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Full Test: 2007 Dodge Caliber R/T AWD

Vehicle Tested:

2007 Dodge Caliber R/T 4dr Wagon AWD (2.4L 4cyl CVT)

MSRP of Test Vehicle: $21,450 Price It!!

What Works:

Feature-packed stereo, lots of content for the money, distinctive styling.

What Needs Work:

Poor fit and finish inside and out, MP3 jack lost if you buy the six-CD changer, 2.4-liter engine + CVT = slow.

Bottom Line:

Looks great on paper, lots of useful features, but falls short in performance and build quality.

Caliber: Fully Loaded

By Dan Edmunds Email

Date posted: 05-10-2006

Times, they are a-changing. As gas prices lurch upward, small SUVs and crossovers are popping up everywhere. Five-door compact wagons, traditionally huge sellers in Europe but dust-gatherers in U.S. showrooms, now have their big chance.

In other words, Dodge's timing with the 2007 Dodge Caliber R/T AWD could not be better. This boldly styled compact wagon crossover has a ton of impressive features on its spec sheet, and it's priced to move. Our well-optioned tester came in at a respectable $21,450, which puts it head-to-head with an all-wheel drive Toyota Matrix or Pontiac Vibe.

Power locked and loaded

To assure SUV-addicted customers that the Caliber is not just a cuddly, warmed-over Neon replacement, Dodge has adopted an "anything but cute" styling and marketing strategy. To that end, Caliber has been given the corporate face from a Durango, with perhaps a dash of Magnum thrown in to keep the whole firearm macho persona plausible. Although we're not entirely convinced that the theme scales down well to this size, the standard P215/55R18 tires on alloy wheels are a visual home run.

Inside, our Caliber R/T came standard with all of the most popular convenience features and power this and that. The controls for these items are well laid out and intuitive. We didn't have to consult the manual to figure out any of it.

But Dodge has taken things a step further, adding a few uncommon tricks. A Chill Zone beverage-cooling compartment within the glovebox works OK — but only if you crank the A/C. "Disco lights" (our term) illuminate the otherwise basic front cupholders. Both drew their share of dismissive sneers, but added value. A snap-out LED flashlight that latches into a charger built into the rear hatch interior lamp housing was universally praised.

Testers appreciated the numerous audio features. Our Caliber's steering wheel had very complete audio controls. We promise. Once we found them hiding on the back of the spokes they were easy to master.

Cooler still was the well-designed iPod/MP3/cell phone pocket that flips forward from the center armrest. It provides a full view of an iPod screen and thumb wheel, and is located directly over a 115-volt, two-prong power outlet.

Our R/T's 60/40 rear seats folded flat, opening storage space from a modest 18.5 to a respectable 48 cubic feet. If you're alone and need to carry something long, the front-passenger seatback can be folded flat as well. Dual finger pockets for closing the somewhat narrow rear hatch serve left- and right-handers equally well.

Our no-sunroof R/T had plenty of headroom for our tallest staffers, but elbow space at the door was tight. Some complained that forward visibility was a little slotlike owing to a lowish windshield header. The view out the back felt "pinched" by overarching D-pillars and large, fixed rear headrests.

Option misfire

We thought the $320 in-dash six-disc CD/MP3 option would be a no-brainer. Instead it was a huge dud. When we grabbed our iPod and went looking for the much touted auxiliary iPod/MP3 input jack, we couldn't find it. Many calls to Dodge later, we learned that this jack is deleted when you "upgrade" to the six-disc changer. What a rip! Our advice to iPod people is to stick with the standard single-disc CD player, which has the auxiliary input jack.

Other options fared better. The $400 premium sound group included a nine-speaker Boston Acoustics system with subwoofer and a pair of Musicgate speakers that swung down from the open hatch to amplify tailgating. Sneer-inducing for some, but they worked. Another $400 gave us the Driver Convenience Group, a grab bag of gadgets. Niftiest among them was the real-time tire-pressure readout on the dash.

For $150, our car sported Sunburst Orange Pearl exterior paint. But checking that box brings the color inside onto the center stack and seat inserts. More sneers, but that's why there are color choices, right? If our tester had been black or silver we think the treatment would have been a hit instead of a miss.

Another miss was our test car's iffy fit and finish. Yes, it was a pilot production car, but even with that caveat, we found many items of concern, from oversized and inconsistent body panel gaps to an ill-fitting airbag cover and a reluctant seatbelt retractor.

Faster than a speeding…Prius?

It's hard to tell if the Caliber R/T's larger four-cylinder engine hit the target or not. It looks decent on paper, especially when compared to a Toyota Matrix or Mazda 3: 2.4 liters, 172 horsepower at 6,000 rpm, 165 pound-feet of torque at 4,400 rpm, DOHC, dual variable valve timing. But during testing, acceleration was more sluggish than the specs suggest.

The Caliber's 10.1-second 0-60-mph time was unimpressive. The last AWD Toyota Matrix we tested returned 11 seconds with a much wimpier 1.8-liter, 123-hp engine. At the end of the quarter-mile, the gap shrunk to only 0.4 second, but 49 horsepower should produce a bigger advantage. Heck, a Toyota Prius gets to 60 in 10.4 seconds.

We doubt it's due to the bulk of the Caliber R/T's all-wheel-drive system, which features an electronically controlled coupling (ECC) and variable torque split. Experience shows that superior AWD launch traction offsets the extra mass — especially on a front driver.

So what's the deal? True, the 3,308-pound curb weight of our Caliber R/T AWD is some 300 pounds greater than an all-wheel-drive Matrix. But the Dodge still has a 26 percent better power-to-weight ratio — 5.2 hp per 100 pounds versus 4.1.

Shooting blanks

The culprit seems to be the mandatory continuously variable transmission (CVT), which, more than any other we've driven, had the effect of severing the visceral connection between driver and power plant.

Depressing the gas pedal did not change the drone of the engine or move the tach much, as acceleration was instead accomplished by a computer altering the CVT ratio. We felt about as involved as a taxi passenger asking the cabbie to step on it.

Autostick manual mode is provided, but on this CVT the simulated shifts felt especially, well, simulated. It was a tad faster this way, so we used it for our acceleration tests.

This sort of behavior is fine for fuel-sipping hybrids like the Toyota Prius, but the Caliber R/T is the allegedly sporty model with 18-inch tires, "sport suspension" and "performance steering."

But it isn't much of a fuel sipper. Caliber R/T AWD estimated ratings are 23 city/26 highway, while the Matrix AWD returns 25/30. During our week with the car, we saw an average of 21.5 mpg.

If all-wheel drive doesn't interest you, front-wheel-drive R/T models are scheduled for July. There are two-wheel-drive units with manual transmission available now, but only with the 1.8-liter engine.

Spin stabilized

As a daily driver, the Caliber R/T is balanced and competent enough. The steering is reasonably linear. Ride comfort was just a little firm over L.A. freeways, but in the ballpark. But nothing made us want to go charging around on back roads on our time off. Commute to home, park it, wait for tomorrow, drive to work, repeat.

Handling and steering didn't exactly live up to "sport" and "performance" expectations. We only managed 0.75 lateral g on the skid pad, with those 18-inch tires complaining loudly all the way. Understeer was strong, especially accelerating out of a corner. Our 64.2-mph slalom run was OK for the class, but we experienced mucho body roll.

Braking performance is also a mixed bag. Our Caliber R/T's four-wheel disc brakes hauled it to a stop from 60 mph in just 120 feet, but pedal effort is high and the brakes feel wooden.

Total recoil

If Dodge's aim for the Caliber was to terminate the Neon from our collective minds and replace it with something more purposeful and less cute, it has certainly hit its target. But in the end, our initial enthusiasm for the 2006 Dodge Caliber R/T and its inviting array of features was softened by its underwhelming performance, fun-robbing CVT and the quality shortcomings of our preproduction tester.

Hopefully that enthusiasm will be relit when we test the turbocharged SRT version sometime this summer.

http://www.edmunds.com/insideline/do/Drive...rticleId=115318

Posted

but falls short in performance and build quality.

10.1-second 0-60-mph

2.4-liter engine + CVT = slow

But the exhaust note sounds so cool in the commercials! :hissyfit:

Is it just the CVT that's making it so slow? Is there a 6MT option?? I suppose the 3300 lb weight doesn't help. I'm sure a 6MT FWD version would put down much better times while weighing less and getting better mileage.

Posted

The Caliber has an atrocious interior. Ugly design, poor quality plastics, and an overpowering sense of cheapness.

Posted

But the exhaust note sounds so cool in the commercials!  :hissyfit:

Is it just the CVT that's making it so slow? Is there a 6MT option?? I suppose the 3300 lb weight doesn't help. I'm sure a 6MT FWD version would put down much better times while weighing less and getting better mileage.

A 2.4 R/T FWD with a manual is supposed to join the lineup later

Posted

Eh, not a fan of the Caliber, but it is definitely growing on me.

I'd like a black SXT 5-Speed.

Posted (edited)

If I were to get one, I'd just wait for the SRT-4...it gets 300 hp and a 6-speed manual

Even though it seems a bit stupid not to have the AUX jack with the CD changer...if you own an iPod chances are you don't need to fit 6 CDs in there anyway...since the iPods hold a ton of songs anyway. Just gotta be careful which one you choose.

As for fit `n finish...it looks fine to me from the pics, but even if it's not it is just a preproduction model. I dunno if the ones in showrooms are built better or not...have yet to look at one up close.

Edited by Dodgefan
Posted

Even though it seems a bit stupid not to have the AUX jack with the CD changer...if you own an iPod chances are you don't need to fit 6 CDs in there anyway...since the iPods hold a ton of songs anyway. Just gotta be careful which one you choose.

Also, if you get the 6 disc changer, you can hold up to 4.2 gig of mp3's on those discs.....because the radio will play them.

Posted

I like the concept of the Caliber, and I think it looks pretty cool and different.......but I think they have made a big mistake in only offering the CVT on the R/T instead of a regular automatic (and hopefully, it would have been a 5-speed). The manual will help, and is a must for Europe. I just got an awesome idea: Since they will be making a Euro version Caliber with stick, a tighter suspension, and more steering feedback (to suit European tastes).....they should sell that version here as some type of special edition under the SRT-4! If DCX does this, then I will be expecting a check in the mail! :P

Are there any vehicles with a CVT that are praised for their performance? Seems like a good concept for possibly getting better mileage and performance.....but I don't think the technology is quite there yet.

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