), lane-keep assist, a surround-view camera, and teen-driver monitoring among its members.

Test Drive: 2020 Kia Telluride SX

2020 Chevrolet Traverse High Country

There’s ample passenger space in the Traverse’s second-row seats. The third row is best suited for kids, but a couple of sub-6-foot adults can fit back there in decent comfort–especially if the sliding second-row seats are set forward a bit.

Exterior details are 20-inch polished-aluminum wheels, dual-pane sunroof, heated power and self-dimming external mirrors, fog lamps, LED headlights and taillights, hands-free power liftgate, roof rails, and trailering equipment that helps make the High Country the conventional-towing champ among Traverses at a rated 5000 pounds. The 7-passenger interior sports leather on the seats and the heated steering wheel. Both front seats are power adjustable—8 ways with memory for the driver—and have power lumbar control. They’re heated and ventilated, too, while second-row captain’s chairs are heated. A power tilt and telescoping steering column, tri-zone automatic climate control, and a universal home remote are included as well.

Audio and climate controls are intuitive and handy. The latter uses temperature-setting dials on either side of a cluster of clearly marked buttons for other functions. The tri-zone unit gives second-row occupants access to controls on the back of the console. However, cabin materials are not so grand for a high-zoot model. The tops of the doors are attractively textured, but they’re plastic with no underlying give. The console is plastic city.

Test Drive: 2020 Hyundai Palisade Limited

2020 Chevrolet Traverse High Country

Cargo volume is a Traverse strong point. There’s 23 cubic feet of space behind the third-row seats, which opens up to 57.8 cubic feet with the third row folded and a capacious 98.2 cubic feet with both the second and third rows down.

It’s hard to complain about passenger space, however. There is excellent headroom in the first two rows, and even a passable level for adults in the third row—for those who can fit there. The same is true for legroom. The individual seats in the middle row are separated by a convenient channel to the third row, but the right-side seat (Chevy calls it “Smart Slide”) tracks forward to ease more-direct entry. Third-row legroom isn’t optimal, but even with the adjustable middle seats all the way back, a couple sub-6-foot adults or three kids will fit back there, and seat cushions are just high enough to keep grown-ups from needing to sit knees-up—and start forming dark thoughts about everybody else in the truck.

The personal effects passengers inevitably will drag along with them have been anticipated. There is a large glove box, a substantial covered console box, pouches on the backs of the front seats, and small bins in the door panels. Cup holders are found in the console, rear doors, and in the sidewalls next to the third row. There are also pockets in all four doors, though they are smaller in the front doors than in the rear ones.

Test Drive: 2019 Subaru Ascent Touring

2020 Chevrolet Traverse High Country

The Traverse’s turbocharged 4-cylinder engine is dropped for 2020, leaving the 310-hp 3.6-liter V6 as the lone powerplant. High Country models come standard with 20-inch polished aluminum wheels.

Considering the overall size of the vehicle, the 23-cubic-foot cargo space behind the third-row seat looks somewhat limited—but that’s just on the bumper-height load floor. Underneath is a substantial molded-plastic storage bin. However, lower the power-folding 60/40-split rearmost seats and 57.8 cubic feet are at your disposal—and that grows to a maximum 98.2 cubes with the captains’ chairs retracted (though that leaves a significant gap in the load floor between the middle seats).

There’s been no change to the Traverse’s surviving 3.6-liter V6 or 9-speed automatic transmission since CGers last drove one in 2018. Engine output still is 310 horsepower at 6800 rpm and 266 lb-ft of torque at 2800 revs. It makes for pleasing acceleration with minimal noise under load, and it is ably accompanied by the smooth automatic that never seems to be playing the wrong note, something not every gearbox with lots of ranges can claim.

AWD Traverses are rated a mile or two a gallon thirstier than front-drivers, according to the EPA. Estimates for those like our test vehicle are 17 mpg in the city, 25 mpg in highway driving, and 20 mpg in combined use. This driver averaged 18.5 mpg from a trip of 71.9 miles with 45 percent of that run in city-like conditions.

While logging those miles, the Traverse is an unperturbed highway cruiser. Ride is cushy without going mushy. It steers easily and handles pretty well in changes of direction, but its size can make close-quarters maneuverability a little more challenging. A twin-clutch automatic-locking rear differential is standard to maximize traction when the situation calls for a little help.

A few of the more-advanced safety-tech items require stepping up to higher-priced models like the High Country. However, the room and power benefits of the Traverse are available throughout the lineup, and they are the kinds of benefits lots of crossover shoppers are seeking.

Test Drive: 2020 Ford Explorer Platinum

2020 Chevrolet Traverse High Country

If you need a lot of passenger and cargo room and don’t want to step up to a full-size SUV like a Chevrolet Tahoe/Suburban or Ford Expedition, the Chevrolet Traverse is a worthwhile choice.

Check out the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2020 Chevrolet Traverse High Country Gallery

2020 Chevrolet Traverse High Country

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 42: 2020 Buick Encore GX, Cadillac Super Cruise Subscriptions

Cadillac Super Cruise Subscriptions

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

Whether you drive a car, need a car, or just occasionally bum a ride with friends, you’ve come to the right place. Join the editors of Consumer Guide Automotive as they break down everything that’s going on in the auto world. New-car reviews, shopping tips, driving green, electric cars, classic cars, and plenty of great guests. This is the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast.

Episode: 42

Broadcast date: August 16, 2020

Guest: Rob Peterson

2020 Buick Encore GX, Cadillac Super Cruise Subscriptions

Host Tom Appel and co-hosts Jill Ciminillo and Damon Bell start off the show by talking about Cadillac being on the cusp of charging a subscription fee for its Super Cruise  hands-free-driving system. We also discuss Ford Motor Company’s recently announced CEO switch, as Jim Farley steps in to take the the reins from Jim Hackett. Buick Marketing Manager Rob Peterson, joins us to talk about the 2020 Buick Encore GX subcompact SUV, and Buick’s transition to an all-SUV lineup. Tom has a quiz for Damon and Jill on average-transaction prices, and Damon runs down the latest articles on the Consumer Guide Daily Drive blog, including a test-drive review of the 2020 Nissan Frontier PRO-4X.

The Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast is broadcast every Sunday on Chicago’s WCPT AM 820 at 1:00 PM CST.

Discussed this week:

Test Drive: Cadillac CT6 with Super Cruise

Test Drive: 2020 Buick Encore GX Essence

Test Drive: 2020 Fiat 500X Sport

Test Drive: 2020 Nissan Frontier PRO-4X Crew Cab

5 Most-Expensive American Sedans of 1975

More Consumer Guide Test Drives

Follow the crew:

The CG Daily Drive Blog

Car Stuff Facebook Page

Consumer Guide on Twitter

Tom on Twitter

Damon on Twitter

Jill on Twitter

Drive, She Said (Jill’s blog)

Tom on the radio:

Tom on the Nick Digilio Show

Tom on Green Sense Radio

Tom on the Stan Milam Show

Super Cruise Subscriptions

Test Drive: 2020 Fiat 500X Sport

2020 Fiat 500X Sport AWD

2020 Fiat 500X Sport AWD in Grigio Moda (Graphite Gray Metallic)

2021 Lexus LC 500 Convertible

2020 Fiat 500X Sport AWD

Miles driven: 228

Fuel used: 10.2 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 23.2 mpg

Driving mix: 55% city, 45% highway

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B
Power and Performance C+
Fit and Finish C+
Fuel Economy B-
Value C
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 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 177-hp 1.3-liter
Engine Type 4-cylinder
Transmission 9-speed automatic
Drive Wheels AWD

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 24/30/26 (mpg city/highway/combined)

Fuel type: Premium gas recommended

Base price: $26,895 (not including $1495 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: sport leather-trimmed bucket seats ($995), Premium Grooup ($1695), Cold Weather Group ($295), Comfort Group ($795), Advanced Driver Assistance Group ($1395), Driver Assistance Group ($895), black-painted accent roof ($445), compact spare tire ($295), Uconnect 4 navigation system with 7-inch display ($695)

Price as tested: $35,895

Quick Hits

The great: All-wheel drive comes standard; one-of-a-kind Eurocentric styling inside and out

The good: Decent passenger room for the class; outward visibility

The not so good: Firm ride; so-so observed fuel economy, and premium gas is recommended; driver-assistance warning chimes are unpleasantly loud; occasionally balky behavior from 9-speed transmission

More Fiat 500X price and availability information

John Biel

With the 500X, Fiat’s subcompact crossover since 2016, models tend to come and go. (Lounge, we hardly knew ye.) There’s a new one in the shuffled 2020 deck. They call it Sport, and Consumer Guide got to sample one that was optioned up to $35,895 from a starting price of $28,390 with delivery.

Test Drive: 2020 Fiat 500X Sport

A new model for 2020, the Sport gets unique front and rear fasciae, dark-finish exterior trim, and body-color side moldings. A black-painted roof ($445) is a new option for 2020.

Sport is more a state of mind than a state of being with the 500X. Powertrain and suspension are the same in all four models. (Sport moves in at second from the top, between the Trekking and Trekking Plus versions.) The newcomer’s external standard-equipment distinctions include a specific lower front fascia in body color, dark-gray exterior accents, and dual bright exhaust tips. Inside are a steering wheel with beefier handgrips, paddle shifters, bright-trimmed pedals, a light-gray dashboard face, matte-black dash and steering-wheel trim, Sport floor mats, and dark headliner and pillar trim. On the test vehicle, the standard cloth seats with a model-specific surface pattern and 18-inch alloy wheels with 215/55R18 all-season performance tires were replaced by optional leather upholstery and 19-inch wheels in 225/45R19 rubber.

Test Drive: 2021 Kia Seltos SX Turbo

Test Drive: 2020 Fiat 500X Sport

The Sport model’s interior gets a new “techno-leather” steering wheel with Alcantera inserts and paddle shifters, among other unique trim items. Simple dial climate controls are located just above dual USB charging ports and buttons for the heated front seats (included in the $295 Cold Weather Group, along with a windshield wiper de-icer).

All of that comes in addition to things like a Uconnect 4 infotainment system with 7-inch touchscreen, satellite radio, Apple CarPlay/Android Auto smartphone compatibility, tilt/telescoping steering column, leather-wrapped shifter knob, fog and cornering lamps, and keyless entry and starting. Options—either in groups or singly—added things like an upgraded Beats audio system, navigation, dual-pane sunroof, heated front seats, dual-zone automatic climate control, adaptive cruise control, full-speed forward-collision warning, blind-spot and rear cross-traffic detection, lane-departure warning, LED headlights, and front and rear parking sensors. Sports are restricted to a choice of five exterior hues, all considered standard colors. However, CG’s Grigio Moda (dark gray metallic) test vehicle was topped by black roof paint that costs $445 to apply.

Test Drive: 2020 Hyundai Venue Denim

Test Drive: 2020 Fiat 500X Sport

There’s decent-for-the-class space in both the front and rear seats. Sports get exclusive sport front seats, and our tester was equipped with a $995 option that added leather upholstery, vinyl door trim, and a driver seat back pocket.

The 500X is powered by a 1.3-liter turbocharged “MultiAir” 4-cylinder engine that puts out 177 horsepower at 5500 rpm and 210 lb-ft of torque at 2200 rpm. It’s just enough power for alert acceleration with acceptable quiet. The only problem is that this powerplant is hitched to a 9-speed automatic that often behaves as if it’s in the wrong place at the wrong time. Launches from a stop often come with a forceful kick in the backside; kickdown for passing can be a little slow to kick in.

A fairly unobtrusive stop/start feature is included (but can be switched off). EPA fuel-economy estimates are 24 mpg in city driving, 30 mpg in highway operation, and 26 in mixed use. However, this reviewer clocked just 20.1 mpg after a stint of 86 miles that featured 55 percent city-style driving. Oh, and premium-grade gasoline is “recommended,” the manufacturer says.

Test Drive: 2020 Hyundai Kona Ultimate

2020 Fiat 500X Sport

The 500X’s cargo area is on the smaller side of the subcompact crossover class. There’s 14.1 cubic feet of space behind the rear seats, which grows to 39.8 cubic feet with the rear seats folded down to create a flat load floor.

As the “X” in the name implies, this Cinquecento has all-wheel drive. Suspension is independent strut (MacPherson in front, Chapman in back) with coil springs and adjustable KONI “Frequency Selective Damping.” A menu of traction modes that can be selected via a console dial include default “Auto,” “Sport,” and “Traction+” for slippery surfaces. In any setting, ride is decidedly firm, maybe even a little brittle. Clicking into Sport firms up steering resistance to a nice extra degree.

The 500X delivers pretty good small-vehicle head- and legroom in front, but headroom is less generous in back under the sunroof. Two average-sized adults will be able to fit in back. The rear cargo area isn’t overly big—just 14.1 cubic feet behind the second-row seats—but this is a subcompact. It will carry groceries for two or maybe two or three overnight bags with ease. Rear 60/40-split seats fold flat and flush with the cargo floor; when they do, 39.8 cubic feet of space are at your disposal.

Test Drive: 2020 Mazda CX-30 Premium

2020 Fiat 500X Sport

The 500X’s sole powertrain is a 177-hp turbocharged 1.3-liter 4-cylinder that is paired with a 9-speed automatic transmission. The 19-inch aluminum wheels 0n our test vehicle replace the standard 18s; they’re included in the $1695 Premium Group, which also adds a Beats audio system and a dual-pane power sunroof.

There’s an undeniable European stylishness to the exterior, but the vita doesn’t come across as so dolce inside. Spongy material is extant on much of the dash around the glossy fascia panel, but the tops of all doors are plastic with no underlying give—though the grain visually complements the dash appearance. Door centers and armrests are covered in soft surfaces, though the vinyl door centers are an element of the leather-seat package. Bright-metal accents (around air vents, on the steering wheel, etc.) found on other 500Xs are sacrificed for the blackout trim peculiar to the Sport.

Cabin storage is modest. There are upper and lower glove boxes, but the bottom one rests very low in the dash. The console box under a sliding-top armrest is very small. The only reason there were net pouches behind both front seats is because the optional leather buckets add one to the driver’s seat. Pockets in all doors include bottle holders, but there are no cup holders for rear occupants.

Settings for the audio system are easy to program and use. The dual-zone climate system that was in CG’s tester has three big, convenient dials for temperature and fan-speed settings. Various safety and parking minders included in option packages brought a lot of beeping and chiming to the driving experience, but man, are those driver-assistance warning tones ever loud!

The 500X delivers a nice dollop of driving character, and at not too bad a starting price for the Sport that was tested. It is a little bothersome, though, that any and all mainstream electronic safety features like blind-spot and cross-traffic detection cost extra.

Will the Sport stick as a 500X? We’ll let you know next year.

Test Drive: 2020 Mitsubishi Outlander Sport

2020 Fiat 500X Sport

The new-for-2020 Sport model’s unique trim elements give the Fiat 500X a sportier attitude inside and out. The starting price of around $27K isn’t bad, but the long options list on our test vehicle helped bump up the bottom line to almost $36,000… not a compelling value against most subcompact SUV class rivals.

Check out the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2020 Fiat 500X Sport Gallery

2020 Fiat 500X Sport

Test Drive: 2020 Chevrolet Silverado 2500 LTZ Duramax

2020 Chevrolet Silverado 2500

2020 Chevrolet Silverado 2500 4WD LTZ Crew Cab in Northsky Blue Metallic

2015 Audi Q52020 Chevrolet Silverado 2500 4WD LTZ Crew

Class: Large Pickup

Miles driven: 202

Fuel used: 13.1 gallons

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort A
Power and Performance B+
Fit and Finish B
Fuel Economy C-
Value C+
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 445-hp 6.6-liter
Engine Type Turbodiesel V8
Transmission 10-speed automatic
Drive Wheels 4WD

Real-world fuel economy: 15.4 mpg

Driving mix: 40% city, 60% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: NA

Fuel type: Diesel

Base price: $53,300 (not including $1595 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Duramax 6.6-liter V8 turbodiesel ($9890), LTZ Premium Package ($7805), Gooseneck/5th-Wheel Package ($1090), power sunroof ($995), chrome assist steps ($795), Z71 Off-Road Package ($175), Snow Plow Prep Package ($150), trailer tire pressure monitor ($50), LTZ Premium Package Discount (-$1000)

Price as tested: $74,845

Quick Hits

The great: Spacious cabin, power of turbodiesel 6.6-liter V8 engine

The good: Long list of available comfort, safety, and technology features

The not so good: Diesel engine is a bit noisy, options drive up bottom-line price, extra-large dimensions make parking a challenge

More Silverado news and reviews

John Biel

Ordinarily, you don’t expect discussions of heavy-duty full-sized pickups to start with fuel economy. However, the opportunity to compare a 2020 Chevrolet Silverado 2500 with the optional 6.6-liter Duramax turbodiesel V8 and Allison 10-speed automatic transmission to one with the new standard 6.6-liter gasoline mill and 6-speed auto is hard to miss—or pass up.

Test Drive: 2020 Chevrolet Silverado 2500 LTZ Duramax

The Silverado’s LTZ trim level is one step below the top-line High Country models. Our test vehicle was equipped with a 6.75-foot bed–the shorter of the Crew Cab body style’s available bed lengths. An 8-foot bed is also available.

Consumer Guide’s first turn in the current Silverado HD 2500, which is fully redone for ’20, was in a 4-wheel-drive crew cab with the 401-horsepower gas engine. Our second taste of the ¾-ton 2500 came in another 4×4 crew cab, but this with the 445-horse Duramax. With 40 percent of total test miles run in city-style driving, CG editors collectively averaged almost 15.5 mpg with the diesel. (With 35 percent city driving in his stint, this reviewer got 16.8 mpg after going 67 miles.) That’s a solid improvement over the 11.1 mpg they booked in the naturally aspirated gas-fueled 6.6, albeit with a greater proportion of city-style operation. By the way, both tests were conducted free of towed or carried loads.

Quick Spin: 2020 GMC Sierra 2500 AT4

Test Drive: 2020 Chevrolet Silverado 2500 LTZ Duramax

LTZs come standard with a heated leather-wrapped steering wheel, heated 10-way power front seats, and dual-zone climate control. The LTZ Premium Package adds a host of features, including a head-up display, rear camera mirror, wireless charging pad, Bose premium sound system, and upgraded infotainment system with navigation.

What, then, is the discussion-starter for HD trucks? Often, it is torque. The horsepower spread between the two 6.6-liter Chevy V8s seems downright negligible viewed against their torque differences. The gas job develops 464 lb-ft of torque at 4000 rpm; when the Duramax does the twist, it is to the tune of 910 lb-ft at 1600 rpm. A standard 3.73:1 axle ratio is used in the gas-fueled model to improve its accelerative capability. With all the low-rpm grunt baked into the turbodiesel V8, Silverado 2500s equipped with it can get by with “relaxed” 3.42:1 cogs that may play a part in that better fuel economy.

Truck Trends: Sales Growth and Electrification

Test Drive: 2020 Chevrolet Silverado 2500 LTZ Duramax

The Silverado 2500’s cabin is cavernous in both the front and back seats, with ample headroom and legroom. LTZ models come standard with a handy storage bin underneath the flip-up rear seat bottoms.

Neither engine makes for a quicksilver Silverado. Sustained strength, not fast-twitch muscle, is what’s important here. The 2500 with Duramax rolls into its considerable power, but once there keeps going strongly. It’s not afraid of highway speeds, and the decagear transmission responds well to the call for a downshift under hard throttle. The test truck did seem to raise an inordinate amount of intake noise in surface-street driving, and unlike the inline diesel six available in lighter-duty Silverado 1500s, the V8 more obviously sounds like an “oil-burner” at idle or under load. Maximum towing capacity with the turbodiesel is 18,500 pounds. To assist in that work, the transmission is outfitted with a “Tow/Haul” mode to reduce shifts (delaying upshifts under acceleration and downshifting under deceleration) and Auto Grade Braking that automatically downshifts to enable engine braking on downhill grades. The engine incorporates an exhaust brake to help slow the truck without as much reliance on the service brakes.

Duramax might comes at a commensurately stout price. The turbodiesel V8 and 10-speed autobox added $9890 to the Silverado LTZ test truck that topped out at $74,845. (Way back before the options started piling up base price—with delivery—was $54,895.) What the buyer doesn’t need to dig deeper for are an automatic locking rear differential, trailer-sway and trailer-brake controls, and a trailer-hitch package with hitch guidance that shows on the in-dash display screen. Four-wheelers come with a 2-speed transfer case with electronic push-button controls.

Test Drive: 2020 Chevrolet Silverado 2500

Test Drive: 2020 Chevrolet Silverado 2500 LTZ Duramax

Side bed steps and a cornerstep rear bumper make bed access easier. The Gooseneck/5th Wheel Package consists of stamped bed holes with caps (for a 5th-wheel trailer mount), a 7-pin trailer harness, and Chevytec spray-on bedliner.

The Silverado HD suspension layout—independent in front with a solid axle suspended by leaf springs in back—isn’t up to the comfort level of its half-ton 1500 relatives. A bump or dip in the road surface can rock truck and passengers, and even coax a hop out of the unoccupied back end. That said, the test truck might have been a little more prone to this: It was outfitted with optional 20-inch alloy wheels and 275/65R20 all-terrain tires (part of the LTZ Premium Package option), extra-cost Z-71 off-road suspension, and the Snow Plow Prep Package that includes stiffer front springs.

All of the freshly styled Silverado HDs come with larger cab and cargo-bed dimensions than their predecessors. Two bed lengths are offered. The test truck had the shorter of them, but both include steps in the bumper corners and ahead of the rear wheel wells for handier working conditions. The LTZ is the second from the top in Silverado HD’s 5-layer salad. In addition to the chrome grille bar and bumper picked up from the LT, its appearance distinctions are chrome-accented grille inserts and chrome mirror caps, door handles, and lower air-intake finisher. LED lighting is used around the truck.

Quick Spin: 2019 Ram 2500 Limited Mega Cab

Chevrolet Silverado 2500 LTZ

The 6.6-liter Duramax turbodiesel V8 was the priciest item on the options list of our test vehicle, followed by the LTZ Premium Package, which adds a long list of features–including 20-inch polished alloy wheels.

All but one of the paint colors available for the LTZ can be paired with a choice of interiors: solid Jet Black or two-tone Gideon/Very Dark Atmosphere. The latter, which sounds like it could be a hipster’s new favorite craft beer, features lighter neutral Gideon on the seats and door armrests. It made an attractive complement to our Northsky Blue Metallic truck. Front seats are covered in perforated leather and heated. The extensive LTZ Premium Package added ventilated front buckets and heated outboard rear seats, as well as a center console with wireless charging bay. Dual-zone climate control, keyless entry and starting, satellite radio, 10-way power seats (with driver’s-seat memory), heated leather-wrapped steering wheel, and front tow hooks are other standard items.

Even at the higher trim levels, Silverados lack state-of-the-art plushness. However, there’s no fault with the passenger space in crew cab models. Cushions in the 3-wide rear seat easily fold up in a 60/40 split, exposing a standard storage tray in the LTZ. Accessory side steps are virtually a must for easy entry and exit. Unfortunately, fairly wide pillars at the front and sides reduce driver vision. A full array of legible virtual gauges confronts the driver, and the Infotainment 3 unit with Apple CarPlay/Android Auto smartphone compatibility is easy to program and use. Personal-item storage is handled by upper and lower glove boxes, a big console box, compartments in the rear seat backs, and large map pockets with cup holders in all doors.

Ultimate power is the raison d’etre for the Silverado 2500 with Duramax. That’s just what you’ll get—but at what might seem a price to match in an LTZ.

Quick Spin: 2019 Ford F-250 Super Duty Limited

Test Drive: 2020 Chevrolet Silverado 2500 LTZ Duramax

You’ll pay plenty for the Duramax diesel engine and the full complement of features, but the Chevrolet Silverado 2500 offers heavy-hauling capabilities with a decent level of comfort.

Check out the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2020 Chevrolet Silverado 2500  LTZ Gallery

Chevrolet Silverado 2500 LTZ