Subaru Tribeca Review
Readers may recall that my previous review of the Subaru Tribeca described the SUV’s front end as a flying vagina. Shortly after this aesthetic assessment hit the web, the San Francisco Chronicle canceled my regular reviews. Both Subaru and BMW banned The Truth About Cars from their press cars. While the column is history and the ban remains, Subaru got the message. The new Tribeca’s front end looks nothing like airborne pudenda, and everything like a Chrysler Pacifica.
Subaru deserves props for abandoning the only automotive design capable of making a Pontiac Aztek look like a mistake (rather than an affront). But patterning the Tribeca’s snout after the prow of Chrysler’s bilious station-wagon-on-stilts is yet another mysterious miscalculation. While the Tribeca’s new nose is as innocuous as the previous one was pervy, why would Subie want potential customers to mistake its SUV for a failed product from a struggling American automaker?
At least the sanitization of the Tribeca’s Area 51-themed rear end leaves the Subaru’s butt looking like the posterior parts of the entirely successful (if now dated) Lexus RX. It's a distinctly upscale makeover compared the Tribeca’s side profile, which is now a dead ringer for the Toyota RAV4. Put it together and what have you got? Something deeply derivative and wildly innocuous with about as much Subaru brand DNA as Japanese knotweed.
The Tribeca’s interior carries over from the previous version; it’s still swoopy in a vaguely nauseating sort of way, adorned with the same flat silver plastic that Revell uses to give their model airplane wings their trademark sheen. The cowled instruments make no sense in this application, aside from diverting your eyes from the over-sized, ‘70’s-style digital readouts hovering inside the climate control knobs. On the positive side, tweaking the Tribeca's stereo’s mid-range and treble controls delivers serious tuneage.
The Tribeca’s seats offer about as much lateral support as a Sit-‘N-Spin, with the extra disadvantage of a steering wheel that doesn’t adjust for reach. And if you’re thinking about using the Tribeca’s third row for anything other than the kiddies’ stuffed animals, it’s best not to mention the middle row’s fore and aft adjustment to sugar-crazed siblings.
Getting the “old” Tribeca to move out of its own way was like asking an inceberg to dance. Given the previous engine’s impolite appetite for premium fuel, there wasn’t much Subaru could do to rectify the Tribeca’s sloth. So they didn’t do much. They modified the existing H6 engine package to run on regular, added variable valve timing to the exhaust valves and fitted a shortened conrod. Voila! The Tribeca’s powerplant grows from 3.0-liters to 3.6-liters, increasing power by 11 horses (to 256hp) and adding 32 ft-lbs. of torque (up to 247 ft.-lbs.).
Factoring the Tribeca’s 4250 lbs. curb weight, the SUV's gone from woefully slow to a kinda slow. Unfortunately the Tribeca still has a prodigious thirst for dead dinoflagellates. Call me carbon positive, but I reckon a SUV whose city mileage struggles to hit sweet 16 is OK if it accommodates seven genuine people and/or holsters a bad-ass V8. Otherwise, not.
More productively, Subaru took another bash at the Tribeca’s five-speed autobox, whose previous unwillingness to shift would test the patience of an opium addled Maharishi. Although shifts are noticeably faster and smoother, the engine now sounds like your mother’s old Hoover. Worse, the Tribeca’s slushbox remains obstinate on inclines, holding onto higher gears as if the lower ones didn’t exist.
The steering is equally unresponsive, with enough slop to feed a large family of pigs. But Subaru’s tweaks to the Tribeca’s rear suspension are easily the worst part of the car’s less than stellar driving dynamics. Not only does every lump and bump send a muffled shudder through the otherwise serene cabin, but it all goes seriously wrong over badly broken pavement.
On anything less than a smooth surface, the Tribeca’s newly recalibrated suspension’s rebound rate fails to catch up with even a minor series of horizontal jolts. I don’t know exactly what Subie’s boffins did to the Tribeca’s front McPherson struts and rear wishbone, but the result is so uncomfortable I actually began to feel carsick. No wonder Subaru removed the “B9” designation from the model’s moniker.
For an automaker famous for creating cars that can carve-up a country road and leave it for dead, a company that advertised its car-based models as SUV alternatives, Subie's SUV is an unabashed and unforgivable brand betrayal. The only real question is when the company will "face" the fact that shooting the messenger doesn't alter the truth: you can't make a silk SUV out of sow's ear or, you know, whatever.
More by Robert Farago
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- Kwik_Shift_Pro4X Where we buy our Nissans, our salesman has a YouTube channel. As with having a steady mechanic, a consistent salesman can reap rewards and fairness.
- Teddyc73 It's interesting how under each new owner of the former Chrysler corporation brands they use the same play book of " there will be new models next year" which become "we have delayed all the new models for next year". This has been an ongoing theme for this company for years and years. As a long time Mopar owner I would love to put Chrysler back on my shopping list. I've owned several. I switched to Ram because I needed a truck. I would like a small premium SUV or sedan to accompany it as my daily vehicle but Chrysler doesn't offer my anything. As great as the Pacifica is I don't need a minivan.
- Teddyc73 "all electric space". Can we just stop with using "space". In the automotive industry it was always class or segment. All of a sudden it's "space". So ridiculous.
- Dave M. I hate to say this, but I think car show days are over. This is from someone who salivated in anticipation of our annual car show. 15 years ago I even went 3 days in a row so I could sit in everything and sharpen my skills when people asked me car buying advice. But these days numerous brands don't bother coming, cars are equipped to where you can't adjust seats, etc without the power on, and in the case of my location, parking is ridiculously expensive (to my chagrin, it's a county owned facility that has multiple acres of parking and charges $25. For a lot the county (thus people) own and has paid for itself numerous times over). Since I got my new car a year ago, for the first time in 42 years I won't be going this year....
- Billccm I bet people have been camping out at dealerships waiting for these arrivals.
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It's a Subaru! The doors are fully framed! It never had a chance. I'm worried about the STi that I intendt to replace my Spec. B with in April. Its doors are framed too! Subaru's position (niche) is simply this: "Different and Better" If they stray from that and don't attract cross shopping against A4s and 3Series it'll be over. If Toyota take the reins completely - which I doubt will ever happen - it'll be instant death. I don't see Toyota bringing any economies of scale for building horizontal 4 cylinder engines. And Subies are WAY more fun and dependable.
I love the Tribeca. It has leather heated seats. A rear camera that helps you reverse. It's a very smooth, quiet ride unlike most SUVs' I've driven. I work at a car dealership and we sell Subaru and many other makes and models. I didn't know anything about Subaru when I started, now I know a lot. They are just about the safest vehicle on the road no matter which model you look at. They are also extremely comfortable. Most people who don't like them probably haven't driven one. I didn't like them at first until I test drove one. Ever since then I've loved them.