2020 Lincoln Corsair First Drive
All-New Lincoln Two-Row CUV Is Sweet!"This car is 'sweet,'" one of our group enthused to Lincoln marketing, sales and service director Michael Sprague after our day-long sojourn over the mountains and down the California coast from San Francisco to Carmel. He seemed about ready to buy one.
Remember not that long ago when Cadillac was cool and Lincoln was lame? Caddy was getting good at pursuing upscale imports with a stable of crisply styled, agile-handling, fine-performing cars while Lincoln was pushing mostly poshed-up, rebadged Fords. Then, just as American buyers have been going SUV/CUV (crossover) crazy, new Lincoln leadership has launched an impressive quartet of new and nearly new premium utilities -- Nautilus, Navigator, Aviator and now this Corsair - all handsomely designed and cleverly crafted inside and out.
Classified as a "small premium utility," this new compact luxury two-row CUV offers a standard 250-hp 2.0L turbocharged 4-cylinder and an available (along with intelligent AWD only in top-trim Reserve II models) substantially stronger 295-hp 2.3L turbo four, both driving through a new eight-speed automatic transmission. And it packs the expected passel of standard and available safety and driver-assist features and a few less common perks including anticipative headlamps that read the road and aim where you're about to go, steering wheel control icons that illuminate when you're using them, 24-way adjustable front seats with massage, easy to download (to Apple or Android) "Phone As A Key" capability, 14-speaker Revel premium audio and "symphonic crystalline" chimes (recorded by the Detroit Symphony Orchestra) that inform you of everything from an unbuckled seatbelt to an open fuel-filler door.
My co-driver handled the long first leg out of urban San Fran to the coast, then (for some reason) through some neighborhoods, back to the ocean, south to Half Moon Bay, east up the mountain to twisty two-lane CA-35, then back west to a driver-change stop at Pomponio State Beach. Observations from the passenger seat: the cabin is so quiet that Lincoln bills it as a "sanctuary for the senses," the infotainment screen is easy and intuitive to use with large touch icons, the radio happily offers both volume and tune/scroll knobs, plus handy hard buttons for Source and Seek.






