1997 Dodge Intrepid Fullsize Car Review & Performance

1997 Dodge Intrepid Fullsize Car Outside Features


The color of our Intrepid Sport test model is dubbed Bright Platinum

Metallic--a $200 optional paint job--but looked more like light metallic

grey to our eyes. The wide front air dam, wide-set foglights and squinty

headlights give the Intrepid the look of a nocturnal predator. This is

a car that definitely looks like it's on the prowl.

Prowling for what, we wonder? Perhaps it's eager to gobble up cars like

the Ford Taurus, Toyota Camry and Honda Accord, which are territorial rivals

even though the Intrepid is actually a full-size car.

By now, every auto journalist worth his or her weight in free coffee

and Danish has thrown laurels at the feet of the Chrysler designers who

came up with the cab-forward design. But let us add to those hosannas:

In concert with the dramatically-swept windshield, the function of this

design follows its sleek form--both in terms of exterior aerodynamics and

interior space.

Adding to the Intrepid's heart-fluttering hint of bad-boy are the evocative

monochrome body cladding, the eye-catching wraparound taillights, the black-tinted

windshield trim, and black heated-mirror housings.

Trim levels include the base Intrepid and the Intrepid ES. Updates for

the '97 include bolt-on wheel covers, an optional eight-way power driver's

seat, and a new $1400 Sport option package that consists of a 3.5-liter

24-valve overhead-cam V6 engine, the AutoStick system, Sport badging, leather-wrapped

wheel and shift knob, a digital message center and the eight-way driver's

seat.

The base price of an Intrepid is $19,955, including destination. Our

tester came equipped with the Sport package. After adding the $200 metallic

paint job, $105 for a regional emissions test and the $550 destination--then

subtracting the $600 Dodge discount--the final MSRP came to $21,060.


1997 Dodge Intrepid Fullsize Car Inside Features


When the Intrepid was introduced, one car-buff magazine measured the

interior space, from the base of the windshield to the base of its backlight,

and found it was 14 inches longer than a Ford Crown Vic--a vehicle that's

much larger and heavier.

Therein lies the beauty of the synergy between the cab-forward design

and the long wheelbase. There's enough back seat legroom for Dick the Bruiser

to pin the Sheik with a flying leg-scissor hold. Headroom is also copious,

while the optional 50/50 split-bench front seat increases seating capacity

from five to six--and with the Intrepid, that means six full-sized adults.

Standard equipment on the Intrepid consists of a 3.3-liter 161-hp V6

engine, four-speed automatic transmission, dual airbags, air conditioning,

tinted glass, AM/FM/cassette, rear defroster, front bucket seats, dual

vanity mirrors, body side protection, interior courtesy lamps, tilt steering

and power windows/locks/mirrors.

All switches are easy to locate and operate, and dials are smartly laid

out and well-illuminated. The sporty instruments have black-on-white graphics,

with a touch of grey shading.

The eight-way power seat provides plenty of body-position configurations

at the flip of a switch, and it reclines to near-horizontal to provide

clearance for loading large or odd-shaped objects. Interior lighting is

also generous.

And can we talk cupholders? The Intrepid sets the gold standard: the

adjustable sides can be ratcheted in and out to hold cups of various girths--and

keep them in place. We wish this design was universal.


1997 Dodge Intrepid Fullsize Car Road Test


Although the standard 3.3-liter engine would probably be sufficient

for most drivers, the optional 3.5-liter powerplant puts out an additional

53 hp--a total of 214--for those who like a little more tiger in their

tank. The extra power definitely makes the Intrepid more fun to drive--this

is a sporty sedan, after all--and provides added muscle for must-pass scenarios.

The 3.5-liter V6 is especially robust when matched with the AutoStick.

After dropping the shift lever into AutoStick, you're able to shift up

and down by flicking the shift lever to the left to upshift and to the

right to downshift.

It takes a bit of getting used to--especially since there's no clutch

pedal to synchronize with the shift lever. But once we overcame the novelty

and newness of sans-clutch shifting, we were impressed by how much more

attuned we felt to the car's power. Of course, a five-speed manual shift

on the floor would deliver even more spritely performance, but Chrylser

doesn't offer a stick shift in its LH cars.

The 3.5-liter engine ran smoothly and quietly; at 50 mph, the tachometer

held steady at a very civilized 1500 rpm, meaning the engine is doing its

job without straining.

When turning into tight corners, the Intrepid's variable-assist power

steering--working in conjunction with the fully independent Touring suspension--delivered crisp, precise handling with minimal body roll. In sudden-stop situations,

the four-wheel antilock disc brakes brought the Intrepid to a safe, controlled

halt.

One caveat, however: it's beyond us how such an otherwise tightly-engineered

car can allow so much wind noise to intrude--via the front-seat windows--upon

such a joyful driving experience.


1997 Dodge Intrepid Fullsize Car Line Up







 
 
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