2020 Ford Escape Review

The Ford Escape has been around for 20 years, and while a lot has changed, a lot has stayed the same, too.

The difference and commonalities are an interesting commentary on the changes in the car business.

What It Is

The Escape is a compact-sized crossover SUV just as it was back in 2000 when the first Escape made its debut. It still seats up to five people in two rows, comes in both front-drive and all-wheel-drive iterations, and offers a pick of three different drivetrains—the same as it did 20 years ago.

But the drivetrains are very different today, and the new Escape offers features that you only saw in the sci-fi series like Star Trek: The Next Generation back in 2000.

It offers like a flat-screen instrument panel array and holographic information displays.

Prices start at $24,885 for the front-wheel-drive S trim, which comes standard with a 1.5-liter three-cylinder engine.

If you want all-wheel-drive, it’s available for $26,385.

If you want more power, the Escape is available with a turbocharged 2.0-liter four-cylinder engine that’s much stronger than the original Escape’s optional V6 engine. It’s paired with AWD that can be disconnected when not needed, which the original Escape’s AWD system couldn’t be.

It stickers for $33,040.

And if you want something really different, there’s a hybrid version, also with (or without) all-wheel-drive. This one delivers three times the mileage the old Escape did. It can also go three times as far as the old V6 Escape could—if you can select a plug-in option that gives you almost 600 miles of highway range on a full tank (and a full charge), without having to stop to recharge.

A top-of-the-line AWD-equipped Titanium trim with the plug-in hybrid drivetrain stickers for $34,900.

What’s New

The 2020 Escape is a wheels-up redesign; the wheels are new, too.

What’s Good

Unlike many in this class, which offer a standard and optional engine, the Escape is available with three different engines and two different transmissions.

Sliding second row opens up more legroom and cargo room.

Hybrid offers a diesel-like range without the electric car wait.

What’s Not So Good

Hybrid’s high cost argues against its mileage benefit.

manual transmission isn’t available.

A diesel engine isn’t available.

Under The Hood

It’s pretty wild to find a three-cylinder engine under the hood of a car and even more so under the hood of an SUV. The 2020 Escape’s 1.5-liter engine is smaller than some motorcycle engines. But it produces 180 horsepower, which is 50 more horsepower than the original Escape’s 2.0-liter four-cylinder managed.

The next-up engine is also a 2.0-liter engine. It makes 50 more horsepower than the original Escape’s available 3.0-liter V6 engine managed.

And the optional 2.5-liter gas-hybrid combo makes as much or more power than the old V6 (198 or 209, depending on whether you go closed-circuit or plug-in) while going three times as far on a gallon of gas.

The original Escape’s 3.0 liter V6, which made 200 hp, drank so much gas (16 city, 22 highway) that it almost needed to pull a tanker behind it. The new Escape hybrid drinks so little (44 city, 37 highway) you might only need to stop for gas a couple of times a month.

It’s just as quick, too. Zero to 60 in 8.6 seconds—same as the 16 MPG original.

And it doesn’t make you wait.

The hybrid layout frees you from having to plan your day around recharging—where to do it and how much time it’ll take. The regular hybrid just drives like any other car.

The plug-in goes both ways. You can just gas and go. Or when you have time, plug it in and wait for the battery to charge up without using the gas engine as a generator. Then use “EV” mode to drive without burning any gas or worrying about running out of charge.

You pull up to 3,500 lbs. with an Escape, par for the class. But the maximum tow rating varies according to the drivetrain you select, and in ways, you might not expect.

The base Escape with the 1.5-liter engine is rated to pull 2,000 lbs., but the more powerful hybrid can only tug along 1,500 lbs. The lower capacity is due to the hybrid already lugs around more weight before you hook anything up to its rear end.

With the 2.0 liter engine, the Escape can handle up to a 3,500 lb. trailer.

On The Road

No matter which engine you pick, the Escape isn’t slow, unlike the original, which was borderline dangerously slow with its standard 130 hp engine.

Your choice is between quick and quicker.

The drive also lasts longer because you don’t need to stop as often. The original with the V6 was decently quick but haltingly consumptive. It averaged maybe 14 MPG, which meant its 15-gallon tank could be emptied in as little as 210 miles.

A new Dodge Hellcat goes farther on a tankful.

The hybrid goes almost as far as a diesel, which Ford used to offer in the European version of the last-generation Escape (called Kuga in Europe) but never brought to the United States—and never will, because of the anathematization of diesel engines, which are too efficient/affordable/practical and make electric cars look stupid.

The next best thing is the hybrid, which approximates not only the range of a diesel but also the torque—one of the good things about electric motors.

Ford knows that while gas is cheap, gas mileage isn’t the sell it used to be. So while the hybrid Escape is very fuel sippy, it is also very peppy. Like a diesel-powered car, it jumps forward when asked to and without having to rev it.

It’s arguably better than a diesel because you don’t have to feed the hybrid DEF (diesel exhaust fluid) or deal with purging particulate traps or pay 40 cents extra per gallon for fuel.

Speaking of which: all the Escape’s engines are regular (87 octane) unleaded engines, so you don’t have to pay 20 cents extra per gallon for high-octane premium unleaded.

An interesting and useful feature of AWD-equipped Escapes is that they can run with the AWD off when the extra grip of four powered wheels isn’t needed, and powering all four wheels would be wasteful.

You save gas plus wear and tear, which is also saved by one of the deepest overdrive ratios you’ll find in any new car—.62 in eighth, which lets the Escape sail at highway speeds with the engine almost off.

But the drive is a bit less fun than it was back in the day because you can’t shift for yourself, no matter which engine you pick. The original Escape was available with a five-speed manual transmission. The 2020 version comes standard with an eight-speed automatic, which many people will be happy about because so many crossovers come only with a continuously variable automatic, and many people dislike the “shiftless” operating characteristics of CVTs.

It shifts snappily and more efficiently—more than a human-shifted manual, which is why Ford (and most car makers) rarely offer manuals anymore. There’s something to be said, shifting yourself, even if it does cost a couple of MPGs.

And if you do prefer a CVT, no worries. The hybrid version has one. And it’s not noisy. Or even very different, in terms of how it feels. The non-hybrid’s eight-speed goes through gears, but the gear changes are subtle, and unless you’re watching the tach and noting the RPM changes as the transmission shifts through its gears, you’ll probably have a hard time telling the difference.

At The Curb

The original Escape looked like a truck-based SUV. It was boxy, which had the upside of making it roomy, just like an SUV, but without actually being an SUV. The whole point was to give people who wanted or needed more than a car the option to buy a vehicle that still drove (and rode) like a car, not like a truck-based SUV.

This is one of the reasons for the popularity of crossovers.

The new Escape isn’t boxy, and it’s roomier. In part because of the flexibility of its fore-aft sliding second row. Pull them forward and lay them flat. The Escape also has 65.4 cubic feet of cargo room and 40.7 inches of backseat legroom, exceptionally roomy for this class.

The Escape is after all only 180.5 inches long, bumper to bumper, which is about a foot shorter overall than a current mid-sized sedan. For example, a Toyota Camry is 192.7 inches bumper-to-bumper and only has 38 inches of backseat legroom. It also has just 15.2 cubic feet of cargo capacity in its trunk—about a fourth of the capacity for cargo that the Escape offers.

I believe this is another reason for the popularity of crossovers and the declining popularity of mid-sized sedans like the Camry, the Accord, and the rest of them. Several (Chevy Cruze and Malibu, Ford Taurus, and Fusion) have been canceled for lack of popularity.

Ford has also added Lincoln-only features such as an external keypad entry system and an available 10-speaker Bang and Olufsen ultra-premium audio system previously. Also, futuristic elements, such as the available 12.3-inch flat-screen main gauge cluster (hybrid versions come standard with this) and a heads-up display (HUD), which projects pertinent information such as the speed you’re doing holographically, in your line of sight.

It’s pretty remarkable to find features like this in an Escape, which is a very bread-and-butter/middle-of-the-road kind of car.

Well, crossover.

Back in 2000, the only thing that had a touchscreen was the starship Enterprise, which wasn’t real.

As recently as five or six years ago, the only cars that had them were costly real things, like the Mercedes S-Class.

This tech, as well as used-to-be luxuries such as climate control AC and outstanding audio systems (not merely stereos), are now almost givens in everyday cars like the Escape. This is nice in that almost everyone can experience things which until quite recently only the very rich could experience. But it also generalizes specialness, which induces a kind of jaded ennui when it comes to new cars.

When every car has things like a configurable touchscreen, what makes this car with a configurable touchscreen special?

The Rest

Given how inexpensive gas is, it’s hard to justify the Escape hybrid’s price if you go solely by MPGs. But when you factor in the range—twice that of any electric car—with the performance and convenience of not having to stop to recharge, the thing makes a different kind of sense.

There is one downside, however.

Or rather, a weird side. The hybrid isn’t silent anymore. For safety, and because it’s now the law, an odd noise is emitted by the Escape hybrid (and all 2020 hybrids) whenever you put it in Reverse. So that pedestrians will hear you backing up and not be pizza-pied by the Escape.

It sounds like lousy wheel bearings, but it’s nothing to worry about—it’s supposed to sound like that.

Probably, there’s a hack somewhere that can be performed to shut this off.

The same goes for ASS, the automated stop/start “technology,” which all versions of the Escape, unfortunately, come standard. There’s no obvious ASS-off button, either as seems to be the new trend with ASS-equipped new cars.

It’s one thing that’s changed which may of us wish hadn’t.

The Bottom Line

Back in 2000, a crossover was something different. The 2020 Escape still is in some important ways – and the same in other ways, too.

And that’s also a good thing!

Comments?

www.ericpetersautos.com

*** Photo courtesy of Caricos

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