<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=1500520490268011&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1"> primo test Outback 3.6R MY 2010 | Il Forum di Quattroruote

primo test Outback 3.6R MY 2010

Let's get one thing straight, right here at the top: The "R" in the model
designation does not stand for race.

The new Outback, generation four dating to 1994, is not a ride that's likely to
stimulate your inner racer. This is family transportation, and 15 minutes behind
the wheel will be enough to convince you that whatever sport you might associate
with the vehicle is the equipment you loaded on the roof rack or into the
rubber-floored cargo well at the back.

But neither does "R" stand for retardo?Spanish for "slow as hell," or something
like that. Not with the optional 3.6-liter flat-six providing propulsion. The
3.0-liter H-6 option in the previous Outback 3.0R made forward progress an
exercise in patience. It's a different story here.

Although the latest Outback is bigger in every dimension but length, the
development team has done an excellent job of keeping weight in check. Our test
subject, a top-of-the-line Limited model, scaled in at 3651 pounds. As with all
Subies, that curb weight includes standard all-wheel drive. For contrast,
consider the mass of two five-passenger competitors with similar dimensions: An
all-wheel-drive Mazda CX-7 weighs in at about 3900 pounds, with a Chevrolet
Equinox coming in at more than 3700 with only front-wheel drive.

More Muscle to Move the Modest Mass

Introduced with the Tribeca, Subaru's three-row crossover SUV, the 3.6-liter
flat-six doesn't make much more horsepower than the 3.0?256 versus 245?but it's
much more of a torque generator: 247 lb-ft compared with 215. Better yet, the
torque curve has a profile similar to the airport butte in St. George, Utah?long
and flat. Subaru claims 225 lb-ft are on tap from 2000 to 6000 rpm, and we
believe it.

With a five-speed automatic sending power to the all-wheel-drive system?the
torque split is 45 percent front, 55 rear in normal operation?the 3.6R hit 60
mph in 7.4 seconds and covered the quarter-mile in 15.7 at 90 mph.

There's obviously no danger of nosebleeds or acceleration g-load brownouts with
numbers like that, but this is a much livelier pace than the 3.0R was capable of
producing. And passing performance, something that required careful planning
with the previous flat-six, is much more carefree and spontaneous. The
transmission kicks down readily, and the Outback surges forward with a will.

Specifications
VEHICLE TYPE: front-engine, 4-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 5-door wagon

PRICE AS TESTED: $34,685 (base price: $28,690)

ENGINE TYPE: DOHC 24-valve flat-6, aluminum block and heads, port fuel injection

Displacement: 222 cu in, 3630cc
Power (SAE net): 256 bhp @ 6000 rpm
Torque (SAE net): 247 lb-ft @ 4400 rpm

TRANSMISSION: 5-speed automatic with manumatic shifting

DIMENSIONS:
Wheelbase: 107.9 in Length: 188.2 in Width: 71.7 in Height: 65.7 in
Curb weight: 3651 lb

C/D TEST RESULTS:
Zero to 60 mph: 7.4 sec
Zero to 100 mph: 19.7 sec
Street start, 5?60 mph: 7.8 sec
Standing ¼-mile: 15.7 sec @ 90 mph
Top speed (governor limited): 116 mph
Braking, 70?0 mph: 188 ft
Roadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad*: 0.79 g

FUEL ECONOMY:
EPA city/highway driving: 18/25 mpg
C/D observed: 20 mpg
*Stability-control-inhibited.

Transmission Omission?

Ah, yes, the transmission. Subaru actually offers three transmissions for the
Outback. Buyers who settle on the 2.5i model can choose between a six-speed
manual (standard) or an optional new chain-driven continuously variable
transmission, a first for an all-wheel-drive application.

Outbacks equipped with the new H-6 are limited to the five-speed automatic. It's
a smoothie in ordinary operation, but the manual function using the
wheel-mounted paddle shifters isn't particularly satisfying. Shifts are a little
soggy, and the transmission upshifts on its own a couple hundred rpm before the
6500-rpm redline. Considering this vehicle's family-oriented mission and the
uninspiring performance of the paddle-shift system, Subaru could well have saved
some money by omitting such frivolities from the inventory. And we'd gladly swap
the paddles for a sixth gear, something the CX-7 and the Equinox include in
their auto-only drivetrains.

Dynamic Certainty

As we said, no one is likely to consider this Subaru to be racy, but it's
unlikely to provoke dismay with any handling quirks. There's a fair amount of
body roll?the trade-off for supple ride quality on all but the gnarliest
surfaces?and the variable-assist rack-and-pinion steering is a little slow at
3.2 turns lock-to-lock.

Even so, the Outback recovers well in quick transitions and is absolutely devoid
of surprises. Inevitably, there's progressive understeer, and it's not difficult
to provoke squeals of protest from the 60-series tires (225/60-17), a taller
profile selected for ride-quality benefits.

But there is never an instant of uncertainty in this vehicle's responses, and
anyone who plants an Outback among the roadside greenery?overcoming an effective
(and not completely defeatable) stability control?has done so by a Darwin Award
level of incompetence.

Capacious, Quiet Cabin

Whereas the 3.6R delivers a respectable level of performance?and decent fuel
economy (an EPA-rated 18 city/25 highway mpg) burning regular fuel (the 3.0
required premium)?the Outback's greatest strengths are quiet operation and the
expanded space in its handsomely appointed cabin.

Although we noted a nasty chassis buzz on washboard stretches of graded road, as
well as an occasional shudder through the unibody on some of the bigger bumps,
the Outback's basic pavement deportment is almost beyond reproach.

The civilized dynamics are augmented by the voluminous interior. The Outback's
overall length is actually slightly diminished, but the wheelbase, the width,
and the height have all increased, yielding rear leg- and headroom capable of a
strong comfort rating from all but the tallest of the current NBA tribe, as well
as a good-size cargo hold.

Our test subject was a top-of-the-line Limited model that rang in at $34,685
with navigation and a power sunroof. Its base price is $31,690. You can get into
a new Outback for considerably less?the base 3.6R starts at $28,690, and a 2.5i
is $23,690?but it's worth noting that the base price for the 3.6R Limited is
actually a little less than for the outgoing 3.0R Limited, and it's also less
than the top version of the Mazda and only about $1000 more than the
highest-spec Equinox.

It may not be a thrill-a-minute ride, but the vehicle Subaru characterizes as
the progenitor of the crossover phenomenon remains one of the key players in
that rapidly expanding game.

Fonte: Car and Driver
 
al di la delle impressioni varie,non ti sembra un po' troppo europeizzata questa legacy? forse che preferivo la vecchia...e quella piu' vecchia ancora :D
 
gallongi ha scritto:
al di la delle impressioni varie,non ti sembra un po' troppo europeizzata questa legacy? forse che preferivo la vecchia...e quella piu' vecchia ancora :D

mah guarda al contrario mi sembra pensata proprio per il mercato nordamericano.
 
senza dubbio...intendevo dire che mi sembra che diano piu' peso al design rispetto al passato...la cilindrata poi fa veramente pensare ad un mercato diverso del nostro!per fortuna hanno fatto un ottimo diesel!
 
Quello che non capisco è "The 3.0-liter H-6 option in the previous Outback 3.0R made forward progress an exercise in patience"

Mah ... quindi il 2.5? Scendi e spingi?
 

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