Dodge Magnum The Dodge Magnum, the wagon that made wagons cool. The unique look of the Dodge Magnum makes any trim level, from SE to SRT-8, an absolute head turner.

Dodge Magnum SXT: Review:

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
  #1  
Old 07-10-2004, 02:07 AM
redriderbob's Avatar
redriderbob
redriderbob is offline
Banned
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Metro Detroit
Posts: 3,879
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Default Dodge Magnum SXT: Review:

2005 Dodge Magnum SXT
Dodge rehabilitates the lowly station wagon with cocky new Magnum
by Marc K. Stengel (2004-07-09)



Station wagons in the '70s and '80s spawned like mad. They were everywhere; ergo, they became very not cool. Minivans appeared on the scene with the '90s. They were new, unfamiliar; ergo they became very hip, very cool.

Today, one scant auto-buying generation into the future, it's time to turn this sweater inside-out. It's minivans that have spawned like mad for the last 15 years. They're everywhere; ergo, they've become very not cool.

Meantime, aided by cultural amnesia, a seemingly unprecedented crop of station wagons is rolling onto the 2005 car scene. They appear unusual, innovative; ergo they're very hip, very cool.

So it's with a sniff of suspicion I've been transported into a parallel retro-universe that I present to my reading public the new 2005 Magnum SXT station wagon from Dodge. It's been ten years, mind you, since The Wife and I sheepishly traded away our stalwart 1987 Oldsmobile Custom Cruiser wagon so as to minimize snickers among valet-parking lads at pish-tosh garden parties. What a great car, though, for the kids - ten, eight and four years old at the time. Then again, what a relief no longer to sit amongst and atop spatters of scabby, dried strained peas that rendered crimson velvet upholstery into transcendental patterns of camouflage. I hardly have a frame of reference any more.

The hullabaloo surrounding Dodge's debut of the Magnum seems better suited to a manifestation of the Holy Grail. "New, bold, revolutionary." "It's like nothing you've ever seen or driven before." It's a station wagon, for crying out loud; a squared-off sedan. It hauls five people, and its boxy tail section encloses cargo. Besides, you have seen it beforeā€¹in old Dick Tracy comic strips. (Oops! Showing my age again. I'm referring to a time, kids, when whispering "Can you hear me now?" into a small pod on your wrist was dismissed as rank science fiction.)

It would be nice to be able to say that the new Magnum relates to my old station wagon as an Apple iPod relates to my first three-by-four-inch nine-volt AM radio with the leatherette case. I can't do that; but don't get me wrong. The Magnum is a pleasant freshening of the station wagon concept. It is simply not a revolutionary re-definition of same.

Fashion forward:
What, then, hath Dodge wrought? For starters, the company has devised an automotive fashion statement that's predicated upon attracting attention to itself. Based upon styling of the equally iconoclastic new 300C sedan from Chrysler, the Magnum's exterior exults in a free expression of snub-nosed, blunt-force affrontery. Like a '30s rod that's been chopped and sectioned (that's oldspeak, kids, for removing, lowering, and re-welding the roof), the Magnum exudes something of the punky sullenness of a street-corner thug. You know, like in Grease: The Musical.

And just like in Grease: The Musical, it's all a pose. There's nothing thuggy about the Magnum. In fact, it's pretty Beaver Cleaver, when you get right down to it. Inside is a clean, well-lighted place that looks for all the world like, well, like the family car that a station wagon is supposed to be. The interior is roomy for front- and backseat occupants, owing to Magnum's generously long (120-inch) wheelbase. The dash is unexceptional, yet complete with standard air-conditioning, AM/FM/CD audio, and the usual range of conveniences like power doors and windows, cruise-control, and steering wheel controls.

When it comes to cargo, Magnum has outsmarted itself a bit. That sulky, lowered roofline cramps storage capacity behind the rear seats - to 27.2 cubic feet, to be exact. Fold the rear seat backs, though, and stowage grows to 71.6 cubes. Magnum's virtue, moreover, is its ability to swallow long items that can stretch, say, ten-plus feet from the folded front right seat to the rear left corner of the hatch. The Magnum's station wagon DNA lends it real versatility, to be sure. Yet, it won't transport seven folks like my old "Wally Wagon" of yore. And that poseur of a roofline sweeps so dramatically low at the rear, that visibility suffers, particularly when backing up.

Horsing around:
There are three available engines for the rear-wheel-drive Magnum, and come autumn an all-wheel-drive powertrain will make its appearance as well. My Midnight Blue tester was the mid-level SXT model, sporting a brisk 3.5-liter V-6 that produces 250 horsepower and 250 pound-feet of torque. Dodge's marketing campaign, predictably, is currently in overdrive touting the available Hemi 5.7-liter V-8 with its 340 hp. Personally, I prefer the middle ground. The base engine's 190 hp is a tad anemic for two tons of curb weight; and HEMI's scandalous drinking habit can't withstand a comparison with the SXT's rating of 19 mpg city, 27 mpg highway.

At 250 hp, the Magnum SXT is no hotrod, for all its posturing like one. It is, on the other hand, a pleasantly civilized automobile. Back in my Custom Cruiser days, four-wheel independent suspension and four-wheel anti-lock disc brakes on a wagon were as sci-fi as Dick Tracy's two-way wrist-radios.

The Magnum has both, with front airbags and optional front-to-rear side curtain airbags to boot. It never quite occurred to me to flog the Magnum over twisty backroads, but I can hardly think of a more trendy, stylish and comfortable vehicle for sport-touring my way cross-country with family in tow.

And that's the clever game Dodge is playing with its new Magnum. The company knows that drivers like me know that station wagons are nothing new. Getting us to feel hip driving one again, on the other hand - now that's Magnum *** laude.

2005 Dodge Magnum SXT
Base price: $25,995; as tested, including 17-inch wheels, curtain airbags and CD player, $26,585
Engines: 3.5-liter V-6, 250 hp
Transmission: Four-speed automatic, rear-wheel drive
Length x width x height: 197.7 x 74.1 x 58.4 in
Wheelbase: 120.0 in
Curb weight: 3903 lb
EPA City/Hwy (est): 19/27 mpg
Safety equipment: Anti-lock brakes, traction control, electronic stability program
Major standard equipment: A/C, auto-reverse power windows, cruise control, power, heated seats
Warranty: Seven years/70,000 miles powertrain; three years/36,000 miles basic

thecarconnection.com

redriderbob
 



Quick Reply: Dodge Magnum SXT: Review:



All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:35 AM.