Las Vegas Review-Journal

SUV SHOWS AGILITY

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T2019 Chevrolet Suburban RST is so far removed from the Chevy Suburbans of the past that it is a different classifica­tion altogether: the performanc­e full-size SUV. If you can have performanc­e trucks, why not giant SUVS?

The Suburban has been suburbing families and their stuff since 1935, making it the longest running nameplate in continual use. The Suburban of my past is a high school buddy’s rusted out powder blue on navy truck with ripped vinyl seats and a busted shock so it listed to one side and could haul the whole gang of teens, provided we chipped in for gas money. That was a Suburban, beat up, beloved, and running seemingly forever to its death.

By contrast, the 2019 Chevy Suburban RST is a sleek blacked-out night prowler capable of surprising agility and power from a small block V-8 engine like the one used in a Chevy Corvette. Except this vehicle is nearly 6,000 pounds. They say black is slimming so it has black wheels, black bumpers, black bow ties — black everything, even the lettering. It’s way too luxurious for any teen, too powerful for the suburban driver and so ridiculous­ly priced it’s meant for only the few.

At $82,000, it cashes in on the predominan­t promise in today’s new car market : You can have it all, for a price.

Last redesigned for 2015, Chevy’s venerable cash cow has been caught in the crosshairs of Ford’s impressive assault on the full-size SUV market. The luxury star of the segment is the $90,000 Lincoln Navigator, which rightly won 2018 North American Truck of the Year, and its more approachab­le cousin, the Ford Expedition, which provides a great balance of power and efficiency, advanced technology and towing capability. Those vehicles capture the attention of what full-size SUV drivers need.

The 420-horsepower RST is not about need; it’s about Chevy injecting some life in the Suburban before it gets redesigned for 2020.

The Rally Sport Truck trim, which appeared in the Tahoe last year, upgrades the engine to a 6.2-liter

V-8 Ecotec with a more efficient 10-speed transmissi­on capable of churning out 460 pound-feet of torque (the standard Suburban makes 383 pound-feet with the 5.3-liter engine and six speed trans). The throttle is light to the touch, making the full-sizer feel much smaller. It carries its weight like the big guy in high school who was surprising­ly, effortless­ly quick.

It also gets Chevy’s performanc­e-oriented active suspension called Magnetic Ride Control, which is also used on Camaro and Corvette. The electronic­ally controlled shocks are more sensitive, reacting quicker to road conditions and driver input than the standard setup. Yet, even with the 22-inch wheels, Suburban RST cruised on the highway with a soft smoothness like that of the Navigator.

We used the Suburban like how a Suburban is most often used: ferrying the kids around town, then on a long camping weekend. We packed plenty for that weekend, and since the forecast called for rain, we even brought other families’ pop-up canopies. Unlike the Cadillac Escalade, there was plenty of space.

Suburban is one of the largest, if not the largest, in terms of space, which is why I considered moving the kids and pup into the Suburban to sleep after the fourth hour of thundersto­rms. But the kids slept through it.

More impressive was Chevy’s already good technology. We averaged 19 mpg on the highway thanks to cylinder deactivati­on, which shuts

down half of the eight cylinders while cruising. The entertainm­ent package ($3,025), with screens that retract from the ceiling from the mid- and third-row, was well worth it. The off-center layout of Chevy’s truck functions, on the dash left of the steering wheel, took a minute to get used to, but it makes for an uncluttere­d center.

Power third row is essential at this price point, and getting in and out of the seats and reconfigur­ing them is no problem. The Suburban doesn’t feel old, even though it’s due for a redesign.

RST is overkill for me, but some people have to have all the stuff to keep them as far away from family minivan compromise as possible. I’m not convinced it’s $10,000 better than the Expedition Limited, and the performanc­e upgrades don’t meet the overall package of the Navigator, but for people who need to haul the team and like to be in a hurry, the Suburban RST trim is a fit.

 ?? Chevrolet ?? The 2019 Suburban RST Performanc­e Package features a 420-horespower, 6.2-liter V-8 engine and a new Hydra-matic 10L80 10-speed transmissi­on.
Chevrolet The 2019 Suburban RST Performanc­e Package features a 420-horespower, 6.2-liter V-8 engine and a new Hydra-matic 10L80 10-speed transmissi­on.
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