Ford and Dodge both launched all-new seven passenger SUVs within weeks of each other. Despite a tough economy, high gas prices, and the public's seeming fascination with greener, electrified cars, two-thirds of the Big Three feel strongly that a market still exists for the type of vehicles Americans fell head over heels in love with a decade ago. We'll go ahead and say three out of three, as GM will happily sell you a Chevy Traverse. But let's not digress.
In the Dearborn corner you have the 2011 Explorer, once the USA's best-selling SUV, now reborn as a crossover instead of the more familiar body-on-frame truck. In the Auburn Hills corner you have the 2011 Durango, looking much leaner and cleaner than the last version, and now a CUV. We haven't had the opportunity (yet) to line these two up for a full-blown comparison, but we figure we'd use our seat time in both to answer some questions. Chiefly, how do these two stack up?
As it turns out, within inches. The Dodge is not quite 3 inches longer than the Ford, though the Explorer is just over 3 inches wider. In fact, the Explorer is 3 inches wider (and about that much shorter) than its sister, the Flex. Both the Flex and the Explorer are based on the same Volvo-derived D4 platform that underpins the Taurus. Meanwhile, the Durango rides on the platform that sits beneath both the Jeep Grand Cherokee and the Mercedes-Benz M/R/GL-Class. The Durango's wheelbase is 5 inches longer than the Jeep's, and a fairly substantial 7.5 inches longer than the Explorer's. Based off our time in not only the Explorer and the Durango but in the Grand Cherokee, the Dodge's extra inches between the wheels pays off with a more subtle and refined ride. We found the Explorer to be just on the hard side of comfortable.
But where do those same extra inches go inside the cabin? The second row of the Dodge is a tighter fit than the Ford. The answer is the third row. Full-size adults (and their feet) can fit comfortably in the Durango's way back. Not so much in the Explorer, especially in the foot room department. You're also left wondering where the Explorer's extra width has gone. The cabin doesn't seem especially roomy, though there is a lot of space between the steering wheel and the door, for whatever that's worth. Put another way, the Ford's width gives it no discernable interior space advantage over the Dodge.
Both SUVs feature all-new cabins. The Durango's interior is quite handsome and nearly as stylish as the new Charger. First and foremost is the new soft-touch, one-piece dashboard. It's excellent, and representative of what Dodge means going forward. The controls feel solid, the aluminum around the vents is actually metal, and the leather is a higher grade. Plus Dodge has banished the color gray from its interior color palette. Hurrah! One gripe: We wish Dodge would have also banished the nasty-looking last-gen navigation screen from its model lineup. Obviously, the fantastic-looking Garmin-based system found in the Charger and Journey will eventually filter down to the Durango, but it's a pity it's not here now.
The Explorer offers Ford's sophisticated MyTouch Ford system, and despite how dorky the name sounds, the more we use it, the more we like it. One nifty feature that's standard on the Limited trim package and optional on the XLT is the Sony-branded version of MyFord Touch. It replaces the normal controls with sharp-looking white-on-black touch-activated buttons. The Sony system is quite classy-looking and seems to work better than what comes standard. Then you have Sync, which just keeps getting better and better. It's close, and both vehicles are worlds improved when compared to their previous examples, but we'll give the interior win to the wide-body Explorer.





