Preowned 2003 Ford Escape at Automobilemag.com Subscribe Now
Resale: N/A
What you should pay
Value: Excellent
MPG: 19 city/25 hwy
New Car Pricing Reports

2003 Ford Escape

What's the Price in Your Area?
View actual, recent sales price to help you outsmart the dealer. Zip
Choose a submodel below for Rebates, Prices & Reviews:»Continue without submodel
2003 Limited ModelsBase EnginePrice RangeClassified Ads
2003 XLS ModelsBase EnginePrice RangeClassified Ads
2003 XLT ModelsBase EnginePrice RangeClassified Ads
2003 Escape

For a year and a half, Ford has been hiding the two-wheel-drive, four-cylinder base version of its Escape from the press--and now we know why. With not even two-thirds the power of its V-6 counterpart, the 127-horsepower, four-cylinder Escape can barely pull a feather out of a chicken's behind. Not only is it slow, but the Zetec engine is coarse and noisy to boot. It's a good thing the sixteen-valve four produces its torque down low, because revving it past 4000 rpm drowns out the radio. Despite its lack of power, the front-wheel-drive Escape still spins its inside front wheel at the slightest provocation and suffers from excessive understeer, although the steering is nicely weighted and accurate.

The four-cylinder Escape makes one wonder why on earth anyone would pay $4000 more for this than for Ford's own Focus wagon.

We know people buy SUVs for their high seating position, their image, and their go-anywhere ability, and because they can haul stuff. But while the Focus wagon can't provide the image or the lofty perch, it has better traction, more rear-seat legroom, and, with the rear seats up, more cargo volume (rear seats folded, the Escape wins by nine cubic feet). And when equipped with the 130-horsepower Zetec engine, the Focus is lively, with superb ride and handling.

The V-6 all-wheel-drive Escape has been highly praised, and rightly so.... Read full article

 
Twitter
Get Adobe Flash player
APPAREL, GIFTS & MORE!