Of the 3 original choices, pick the CX-5
2019 CRV owner here going on my 6-year of ownership. No problems whatsoever. Consider me a lucky blasturd..You couldn't give me a CR-V. Slow, uncomfortable and not that reliable. The newer ones aren't any better.
Why in the world do you need all-wheel drive as a must Northern Kentucky I can't see you having any issues that often unless you live on some gravelly dirt roadIf only they made them in AWD.
If one of my questions offends you it’s perfectly acceptable to just ignore it and scroll on by.
None of those choices have great AWD. More like FWD and if it’s slipping the rear wheels kick. That might be perfectly fine for use case.
Just make sure they have decent in winter tires even if all season . I have 13 RDX with similar type AWD.
Who makes a good AWD? I just naturally gravitate toward Toyota, Honda and Mazda because of their reputation for reliability so those are the ones I initially thought of.No offense taken, none of those vehicles have stellar AWD systems.
Define good first. The rock crawler guys no doubt have their opinions about what is "good".Who makes a good AWD?
Never look in my driveway, lol. I put up with a slow leak on my 5S-FE for a few years, when it was time to redo the timing belt, I finally found the culprit: I put in the o-ring wrong on the oil pump. I did every other gasket looking for that! put up with that for years, resorted to a piece of cardboard under the car when I finally had a garage.oil leaks drive me batty.
I got a ride in recent generation hybrid of CRV and found it really nice and not anything you describe.You couldn't give me a CR-V. Slow, uncomfortable and not that reliable. The newer ones aren't any better.
I got a ride in recent generation hybrid of CRV and found it really nice and not anything you describe.
I was asking because a couple of people said my choices weren’t good AWD systems, so aI wondered what is. I’ve driven true 4wd trucks all my life but the distinction between AWD and 4wd is not something I understand well. To me “good” means you get the maximum benefit of all of your tires grip on the road surface.Define good first.
None of those choices have great AWD. More like FWD and if it’s slipping the rear wheels kick. That might be perfectly fine for use case.
Just make sure they have decent in winter tires even if all season . I have 13 RDX with similar type AWD.
In the case where I know in advance I’ll need true 4wd I can drive my truck…or my tractor. I’m thinking about something that’s more of a gas saver that’s comfortable but still has enhanced abilities if the roads get bad.That's fine for most people who think they need AWD, and the ones who do need real AWD have a Subaru anyway.