The gauges are nicely lit at night, in blue and white. The tachometer is at left, redline 6800, with an insert that shows turbocharger boost.
A big speedometer is in the center with an information display inside it, and on the right is a gauge of similar size but which only contains an indicator of what gear the transmission is in, plus fuel level. It would be nice if a temperature gauge was in that space, because, as it is, you can only find out if the car is overheating by suspecting it, and then checking on the information display inside the speedometer, scrolling through other information to find it.
The info display can also show which wheels are getting the power with the SH-AWD, or Super Handling All-Wheel Drive. This system sends more power to the outside rear wheel when the car cornering aggressively, which keeps it on line; of course, that's exactly the time you'd not want to look down to check the display. There's also an instantaneous fuel mileage display, a bar from 0 to 50, but we did not find it to be practically readable.
The EPA-rated mileage is 17/22 mpg City/Highway, and we got 17.6 miles per gallon (on premium fuel) at an average of 34 mph running stop-and-go on the freeway and 80 mph when we broke out. The fuel mileage didn't change much after that, with mostly around-town driving.
The leather-wrapped steering wheel feels nice in your hands, if busy, with controls for a half-dozen or more things, including paddles for upshifting and downshifting the sequential transmission. It's kind of ugly, though. It has three spokes, at 3, 9 and 6 o'clock, and they're trimmed in aluminum-look plastic, with a design that makes the wheel look like a scale model of a space station.
There are terrific grab handles for closing the front and rear doors, something we wish all cars were smart enough to have, especially for the driver.
There are nice little storage compartments, and a humongously deep center console compartment, with trays at the bottom that lift out to reveal a secret spot that's another couple inches deep. It's 16.9 inches from front to back, 12.2 inches deep and 5.5 inches wide, big enough for a laptop or briefcase, and it's lockable.
The parking brake pedal is too low for effective left-foot braking. It catches your toe when you move your foot to the brake pedal from its resting position on the floorboard when braking with the left foot; you have to slide your foot right, lift it, slide it farther right, then lower it on the brake pedal, sort of a fast S-shaped movement.
There seems to be decent knee room in the rear seat; we had a tall passenger back there who said she had enough room, but the specs of 37.7 inches are pretty tight. The rear passengers have cupholders in the folding armrest, door pockets and map pockets in the front seatbacks. The 60/40 rear seatbacks fold flat, after the cushions flip against the front seatbacks.
Cargo space behind the rear seat is in short supply, with just 27.8 cubic feet, but then this isn't a big SUV. With the rear seats lowered, there's 60.6 cubic feet. Next Page