For a vehicle named after a tribe of Saharan nomads, the Volkswagen Touareg
(pronounced “twar-egg”) hasn’t wandered far from the middle of the
road. That’s been good business for VW, which says it has sold more than
720,000 copies of this mid-size SUV worldwide over 11 model years now,
nearly 130,000 of them in the U.S. So VW didn’t see much need to go
wandering off into the desert with this midterm update for 2015. The Touareg is one of our Editors’ Choice picks, and the 2013 TDI model won a comparison test of diesel SUVs, so we’d agree that not much needed to be fixed.
This second-generation Touareg debuted in 2011, and this newest one is
mechanically unchanged whether you choose the standard gasoline V-6
model, the TDI turbo-diesel, or the performance-oriented hybrid. The
exterior is dressed up with a new four-bar grille, chrome trim, lighting
upgrades, restyled wheels, and new colors. Inside, there’s more shiny
silver stuff, better switchgear, and richer-looking leather and wood
trim details. Finally, to stay in contention with newer competitors, VW
added a suite of electronic driver safety aids including adaptive cruise
control, a lane-departure warning system, blind-spot detection, and
pre-collision braking.
Standard 4MOTION all-wheel drive, a rated towing capacity of 7716
pounds, more than six inches of fore/aft travel for the split-folding
rear seat, and a hands-free liftgate for access to the cargo hold (32
cubic feet with the seat up or double that with it folded) all carry
over as allures to those buyers who still need real SUV features and
won’t settle for less-capable crossovers.
Déjà Vu All Over Again
Our first experience driving the 2015 model was much like our last drive
in a 2014 Touareg. This went double because VW staged its media event
minutes from C/D’s Ann Arbor offices, using a route incorporating roads we use regularly for our 10Best testing.
As you’d expect, the driving character of both the gasoline FSI and
diesel TDI V-6 variants carries over with good feel from the
hydraulically assisted steering (only the hybrid uses electric assist), a
fairly taut and responsive chassis, and a nicely firm and readily
modulated brake pedal. The family-oriented VW’s character tilts toward
the compliant and comfortable mainstream virtues, leaving more
expressive driver-oriented attributes to its VW Group platform-mates, the Audi Q7 and the Porsche Cayenne.
The VW, for instance, doesn’t offer paddle shifters for its eight-speed
automatic transmission, although there’s a manual mode available on the
shift lever.
The manual mode is semi-necessary to keep the 3.6-liter FSI V-6 on the
boil to propel 2.5 tons of mass. Programming for the transmission is
fairly prompt to kick down when the driver pushes hard on the
accelerator and smart about holding gears through a series of bends, but
it’s also calibrated to maximize economy on the EPA cycle. As has been
the case at least since the diesel’s horsepower total was bumped to 240
(from 225) in 2013, the TDI version’s abundance of torque (406 lb-ft)
makes it the driver’s choice when accelerating out of slow corners. The
penalties for diesel are minimal here, with only a very slight
coarseness in the power delivery to give away the game, plus the buy-in
cost and the pricier fuel that offset the real fuel-economy advantage.
The higher peak output of the gas engine is evident only in passing
maneuvers at higher speeds. Yet the real performer of the range is still
the costly hybrid, which enjoys a huge power advantage over its siblings.
Creeping Toward Autonomy
We regard the new safety-technology features much as we do the exterior
chrome: Superfluous steps that keep the Touareg competitive with newer
offerings in the segment without really adding much desirability. The
lane-departure warning comes in the form of a vibration in the steering
wheel, adjustable via the central touch screen through three degrees of
severity. At its gentlest, we found the warning that we’d crossed a lane
line without signaling our intentions nearly indistinguishable from the
vibration induced by slightly roughened pavement and less so than the
edge-warning grooves on some highways. The harshest setting should be
reserved for the chronically inattentive, who might well imagine the
shaking wheel as indication they’d just run over an alligator.
The adaptive cruise control works well and, with the pre-collision
braking feature, can bring the Touareg to a full stop when traffic
demands. The blind-spot warning, delivered via lights on the inner edge
of the exterior mirror housings, worked as advertised but never told us
anything we didn’t already know by paying attention to properly adjusted mirrors.
The lights glow to indicate the presence of a vehicle in an adjacent
lane, flashing if the driver signals a lane change in that circumstance
or with traffic fast approaching (VW calls this latter feature Side
Assist). The main reason VW needs these “aids” is to keep shoppers who
insist on them from wandering off to other brands.
Buyers can opt for some of these technologies on Touaregs starting in
the mid-$40,000 range, but the diesel isn’t available until the price
starts with a five. The base model is the Sport, followed by Sport
w/Technology that adds navigation, a towing package, and Side Assist.
This level is the lowest trim for the diesel, which costs $3500 more
than the FSI engine, a margin that carries through the mid-level Lux
(with Park Distance Control) and top Executive (with surround-view
camera) trim levels. The hybrid partially justifies its exorbitant MSRP
by including all the new driver assists, some of which are optional even
at the Executive level, as standard equipment.
Jeep sells almost twice as many Grand Cherokees
in any given month as VW sold Touaregs all last year, and VW’s mild
update doesn’t offer any compelling argument to drastically move the
scales, but it should keep this appealing SUV on shopping lists for a
few more years
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