A
new longer “EL” Expedition
For 2007, Ford has refreshed the front fascia
on the second-generation Expedition and added
a new six-speed automatic transmission. With
its new Extended Length (EL) model, the Expedition,
which was originally launched in 2003, can
finally compete bumper-to-bumper with the Chevrolet
Suburban and GMC Yukon XL. At this trim level,
the overall length is extended by 15 inches,
and 12 inches are added on to the wheelbase.
The enhanced Expedition fills a void left
by the discontinued Excursion that was manufactured
by Ford from 2000-2005. The Excursion
never really caught on and was out-sold by
Suburban at a rate of 6-to-1. Despite being
a self-described “truck company,” Ford
never directly competed in the “Suburban” market
until now.
I recently spent a week driving both a fully
loaded Eddie Bauer Expedition and the new
Limited EL. Both are massive vehicles
and definitely made for those who have to
carry up to eight people with luggage and
gear, or tow a trailer, camper or boat — up
to 9000 pounds.
While the sales of full-sized truck-based
SUVs are down and rapidly giving way to crossover
(car-based) SUVs, they still remain popular
as kid-haulers for back and forth trips to
school and running errands to the grocery
store.
For 2007, Ford is offering the Expedition
in a choice of four trim levels, each with
either rear-wheel or four-wheel drive. The
entry-level XLT ($29,995) replaces the XLS and
has a base price that is $5,485 less than
the 2006 model. The Eddie Bauer and
Limited model Expeditions are $3,200 and $3,500
less expensive than their 2006 counterparts,
respectively. The top of the line Limited
EL 4X4 has a base price of $43,395; my well-equipped
tester stickered at $51,035.
The same 300-horsepower, 5.4-liter V-8 linked
to a new six-speed automatic transmission
powers all Expeditions. Despite the
vehicle’s size and weight, the engine
easily and smoothly handled all of my driving
needs. I did not, however, tow anything
with either vehicle.
Both Expeditions are exceptionally easy to
drive, handle and park. Perhaps that
explains, to some extent, their popularity. Highway
driving is sedan quiet and I especially enjoyed
the longer-EL wheelbase’s smooth ride.
Conversely, fuel economy remains dismal with
an overall 13.8 miles per gallon in combination
city/highway driving.
Inside, the Expedition can seat up to nine
occupants across three rows of seats. Unlike
GM’s Tahoe, Yukon and Escalade, full-size
SUVs which have a solid rear axle, Expedition
uses a more advanced independent rear suspension
that permits the third-row set of seats to
fold flat into the floor and provides more
leg and knee room for occupants. Power-folding
seats for the third row are optional, as is
a power tailgate.
Second-row seats are split 40/20/40. The
center section can slide forward up to 11
inches to provide passengers in the front
bucket seats access to a child in a safety
seat. I first saw this feature on the
Volvo XC 90 SUV and thought it was great. Individual
captain’s chairs are a second-row option. Seating
position is high and provides a commanding
360° view of your surroundings through
oversized windows. However, third-row
headrests are unusually large and block rearward
visibility when the seats are in the upright
position.
I thought the dash looked dated with low-grade
hard plastic textures and materials. The
metallic-looking trim seemed out of place
and the faux-wood trim is not at all convincing. There
was too much hard plastic on the dash and
door panels. In fact, there isn’t
one soft-touch surface on the entire area.
My Eddie Bauer featured two-tone black and
cream leather seats, a look I found far from
designer-quality in appearance, and touch,
fit and finish are well behind the competition. I
much prefer the interior treatment on the
newly restyled Chevy Tahoe.
Other things that disappointed me were rear
windows that don’t go all the way down
and a tilt-only steering wheel. Telescoping
should be required on a vehicle at this class
level.
All major safety features come standard on
every Expedition, including stability control
and Ford’s Roll Stability control to
help mitigate rollover accidents. Front,
side and side-curtain airbags are standard. The
Expedition earned the highest five-star frontal-impact
crash-test rating from the NHTSA. SUVS
are not side-impact crash tested.
Expedition slugs it out with formidable competition
in the full-size truck-based SUV category, with
vehicles like the Nissan Armada, Toyota Sequoia,
Chevy Tahoe, GMC Yukon, Audi Q7, Mercedes-Benz
GL450 and Dodge Durango. With high gasoline
prices fueling the competition, the Expediton’s
biggest challengers seems to be the increasingly
popular car-based crossover SUVs.