Friday, November 22
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2023 Cadillac Escalade V – Wild Large Luxury SUV!

Thanks: Global Motorsports
https://www.instagram.com/globalmotorsportsnashville/
Website: globalmotorsportsinc.com

2023 Cadillac Escalade-V Tested: Power and Money

Cadillac’s new flagship SUV tries to justify its $151,490 price with 682 supercharged horsepower.

Cadillac has done to the Escalade something it should have done nearly two decades ago: give its full-size SUV the V treatment. Admittedly, the ethos of the American luxury brand’s performance arm has become somewhat muddled in recent years, what with the V lineup now split between tamer V-badged models and full-on V Blackwing high-performance variants, such as the 10Best-winning CT4-V Blackwing and CT5-V Blackwing. But there’s nothing confusing about the new 2023 Escalade-V. Its mission is one of power and prestige.
We certainly won’t call the Escalade-V tame, as it packs a 682-hp wallop from a supercharged 6.2-liter V-8—a hand-built mill that’s closely related to the 668-hp supercharged V-8 found in the CT5-V Blackwing, though the engine in the SUV trades the sedan’s 1.7-liter Roots-type blower for a larger 2.7-liter unit. With the help of standard all-wheel drive and a 10-speed automatic transmission, this blown V-8 propels the standard-wheelbase Escalade-V to 60 mph in 4.3 seconds—1.7 seconds quicker than a 420-hp 2022 Escalade Sport Platinum we tested.

Set aside the stopwatch and the Escalade-V feels properly quick from the driver’s seat. A tap of the model’s V mode button in front of the shift lever activates this brute’s highest dynamic settings and engages its launch-control feature, which holds the engine’s revs at around 1500 rpm when the driver has both pedals mashed to the floor. Lift off the left pedal and the immediate acceleration provided by the torque-rich V-8—Cadillac claims 80 percent of the Escalade-V’s 653 pound-feet of torque is available from 2000 rpm—is akin to the initial surge of a moderately powerful electric vehicle.

HIGHS: NASCAR-worthy exhaust note, fade-free Brembo brakes, no loss in on-road comfort.

Unlike an EV, though, the subtle whine of the Escalade-V’s supercharger and the raucous wail of its active exhaust system bring a symphonic quality to its straight-line acceleration. Even at idle, the V’s quad pipes emit a menacing burble (Stealth mode does let you quiet things down for the school pickup lane). At speed, the system exhales with loud crackles and pops when you abruptly lift off the accelerator. Flat-footing this 6290-pound SUV results in 85 decibels of mostly exhaust noise entering the cabin. That’s 10 more decibels than an Escalade Sport Platinum, which sounds roughly twice as loud. Yet, like the aforementioned Sport Platinum, just 66 dB of sound finds its way inside the V at 70 mph.

Cadillac also altered the Escalade’s suspension and braking systems for V duty. Tweaks to its air springs and adaptive dampers lessen this elephantine SUV’s body motions with little sacrifice to its ride quality. And six-piston Brembo front brake calipers endow the V with a firmer and more responsive brake pedal. Though the brake pedal of an Escalade-V ESV we drove around Arizona struck us as a tad too grabby, the short-wheelbase model Cadillac sent to our Ann Arbor, Michigan, office for testing exhibited no such issue.

Despite its upgraded binders, our Escalade-V test vehicle’s 178-foot stopping distance from 70 mph is four feet worse than that of an Escalade Sport Platinum. Blame the V’s 192 pounds of additional mass and its 22-inch Bridgestone Alenza A/S 02 all-season tires. It’s the same rubber Cadillac fits to all Escalades, and the sole setup offered on the Escalade-V. But the V’s brakes remained more consistent during our testing, resisting fade, and with no brake-overheating warnings popping up as has happened when testing lesser Escalades.

While the V treatment does make for a better-handling Escalade—which in standard form we’ll grant is already one of the more athletic examples of its kind—the enjoyment that comes from being behind the wheel of this body-on-frame Cadillac still falls short of that offered by unibody competitors such as the Mercedes-AMG GLS63 and the BMW Alpina XB7. Both of those quicker and nimbler Germans hit the mile-a-minute mark in under four seconds and are available with sticky summer tires from the factory. No surprise, the Escalade-V’s 0.69 g of cornering stick around our skidpad fell far short of the two German SUVs’ 0.92-g runs. The V is held back by an overly intrusive stability-control system that pours salt into the Caddy’s lateral-performance wound, just like all of General Motors’ full-size SUVs.
Read More https://www.caranddriver.com/reviews/a40254654/2023-cadillac-escalade-v-drive/
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