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Mercury Mariner Hybrid Review

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Hop in the Mariner Hybrid and twist the key, clicking noises enimate, the engine cranks and quickly fires up. In warm enough conditions, with all systems optimal, the gasoline engine will shuts down, and you drive completely under battery power. The electric traction motor with 94 HP (70-kilowatt) powers the Mariner Hybrid up to 20 mph or untill the throttle is pressed down hard. At such a point, the 133 HP Atkinson cycle gasoline engine will fire up and join the traction motor to give the desired thrust. The engine can also shut down while coasting or decelerating. The Mariner Hybrid is a full hybrid, meaning it will try to run on electricity alone whenever possible.

Power steering is electric, so even when you're running on battery power, there's no impromptu steering wheel struggle when the gasoline motor turns off as it would normally in a normally aspirated Mariner (which uses a traditional engine-driven steering assist belt).

Air conditioning is driven by the gasoline engine. When that engine shuts off, the AC will too. These could leave drivers sweating in urban conditions so you are able to switch from AC to Max AC, which on the Mariner Hybrid, sends a signal to the engine to keep on turning.

The Mercury Mariner Hybrid uses an adapted 2.3L four-cylinder engine that has been detuned. Atkinson cycle technology allows in less fuel and air, which improves efficiency at the cost of 20 hp. The combination of the Atkinson-cycle gas engine and electric traction motor makes for an effective 155 hp, enough for a smart pull away.

Slowing and braking regenerates power to the supplemental battery, an array of 250 1.3-volt nickel-metal hydride D-cells under the cargo floor. The batteries plus the two motors add 300 pounds, for a total of 3,787 pounds curb weight. The batteries and electric motors are warranted for 8 years or 100,000 miles; the bulk of the car is 3/36. The Mariner's four-wheel drive and all-season tires will get you through most snowy weather. It's a fine vehicle for cruising two-lane roads (avoid passing) and interstates, but not for twisty mountain roads. At 70 inches high (and wide), stability control would help rein in overly exuberant driving; unfortunately, it's not available, so you're trading a measure of personal safety for environmental improvement.

The Mariner is relatively quiet, with plenty of backseat room, high seating, and a spacious carpeted cargo area. The cabin is fairly quiet, and the premium audio system (seven speakers and a six-disc CD changer with claimed MP3 capability) sounds nice

which is part of a $3,795 premium package (navigation, leather, premium audio with six-disc CD changer, parking sonar, cargo cover, heated front seats, side air curtains, and front side airbags). The radio/navigation package fits into a big dashboard cutout, but the LCD is only 4 inches.

When nav goes in, the standalone premium audio system's six-disc CD changer gets kicked out, and an external changer is relocated under the passenger seat; in its place in-dash is a single CD-drive (nav or audio) requiring you to swap among the half-dozen discs covering the U.S. Most every other maker long ago chucked CD for DVD nav, since the extra few dollars a DVD drive costs gets buried in the $1,500-plus cost of in-car nav.

High Points

  • Fuel economy
  • Bold styling
  • Rides better, out handles most of its competition

Low Points

  • Navigation system far from the best available
  • Battery charge/motor assist gauge angled too oddly to view easily

Performance and Handling

Anti-lock brakes (ABS) operate smoothly. Pedal response has been praised. Drum brakes are used on the rear except on V6 4WD models and Escape Hybrid, which have with four-wheel disc brakes. Brake Assist helps handling, allowing full braking power when it senses the driver has mistakenly relaxed pressure on the brake pedal in an emergency stopping situation. In addition, electronic brake-force distribution (EBD) provides more effective, more stable braking.

Gas Mileage

Trim

FWD 2.3L automatic

FWD 3.0L

4WD 2.3L automatic

4WD 3.0L

Engine

2.3L I-4

3.0L V6

2.3L I-4

3.0L V6

MPG (City/Highway)

22/26

20/24

21/24

19/23

Reliability and Maintenance

Interior and Comforts

The steering wheel is leather wrapped, but there are no audio volume/track buttons. Some switches are awkwardly placed such as the seat heaters, low down next to the door pockets. The satin trim pieces are pleasant to the eye. Many buyers won't feel the same about the simulated wood grain pieces.

Buyers who opt for the navigation system, can bring up a Hyrid Energy Flow screen, although many may find it hard to figure out what's going on. More informative is the fuel consumption graph screen, which shows the last 15 minutes of economy figures. It is somewhat marred by lettering across the bottom which indicates the average. The 110-volt AC socket offered in the Ford Escape Hybrid isn't available in the Mariner Hybrid, which some buyers may find troublesome.

Exterior

The trademark satin-finish aluminum vertical-bar grille sits on a matching bumper inset, turn indicator lights are housed where the headlamp lenses wrap around the fenders and the central recess in the hood imbues the front fenders with a subtle shoulder look.

Borrowing from Europe, small turn-indicator repeater lights are positioned in the front quarter panels just aft of and slight above the front wheel wells. Understated cladding preserves and protects the lower door panels and tie together the minimalist front and rear fender flares, nicely finishing the mid-door, horizontal character line optically connecting the front and rear bumpers. The tall glasshouse is properly proportioned to balance the body side panels. The angled C-pillar behind the rear side door accentuates the people-orientation of the Mariner while acknowledging it can haul cargo, too.

More satin-finish grille-like accents brace the taillamps. The side character line continues across the liftgate, swelling in the center to form a surround for the license plate recess. Another satin-finish inset separates the step-top of the rear bumper and the body-color lower fascia. Bright chrome exhaust tips finish the package

Styles and Options

The Escape is available in one 4-door body style. Four wheel drive is standard.

Main Competitors

Hybrid

In 2004, the Ford Escape Hybrid was released. This hybrid electric vehicle is 75% more fuel-efficient than the regular Escape according to Environmental Protection Agency tests and was the first SUV available to the public with hybrid technology.

External links