All posts by budwells

About budwells

Born at Wray, Colo., graduate of Sterling High School, attended Northeastern Junior College, began work at Sterling Journal-Advocate in 1956, began work at The Denver Post in 1968, resides at Greeley, Colo. Bud and wife Janice are parents of three sons and two daughters.

Wind cuts charge in all-electric Volvo XC40

Black cap and spoiler add to stylish Volvo XC40 Recharge Twin Ultimate. (Bud Wells photos)

Another all-electric, the ‘22 Volvo XC40 Recharge Twin Ultimate, rolled quietly into my driveway, the fourth fully-electric I’ve driven in March and April 2022.

The Recharge is Volvo’s compact offering, beautifully styled from its short hood up front, over its sharply raked windshield and black cap roof, to its high-riding spoiler and large, wavy taillights at the rear.

And performance-wise, things were going so well, from Greeley to DIA for dropping off a passenger for her flight to Atlanta, on down south to pick up our finished tax returns, back east for lunch stop at New York Deli News, then over to AB&C for supplies.

Heading out of Denver northward toward home, the driver-information center estimated the Volvo had 80 miles of energy stored in its big battery pack. “That’s plenty to get us home (50 miles away),” I reassured Jan.

But those terrible winds which have dominated our spring weather thus far hit us at about 120th Avenue.

The all-important digital reading of projected miles began rapidly dropping by 5’s, to 75, to 70, to 65, to 60. At about 25, most all the excess mileage from the easy morning drive had been eaten up and we weren’t yet to the Berthoud Exit. Thinking of where I might find a charger in Loveland, if we made it that far, the message center asked, “Want to locate a charging station?” “Yes,” I punched.

The Volvo is recharged at the Berthoud Recreation Center.

“12 miles to one on Berthoud Parkway (west of I-25),” we were informed and followed the map guidance to a ChargePoint station at the Berthoud Recreation Center at Waggener Farm Park.

We connected the heavy charge cord from the cargo space in the Volvo, and in 28 minutes a total of 82 miles had been added to the car’s battery at a cost of $11.57. We headed home with no problem. Volvo claims maximum range for the Recharge of 210 miles.

The XC40 Recharge uses electric motors totaling a combined 402 horsepower and 486 lb.-ft. of torque at its axles, with single-speed transmission and a 78 kWh lithium ion battery pack; it is easily handled and acceleration is very quick. It also makes available 4Motion all-wheel drive. It rides on Pirelli Scorpion all-season 235/45R20 tires. Much of my drive was in one-pedal mode with regenerative braking in effect.

Getting used to lack of a start/stop button took some time. With keypod in pocket, slip into the driver seat, buckle up, move shifter to D or R, push accelerator and drive away. After parking, simply push the P button and exit the vehicle (with pod still in pocket).

Seats are comfortable, with stitched leather bolsters on either side of the semi-suede cushion inserts. The Recharge is 174.2 inches in overall length, with wheelbase of 106.4 and a hefty curb weight of 4,700 pounds.

Price tag is somewhat heavy, too, at sticker of $60,090, including surround-view camera, Harman Kardon premium audio, inductive smartphone charging, adaptive cruise, park assist, headlight high-pressure cleaning.

The XC40 Recharge is built in Ghent, Belgium.

Sasquatch extends trail for Ford Bronco

Tough-looking Bronco front end is highlighted by white lettering. (Bud Wells photos)

After all those quiet, smooth, sleekly styled all-electric models I’ve been reviewing through April 2022, along comes a return to the automotive world we’ve long known in the form of a Ford Bronco 2-door with the Sasquatch and Wildtrak packages.

So deeply rutted in offroad capability is this one that its chief rival, Jeep Wrangler, put together a competitive trim, the Rubicon Xtreme Recon.

In addition to the four-wheel-drive wonders built into the Ford Bronco Sasquatch, it has a 2-inch-wider track than other Broncos and stands taller than most, with a 25-inch step-in height.

It’s not entirely an offroad show, either, for I found the Sasquatch street-friendly. In lots of highway driving, the Bronco exhibited excellent control, with none of those squirrely moves so much a part of oldtime 4X4s.

But offroad is, of course, the name of the game, and Sasquatch responds with locking front and rear differentials, high-clearance suspension, skid plates, rock rails, automatic swaybar disconnect. The Wildtrak package offers a HOSS 3.0 (high-speed offroad suspension system) with Bilstein shocks.

The Sasquatch package adds Goodyear Territory 35-inch mud-terrain tires, with beadlock on the 17-inch wheels to help prevent the tire’s bead detaching from the wheel. With the big tires and lifted suspension, the Bronco Sasquatch boasts 11.6 inches of ground clearance.

In its design, Ford has retained some of the boxiness of the original Bronco. From its white-lettered “BRONCO” at the grille and the tiedowns for limb risers at front edge of fenders, the look squares off over the top and down the back side.

The top can be popped easily and quickly over either or both the front seats by releasing levers and latches on the overhead panels. Highway speeds bring lots of wind noise with the panels locked in place.

Ford Bronco Sasquatch sits high with lifted suspension, big tires.

Even in its two-door configuration, the Bronco offers a comfortable ride with plenty of rear-seat space and cargo room. The rear gate and spare tire are swung open from the driver side.

Performance comes from the surprisingly strong 2.7-liter, Ecoboost V-6 engine and 10-speed automatic transmission, with various drive modes. Horsepower is 315 and torque 410 lb.-ft. All that size, power and equipment is costly in the fuel-usage measure, where EPA rating is 17 in town, city and combined; my overall average was 18.5 miles per gallon.

Adding the $4,495 cost of the Sasquatch package to the Bronco brought its total sticker price to $55,970, which also included adaptive cruise control, heated steering wheel and sound deadening headliner.

The standard Ford Bronco 2-door, introduced a year ago to face the popular Jeep Wrangler, is 172.7 inches in overall length on a wheelbase of 105.1 inches and curb weight of 3,500 pounds. The Bronco 4-door, battling the Jeep Wrangler Unlimited for sales, has overall length of 189.4 inches on wheelbase of 116.1 and curb weight of 4,500 pounds.

Suspension key to Chevy Colorado ZR2

The Chevy Colorado ZR2 is in offroad territory. (Bud Wells photos)

I climbed back into the newest offering of the Chevy Colorado ZR2 offroad pickup, this time assessing it with the 3.6-liter V-6 engine and 8-speed automatic transmission.

The ZR2 package, with its wider track, shortened overhangs for improved approach and departure angles and added offroad enhancements, earns the Colorado the reputation of a smaller version of the Ford Raptor.

The Colorado ZR2 Bison was tested in 2021 with turbodiesel.

A year ago, I drove the ZR2 Bison powered by the turbocharged 2.8-liter, 4-cylinder, Duramax diesel. Comparing the two, the 3.6 V-6 is of 308 horsepower/275 torque; the 2.8 turbodiesel is 186 hp and stout in torque with 369 lb.-ft.

It is a four-door crew cab; other configurations are an extended cab and choice of short or long box. It has nice, leather seats, with Bluetooth audio streaming, Apple CarPlay and Android Auto capable. The rear seating is slightly cramped for legroom.

Accessing the comfortable interior requires a 2-foot-high step-in, somewhat inconvenient, but running boards or step rails would deny the truck some offroad capabilities.

The responsiveness in ZR2’s advanced suspension, with Multimatic DSSV dampers, is impressive, whether jouncing around offroad or rounding a curve at 70 miles per hour on the highway. It rides on Goodyear Wrangler Duratrac 265/65R17 tires. Gauge availability includes an inclinometer for awareness of pitch/roll degrees of the 4X4, as well as slope of the terrain.

When not offroading, the ZR2 is very carlike in steering and ride quality. And while the turbodiesel with its torque superiority is an offroad champ, the 3.6 V-6 is more ideal for everyday highway travel.

Late one afternoon, we drove the Chevy to the levee of Strasburg, then joined Mike and Hannah McKenner and Bill and Kathy Allen for a performance of “Cinderella” by the Strasburg Elementary Singers, including two great-granddaughters Ava and Bailey McKenner. These were 4th and 5th graders, and residents from Strasburg filled the school auditorium at nearby Bennett, where the musical was staged.

With the curb weight of 4,900 pounds and all the normal 4X4 equipment, plus the ZR2 packages, the EPA estimate is a low 16/18 miles per gallon; my overall average was 16.8.

The Chevy was finished in a pleasant bright blue metallic finish; when my replacement, the 2022 Ford Maverick pickup, was delivered, its velocity blue metallic was near identical.

Sticker price of $45,865 includes transfer case shield, remote vehicle start, the ZR2 appearance package, spray-on bedliner, EZ lift and lower tailgate, Stabilitrak stability control system with traction control.

The Chevrolet Colorado and its counterpart, the GMC Canyon, are midsize pickup trucks; they were introduced in 2004 to replace the Chevy S-10 and GMC S-15/Sonoma. They’re built in Wentzville, Mo.

’22 4Runner lights up offroad scene

The new Toyota 4Runner TRD Pro adds brightness to offroad setting. (Bud Wells photos)

Stirring a measure of excitement into my routine some time back was the appearance of the 2022 Toyota 4Runner.

The interest came not from an upgrade to the Toyota’s old 5-speed automatic transmission or the aging jagged gate for its shifter. It has nothing to do with fuel mileage – still about 17 miles per gallon for the 4Runner.

It is “lime rush,” one of the brightest, most bold and distinctive exterior colors ever for a traditionally tough, body-on-frame sport utility vehicle.

Wyoming Hereford Ranch barn is background for Toyota 4Runner in 2017.

It is exclusive to the ’22 Toyota 4Runner TRD Pro and lends new presence to the old standard, a longtime competitor of Jeep products. Offroad settings may become more luminous.

I’m remembering an outstanding photo of a blue 4Runner out front of the big red barn at the Wyoming Hereford Ranch near Cheyenne in 2017; what a contrast the lime green rush color would be with that background.

Responses from viewers of the 4Runner and its new color were generally positive, definitely so by younger individuals.

The ’22 4Runner is being offered in only three other hues – super white, midnight black metallic and magnetic gray metallic.

The Toyota is a great offroader with its part-time four-wheel drive, the low-range transfer case shifter on the console, locking rear differential and multi-terrain shift selector placed awkwardly on the overhead console. The two-row cabin is roomy, with 47.2 cubic feet of cargo space.

The heavy, 4,760-pounder is not particularly smooth in ride quality, somewhat bumpy, with its TRD-tuned Fox shocks and springs. Suited well to its size and weight are Nitto Terra Grappler 265/70R17 tires.

Moderate acceleration is provided by the 270-horsepower, 278 lb-ft. torque, 4.0-liter V-6 engine and the 5-speed automatic. This same powertrain has been used for more than 10 years. Most competitors have moved to 6-, 7-, 8- and 9-speed transmissions. The 4Runner’s EPA estimate is 16 city, 19 highway; my overall average was 17.4.

The 4Runner, built at Toyota plant Tahara, Aichi, Japan, is 190.2 inches in overall length on a wheelbase of 109.8 inches.

While its parts are often mentioned as old and aging, the pricepoint is where it remains modern. The ’22 TRD Pro carries sticker price of $53,435, with basic safety items precollision with pedestrian detection, cruise control, lane-departure alert and blind-spot monitor. Also standard are power sliding rear window, 8-inch touchscreen with navigation and JBL audio, Android Auto/Apple CarPlay compatibility and front skid plate. Beginning prices on 4Runner 4WD models are around $42,000.

The midsize 4Runner, in spite of its aging makeup, is fun to drive; the soundness of its body and its structural integrity are appreciated.

The 4Runner was introduced into the U.S. in 1984; it has been recognized as one of the most long-lasting of vehicles. It remains a strong seller for Toyota.

Mercedes EQS450, electric luxury sedan

The sleek 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450 at the Overland Trail Museum in Sterling. (Bud Wells)

Its acceleration, perhaps, is the smoothest of anything I’ve driven, ever. And the quietness ranks right up there, too.

The 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQS450 all-electric luxury sedan, with air-spring suspension, uses rear-steering at low speeds in which the rear wheels turn up to 10 degrees in opposition of the fronts, cutting the turning radius from 42 feet to just under 36.

It is the most aerodynamic production car in the world with drag coefficient of 0.20.

The EQS is noticeably lengthy, 207.3 inches overall on a wheelbase of 126.4 inches, same as the new S Class four-door with internal-combustion engine.

The EQS450 rides atop a 107.8-kWh lithium-ion battery pack; driving its rear wheels is a single electric motor of 245 kW producing 419 lb.-ft. of torque and 329 horsepower. Transmission is direct-drive single-speed. Its estimated driving range is 350 miles.

For a comparative measure with the Ford Mustang Mach-e GT I drove last month, the Mercedes is 21 inches longer in overall length, with a 9-inch-longer wheelbase and curb weight of 5,700 pounds (700 more).

Sticker price on the rear-drive EQS450 is $122,100; for about $20,000 more the EQS580 will offer all-wheel-drive capability and an electric motor at each axle for an amazing performance from 516 horsepower and 631 torque.

Three screens stretch full width of glass-covered dashboard. (Mercedes-Benz)

The smooth operation of the EQS450 suited me just fine, and its soft leather and wood trim interior, with soft-pillow headrests and three large info screens across the 56-inch-wide glass-covered dashboard were superb.

With the help of Dylan Blanton and Brenden Broyles at Greeley Nissan and its ChargePoint connector, the Mercedes battery was charged with 291 miles by the time we left for a drive northeast to Sterling.

We enjoyed a birthday lunch with my sister, Norma Wagner and Dave, and a birthday dinner that evening with Jan’s cousin, Don Carey and Audrey, at Hot Spot Smokehouse. Sterling is 100 miles northeast of Greeley, double that with the return drive and add some miles driven about town; on our completion we had 70 miles remaining on the Mercedes battery, so used 221 miles, which is approximately the amount of miles driven. Regenerative braking and descent of altitude brought savings of miles on the trip down, but that gain was erased by some climb and use of headlights on the return.

Mercedes information says with DC Fast Charging, the battery can be recharged from 10 percent to 80 percent in 31 minutes, and that charging with a 240-volt connection takes a little more than 11 hours. I added 90 miles to the EQS in a 24-hour charge from a regular 120-volt outlet at home.

A fixed hood covers a cabin air filter and other items. Since there is no opening, a small cup swings out from the driver-side fender as a receptacle for pouring fluid into the windshield-washer reservoir.

The hyperscreen package, head-up display, black microfiber headliner, air control with fragrance, ambient lighting and other options raised the price from a base of $103,560 to the $122,000 mark. The EQS is built at Sindelfingen, Germany.

Lincoln marks 100 with Ford

The 1939 Lincoln Continental. (Ford)

Henry Ford, who bought the Lincoln car company 100 years ago from inventor and engineer Henry Leland, used it to create a luxury division of large, garish exteriors, lavish interiors, powerful engines, yet sales in many years failed to meet expectations.

Lincoln’s 87,929 sales in the 100th year in 2021 didn’t measure up to BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Lexus, Audi, Tesla, Acura or Cadillac. Even Land Rover outsold the Lincoln.

Florian Barth, Kumpf Motor Co

I was enjoying lunch on a warm fall day in 1995 at the Wellshire Inn on South Colorado Boulevard with Florian Barth, the classy owner and operator of longtime Lincoln dealership Kumpf Motor Co., when he uttered a brief, enlightening revelation on some former dark days for the luxury brand.

“Things were so slow in the first half of the ‘50s, the only time we sold a new Lincoln was when the guy across the street (Rickenbaugh) ran out of new Cadillacs.” Kumpf and Rickenbaugh operated on Broadway.

I scribbled that quote before leaving the restaurant, used it in the Colorado Car Book published the next year and have done so on several other occasions through the years.

Lincoln’s most noted model was the Continental, considered by some “the most beautiful car in the world” on its unveiling in 1939.

The first Lincoln I reviewed was the ’78 Continental Mark V, a $16,079 beauty with 460-cubic-inch V-8 and 13-miles-per-gallon fuel usage. Two years later, the Mark VI was powered by a 351 V-8 and in ’81 engine size had been reduced to 302 cubes. That was about the time Lincoln introduced its huge four-door Town Car, which stretched out to 221 inches in overall length.

One of the best drives I had behind the wheel of a Lincoln was the rear-drive 2002 LS sport sedan with manual transmission around the hills of Santa Fe and Taos with Jan, Dave and Norma Wagner as passengers.

As for its future, Lincoln president Joy Falocito said, “The timing of our 100th anniversary couldn’t be more ideal as we shift to an electrified future. We plan to have a full portfolio of electrified vehicles globally by 2030.”

Hybrid enhances small Ford Maverick

The Ford Maverick XLT Hybrid beside ice- and snow-covered lake. (Bud Wells)

Ford, for more than 40 years the greatest seller of full-size pickup trucks, may be building success with its newly introduced light-size entry.

I’m referring to the 2022 Ford Maverick small pickup, for which Ford said retail orders throughFebruary are already equal to its full-year’s production expectations, and that it has stopped accepting more orders. Order-taking for the little pickup will resume in August, when production begins on the 2023 Maverick at the Ford Hermosillo plant in Mexico.

Herrick Garnsey, former longtime Ford dealer in Greeley, sits in new Maverick. (Bud Wells)

The Maverick is built on a front-wheel-drive-based unibody platform shared between the Ford Escape and Bronco Sport. It is almost a foot shorter and 500 pounds lighter than the Ford Ranger compact and reminds some of the mini-pickups of the 1980s and ‘90s, though is much more technically advanced. Those minis included Chevy Luv, Datsun, Dodge D-50, Ford Courier, Isuzu P’up, Mitsubishi Mighty Max, Plymouth Arrow, Subaru Brat, Toyota, Volkswagen Rabbit.

I’ve been driving the ’22 Ford Maverick XLT Hybrid, a front-wheel-drive four-door, with a 191-horsepower gas/electric system including 2.5-liter 4-cylinder engine, an electric motor and continuously variable automatic transmission.

Jan and I took the Maverick for a pleasant afternoon drive of 56 miles, including 6.9 miles of electric charge. The overall fuel average was 40.1 miles per gallon. For an entire week of more than 250 miles driven, the average was 37.2. Its EPA estimate is 42 miles per gallon in city driving and 33 on the highway.

Here is a bit more of what you get for the $26,950 sticker price on the Maverick XLT FWD: cruise control, heated front seats, heated steering wheel, alloy wheels, full-size spare, body-color door handles and Ford Co-Pilot360 of blind-spot info with cross-traffic alert, lane-keeping system, driver alert, manual-sliding rear window and manual-folding sideview mirrors.

The Maverick’s Flexbed offers light and electrical outlets. (Ford)

Its pickup bed is 52-inch by 58-inch and can handle 4-by-8 sheets of plywood when they’re slid in on top of the wheel wells. The lightweight tailgate can be adjusted to multi-positions. Without the XLT Luxury Package, the Maverick Hybrid XL beginning price is $21,490.

The hybrid performance is very smooth and plenty gutsy in town, though of milder response on the highway, with some engine drone occurring under heavy acceleration while climbing.

In addition to the hybrid powertrain, the Maverick can be purchased with an optional 250-hp, 2.0-liter turbocharged 4-cylinder engine and 8-speed automatic transmission, in either front-wheel or all-wheel-drive configuration. EPA ratings for the gas-only version are 23/30 for the FWD and 22/29 for the AWD.

The name selected for the new pickup is somewhat of a head-scratcher. Maverick was used by Ford to identify a 1970-77 compact sedan, which was of no great significance in sales or reputation of that era.

A flaw for me when stepping into the driver’s-side floor area with the seat fully back, the end of track for the power-seat slide is rough on an ankle.

On a wheelbase of 121.1 inches, the Maverick is 199.2 inches in overall length, with curb weight of 3,674 pounds. With a fuel tank of 13.8 gallons, the range for the Maverick Hybrid is more than 500 miles.

GT adds zip to Mustang Mach-e

The Ford Mustang Mach-e GT all-electric four-door hatchback. (Bud Wells photos)

The GT version of the Ford Mustang Mach-e all-electric SUV hatchback, more advanced than the basic model I drove 14 months ago, came my way in February.

“Acceleration is absolutely amazing,” I’ve said over and over since ending my weeklong drive in the new all-wheel-drive model.

So quick, so quiet. In kickdown mode, I miss the sound of the engine revving, as it would in an auto powered by an internal-combustion engine. Ford, anticipating some fallout from the quietness, allows the Mach-e operator to engage augmented engine noise by pumping artificial exhaust notes into the Mustang’s cabin.

It performs with two electric motors, one for each axle, an 88kWh lithium ion battery pack and a one-speed automatic transmission. Combined horsepower is 458, with torque of 612 lb.-ft.

The Mach-e GT handled well and tracked perfectly after a 4-inch snowfall Thursday morning of last week on a drive to Eaton, where we attended funeral services for a friend, Les Brumley, 88, at the Evangelical Free Church. Jan and daughter Kim Parker rode with me. By the time we returned home, we’d driven 38 miles and used 52 miles off the range of the battery pack. Temperature of 25 degrees on the drive out there probably stole some of the lost miles.

In that first Mustang electric in late December 2020, we also drove to the Evangelical Free Church in Eaton, that time for the funeral of Keith Brumley, a son of Les. Keith, who helped plan a couple flooring projects in our home, died unexpectedly. Naomi, Keith’s mother and Les’ wife, survives.

A recharging of the battery pack in the Mach-e GT.

Saturday morning, needing a recharge of the GT’s battery pack, we failed to connect on three tries at an EVgo station in Greeley, then drove to Greeley Nissan, where sales consultant Brenden Broyles connected the Ford to the dealership’s charger. During an hour’s wait to bring the range of the battery to almost 80 percent (170) miles, I enjoyed a visit with Chad Shoeman, general manager for the store. He is looking forward to arrival of a new Nissan electric, the Ariya.

I then drove the Mach-e to Loveland, on into the Big Thompson Canyon to Drake, over the Devil’s Gulch Road to Estes Park. The return drive down Big Thompson Canyon, aided by the rather steep descent and regenerative braking, added 18 miles to the range.

Near the end of my drive time, a gauge of “where did my energy go,” showed this percentage breakdown for the battery pack: Climate/heater 8%, driving 83%, accessories/audio 4%, external temperature 5%.

BlueCruise, part of an updated Co-Pilot 360 safety system featured on the GT, handles steering, braking and acceleration for the driver. It also makes possible hands-free driving, which I used on a number of curves of varied sharpness

With the added power, range and features, the Mach-e GT carried sticker price of $63,885, while the earlier one was $51,200. Purchasers are eligible for a federal tax credit up to $7,500. My effective range with the Mach-e GT was mostly in the 210 to 215 miles, lowered some by the extreme cold

Toyota counts on V-6, coils for Tundra

Toyota counts on V-6, coils for Tundra

Production began in January for the third-generation, 2022 Toyota Tundra, fully redesigned with interior appeal, and company officials anticipate the first real sales climb in 15 years for the full-sized pickup.

The Tundra’s platform has been expanded into a fully-boxed frame, its rear leaf springs have been traded in for better-riding coils, and its 5.7-liter V-8 engine has been dropped in favor of a turbocharged V-6 or a second choice – a more powerful hybrid V-6.

With opportunity last week for testing the 389-horsepower, 3.5-liter V-6 and 10-speed automatic transmission (replacing a 6-speed) in deep snow and cold, I was impressed with good 4X4 performance, improved ride and enjoyed the front-view camera as a big help in offroading through brush and over uneven terrain, and particularly helpful in a weedy, narrow turnaround space.

The 2014 Toyota Tundra Double Cab

It was the Tundra Limited Crewmax, the four-door crew cab, with the TRD Off-Road package. A shorter extended cab is known as Double Cab. Toyota does not offer a two-door regular cab. The bed in the review-model pickup is 5-foot-6; other bed lengths are 6-foot-6 and 8-feet.

With its 3.5-liter i-Force Max twin-turbo V-6 hybrid of 437 hp/583 lb.-ft. torque, the Tundra is rated at 12,000 pounds of tow capacity and max payload of 1,940 pounds.

Maximum tow ratings for other light-duty competition are 14,000 pounds for Ford F-150 PowerBoost V-6 hybrid of 430 hp; 13,300 pounds for Chevy Silverado 6.2-liter V-8 of 420 hp; 12,750 pounds for Ram 5.7 V-8 with 48-volt eTorque mild hybrid of 395 hp. Ford, Chevy, Ram also carry higher payloads than the Tundra.

The Tundra’s structural design has been well-accepted, though complaints have been sounded about the large, relatively flat front end and grille.

For all the success of the highly regarded Tacoma compact pickup, Toyota has never gained anywhere near the same wide sales reception with its full-size Tundra. It seems to just nudge past 100,000 sales per year; in fact, last year’s total fell to only 81,000 in the face of serious chip shortage and continued pandemic.

A sharp jump in sales occurred in 2007, when 196,555 Tundras were sold; it slumped, though, with the recession of ’08 and has never approached that level of sales again.

Pushing the Tundra to the $60,000 price level was the TRD Off-Road package ($3,085), which included beefed-up suspension with Bilstein shocks, 20-inch alloy wheels with all-terrain tires, skid plates, mud guards, leather shift knob, aluminum sport pedals and electronically controlled locking rear differential.

Among other options are JBL 12-speaker premium audio for $565, rock rails for $625 and heated leather steering wheel for $150. The Tundra has upgraded its user-friendly infotainment system; voice commands will adjust a number of settings.

The Tundra is built in San Antonio.

Kona EV and winter’s cold shoulder

The Hyundai Kona offers electric range into the 250s. (Hyundai photos)

The cold of winter takes a cut of range from the all-electric vehicles testing the market today.

In my experiences in driving fully electric vehicles in cold weather in recent years, the amount of miles lost to the weather are 10 to 15 percent. Other reviewers have estimated the loss of miles as high as 40 percent.

Most recently, the 2022 Hyundai Kona Electric Limited driven in the cold and on snowy roads gave up noticeable range.

That is, until an evening drive, with temps still around 35 to 38 degrees, no wind and all the snow and ice gone from major roadways, the Kona showed 232 miles of range still at its battery. Jan and I headed out of Greeley north on U.S. 85 to Lucerne, then made a right turn onto Colo. 392 for 28 miles to Briggsdale, took a left turn onto Colo. 14 to Ault, then south on U.S. 85 through Eaton, Lucerne and back to Greeley.

It was a nice, steady drive, somewhat light in amount of traffic. I accelerated heavily only three or four times when passing another motorist, and let the regenerative braking play its role of restorer of energy into the battery pack. The drive mode was in Comfort for the most part, though I used Eco (mildest) and Sport (liveliest) for short stretches.

We drove 78 miles, yet the range of the battery pack had been reduced by only 64 miles, a turnaround in performance from the week’s earlier cold and snow. The 64kWh battery pack modules are beneath the floor of the Kona and under the rear seat.

A look beneath the hood of the Hyundai Kona EV

The ride was a bit rough in the little Kona with curb weight of 2,899 pounds and wind noise was in evidence. The subcompact SUV crossover is on a wheelbase of 102.4 inches and overall length of 165.6.

The battery pack supports a 150kW electric motor of 201 horsepower, with single-speed automatic transmission and push-button drive.

The ’22 Hyundai Kona Electric Limited carries a sticker price of $44,240. A cheaper version of the Kona electric is the SEL model, beginning at $35,185.

Among the many features of the Limited are 10.25-inch digital instrument cluster with Harman Kardon audio, navigation, smart cruise, heated and ventilated front seats, leather-wrapped heated steering wheel, forward collision-avoidance assist, lane-keeping assist.