Lincoln MKX Reviews – Lincoln MKX Price, Photos, and Specs – Car and Driver

Lincoln MKX

Car and Driver

Tested: two thousand sixteen Lincoln MKX Two.7T FWD

2016 Lincoln MKX Two.7T FWD

  • Aug 2016
  • By STEVE SILER
  • Photography By STEVE SILER

We’ve been warned about expectations. “No expectations, no disappointments,” read one familiar telling we eyed on a wall plaque somewhere. Another one read, “Expectations are merely resentments under construction.” But when it comes to luxury vehicles such as the Lincoln MKX, the prices charged by their makers inevitably raise certain expectations.

As the ostensibly cushier expression of FoMoCo’s two-row, mid-size SUV architecture that also underpins the square-jawed and generally appealing Ford Edge, the elegantly styled Lincoln MKX makes certain promises. We found many of those were fulfilled and even surpassed when we tested a swift, slick, if rather pricey ($63,275 as tested) MKX Two.7 turbo with all-wheel drive. We praised its precise treating, strong acceleration, and convenient cabin. So how much different might the front-wheel-drive model be with that same excellent engine? And what if it were priced closer to what people might expect to pay for a Lincoln rather than a BMW X5 or a Porsche Cayenne?

As it turns out, when it comes to the most powerful MKX, all-wheel drive and heaps of options make the difference inbetween exceeding expectations and failing to meet them.

Power without Grace

On paper, the $2000 charge to interchange out the MKX’s base engine—a Three.7-liter naturally aspirated V-6 making three hundred three horsepower—for the optional 335-hp Two.7-liter turbocharged V-6 seems a no-brainer, if only for the attendant boost in peak torque, from two hundred seventy eight lb-ft at four thousand rpm to three hundred eighty lb-ft at three thousand rpm. One might also expect that, by carrying almost three hundred pounds less than the all-wheel-drive model, the front-drive Two.7 turbo model might serve up quicker zero-to-60-mph acceleration times. (Or at least matching ones.) Nope. The best we could muster with the front-driver was a lackluster 6.9 seconds, 0.9 2nd behind the all-wheel-drive MKX and 1.Three seconds behind the Ford Edge Sport, which is powered by a detuned version of the same engine with three hundred fifteen horsepower and three hundred fifty lb-ft of torque.

What gives? Low-speed traction. At anything beyond half throttle, the MKX just can’t get a grip. The comfort-oriented suspension permits serious rear-axle squat under acceleration, pitching the nose up and unloading the front wheels, resulting in fruitless wheelspin. If there are pavement irregularities or a whiff of steering input when the power comes in, the driver needs both mitts on the wheel to keep pointed straight. Stability control actually seems to worsen this effect, applying the brake to one front wheel, then the other, generating a seesaw response. We’re talking about steering-wheel-yanking torque steer like you haven’t seen since a 1980s Saab Turbo. Much of the Two.7T’s extra power goes to waste when it can’t route excess torque to the rear wheels. We tested during dry conditions in California and can’t imagine how rambunctious it might be in the humid or in snow.

Aside from that, the slick turbo six is a good companion. It scarcely murmurs at speed, and combined with a dearth of wind and road noise (thank you, noise-cancellation technology), the MKX registers just sixty four decibels at a 70-mph cruise, five decibels quieter than the Edge Sport, matching such paragons of serenity as the Lexus LS. Expectations met.

Slick Operator, Until You Stop

Also meeting expectations of the Lincoln brand is a deliciously silken rail, thanks to adaptive dampers that absorb bumps like Bounty deep-throats up spilled Kool-Aid. When we reviewed the all-wheel-drive model, we noted that drivers need to dig deep into the Sync infotainment system’s menus to switch the chassis tuning among Convenience, Normal, and Sport settings. The front-drive edition avoids that annoyance with a system that isn’t adjustable at all; instead, the single-tune setup’s responses are dictated directly by how you drive. Feed in the steering gently, and the vehicle stays rather vapid as side fountains build; turn quickly, and the MKX heaves over like a container ship in the North Sea. A major dead spot in the steering at center prevented this model from feeling terribly precise, no matter how strong the steering got at high speeds.

Our test example’s vague brake pedal also made even the most concerted attempt at sleek stopping an exercise in futility. Initial pedal application produced little response. Then, at some point midway through the pedal travel (a point that was still unpredictable even after two weeks spent with the vehicle), a unexpected onslaught of stopping power would hurl forward anything not glued to the seats—heads, arms, cargo, dogs, hot cappuccino—in unseemly style. The MKX gives the impression of enormous stopping power, but our 70-to-zero-mph braking test actually produced a lackluster 186-foot stopping distance, fifteen feet longer than the AWD model and ten longer than the Ford Edge Sport AWD. Anything beyond one hundred eighty feet is too long for this class, where leading luxury-brand competitors can stop from seventy mph in one hundred sixty to one hundred seventy feet.

Much of what we disliked about this MKX’s dynamic behavior was absent in the all-wheel-drive model. The tidier treating and better directional control of the AWD version can be attributed not just to the added rear-wheel traction but also to the driver-selectable dampers, which, left in Sport mode, kept figure motions in check. Our advice: Spend the extra $2495 for the all-wheel-drive edition, or save $2000 by sticking with the base Trio.7-liter engine. Going with all-wheel drive erases two mpg from the EPA rating on the highway (24 versus twenty six mpg), while the 17-mpg city figure doesn’t switch. In reality, we recorded twenty mpg in the AWD model but only seventeen mpg in this front-driver—the switch sides of expectations.

Vinyl, Vinyl Everywhere

Like the other MKX we tested, this one arrived in Reserve trim—the penultimate version, just below the Black Label model (more on that later)—and its relatively attractive as-tested price of $54,365 included the $1650 Driver Assistance package (lane-keeping assist, interior mirror with camera, automated emergency braking, and adaptive cruise control), the $1720 Technology package (active park assist, front parking sensors, and a 360-degree camera), the $1155 Revel audio system, $250 inflatable rear seatbelts, a $595 Climate package (heated rear seats, heated steering wheel, and rain-sensing wipers), a $695 White Platinum paint job, and a $60 Enhanced Security tag. It lacked the 22-way front seats ($1500) that were in our all-wheel-drive test car. We missed them, finding ourselves sitting on broad, lounge-like chairs that permitted too much bod movement during turns. Our test car also had dreary all-black upholstery, with vast expanses of shiny vinyl on the dash and upper door panels that were made only slightly classier with stitching. The luxury vibe is further compromised by hard plastic in the lower door panels and the center console, with still more plastics doing their best impressions of wood, aluminum, and graphite surfaces.

On the plus side, Lincoln had the good sense to reinstate conventional buttons and knobs for the MKX’s stereo and climate controls rather than proceed with the sliders and capacitive touch controls of the previous MKX. We also appreciate the open lower deck of the center console. And the rear seat is absolutely massive.

Much of the MKX’s interior cheapness is alleviated when you choose the Black Label trim, which coddles passengers with Venetian leather, genuine wood, and real metal, coordinated among one of four different design themes: Modern Heritage, Thoroughbred, Indulgence, or The Muse. Black Label models also bring a different ownership practice, says Lincoln, finish with a concierge, free car washing, a yearly detail, and remote pickup and delivery services. But that comes at a steep price. A Black Label model with the Two.7-liter EcoBoost mill and a similar level of equipment as the Reserve version we tested costs almost $61,000—even more if you opt for the 22-way seats or all-wheel drive. At that price, Lincoln finds itself in a space where expectations are higher still.

While Lincoln has opened up more space than ever inbetween its MKX and the more plebeian Ford Edge, having even one model in the range exhibiting drivability issues as extreme as the torque-steer problem this car had—disregarding the low-grade plastics and vinyl inside—makes it stiffer to consider Lincoln a worthy competitor to Mercedes-Benz and Audi. If Lincoln wants to meet the rightful expectations of luxury shoppers, all of its models, not just one combination or two, need to drive well and look good. While a dressier interior in lower trim levels would go a long way, another step in the right direction would be to make all-wheel drive standard with the turbo engine.

Highs and Lows

Highs:

More than enough power, supremely quiet, elegant styling.

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