INSIDE LINE

Comparison Test: 2007 Cadillac Escalade EXT vs. 2007 Lincoln Mark LT

Media Player

  • 2007 Cadillac Escalade EXT vs. 2007 Lincoln Mark LT Comparison Video

    Watch the 2007 Cadillac Escalade EXT vs. 2007 Lincoln Mark LT Comparison Video on Edmunds' Inside Line | September 25, 2009

1 Video , 26 Photos | See more photos in this gallery »

Comparison

Comparison Test: 2007 Cadillac Escalade EXT vs. 2007 Lincoln Mark LT

Two Luxury Pickups Face Off

    0 Ratings
    Loving trucks is as American as the Marlboro Man. But just as that rough and rugged pitchman has ridden off into the sunset (probably coughing), rough and rugged trucks are a thing of the past. Even the lowliest Chevy Silverado is now packed with the kind of features and luxury once reserved for high-end sedans.

    The 2007 Cadillac Escalade EXT and 2007 Lincoln Mark LT are the pinnacle of this new breed of softer and gentler American pickup trucks. Part pickup, part recreational vehicle and part hot-rod sedan, these trucks put bling before balls...er...make that ball hitches. They reinvent the pickup truck as a luxurious recreational vehicle. Each is a grandly stylish device with both adventurous possibility and everyday utility.

    If It Looks Like a Truck
    Even a pickup truck guy can appreciate style, and these high-profile trucks are meant to make you think about the outdoors and your plans for the weekend. After all, if you want respect in suburban America, you're not supposed to carry a lunch bucket everywhere you go.

    The Cadillac Escalade EXT has enough style for two trucks and maybe a couple of cars besides. It's angular and aggressive, a machine for driving and not just for hauling. And just so you know it's a Cadillac, it's been overlaid with lots of automotive jewelry, including big high-intensity headlights, a retro-style egg-crate grille, and layers and layers of chrome detailing.

    On the other hand, the Lincoln Mark LT, is plainly a Ford F-150. But it's also Ford's most successful interpretation of the heavy-duty truck look since the Dodge Ram 1500 introduced this style so successfully in 1994. Like the Cadillac, the Lincoln sets itself apart with its own complement of jewelry, only they're the kind of chrome accents that you might find in a Harley-Davidson accessory catalog. The assembled, customized look is meant to be all about authenticity.

    Recreation Room on Wheels
    In case you haven't heard, the interior of a pickup truck isn't meant to be cleaned out with a garden hose anymore. Americans live in these trucks, and they need a cabin that amounts to more than just a cupholder big enough for a Big Gulp and someplace to toss the candy bar wrappers.

    With the Escalade EXT, GM's oversize, work-grade truck interior has finally given way to carlike detailing. You're meant to travel in the EXT, not just shuttle from job site to job site. That's why the seats are sufficiently bolstered to be supportive enough for long journeys, and they're available with both heating and cooling functions.

    A $3,990 complement of optional interior luxury features transforms the EXT into a luxury sedan. There's a complex audio system that plays DVD-audio as well as CDs, not to mention an MP3 player and satellite radio. Naturally there's a navigation system with an 8-inch touchscreen for the front-seat passengers plus a DVD player with a flip-down, 8-inch screen for the rear passengers.

    This particular Lincoln Mark LT didn't quite have an Escalade-grade arcade of optional electronic gizmos, although you'll find nearly identical stuff among this truck's list of available options. Where the interior of the Escalade resembles some kind of recreational device from the sporting goods store, the Mark LT goes for luxury-car elegance, as if it were the reincarnation of the Lincoln Continental Mark III. The seats are as easy to slide into as the old man's big puffy chair in the family room, although they're not supportive enough for all-day comfort.

    The interior of the Escalade EXT has one clear advantage over the Mark LT, and it lies in passive passenger safety. Both the Escalade and the Mark LT have front-passenger airbags, but only the Cadillac has curtain-type head-protection airbags for both front- and rear-seat passengers, plus front-passenger seatbelts with safety pre-tensioners.

    Aside from the details, the cabins of both these trucks have been designed for real vacation travel, not just short trips to the lumberyard. The Escalade EXT affords 108.9 cubic feet of passenger volume, while the Mark LT is substantially larger at 121.8 cubic feet. Both make it possible to take a family vacation without having to invest in family counseling afterward.

    A Real Truck Has a Cargo Box
    What makes these vehicles different from other vehicles (and each other) is the cargo box, the essence of any pickup truck. We live in a country where the home-improvement store is a destination resort, and as anyone who has ever packed a load of grass sod in the trunk of a Honda Accord can tell you, a pickup truck is a fine thing to have on Saturday mornings.

    What makes the Escalade unique is its Midgate, an access panel into the cabin from the cargo box that effectively lengthens the cargo box from 63.3 inches to 97.6 inches. It seems like an expensive indulgence, yet it enables a four-door cab and a cargo box to be integrated into a relatively compact package.

    The Lincoln Mark LT has a more conventional answer to the cargo box question. For 2007 there are two LT models, both the standard LT with a 138-inch wheelbase and a 67-inch cargo box, and the long-bed LT (like our test truck) with a 150.5-inch wheelbase and a 79-inch cargo box.

    Although the Escalade ultimately offers the larger bed, we should point out that using the Midgate opens the rear of the Caddy's cab to weather, plus it keeps you from locking the truck.

    In standard trim, the four-wheel-drive Escalade EXT is rated for a 1,362-pound payload of people and gear, and can tow 8,600 pounds. Meanwhile the long-wheelbase, four-wheel-drive Mark LT can carry a load of 1,430 pounds, and it'll tow 8,500 pounds. Just like regular pickup trucks, both the Escalade and the Mark LT can be equipped with optional towing packages for more capacity.

    Going Places
    With a plain old pickup truck, all you need is an engine good enough for motivation, not speed. But once you transform a truck into full-time transportation, suddenly driving becomes the priority.

    This four-wheel-drive Cadillac weighs in at 6,068 pounds, so it needs some serious motivation. GM's new all-aluminum, 6.2-liter V8 measures up with 403 horsepower and 417 pound-feet of torque. Even more important is its new six-speed automatic transmission, which not only improves the powertrain's response and acceleration, but also makes the whole truck feel effortlessly powerful.

    Power plus short gearing helps this Escalade make a quick full-throttle getaway. You can even feel the front tires get a little light with the weight transfer, and 30 mph comes up in only 2.5 seconds while 60 mph turns up in 7.0 seconds. It's hard to believe so much weight gets through the quarter-mile in 15.5 seconds at 90.6 mph.

    In comparison, the Lincoln Mark LT's iron-block 5.4-liter V8 puts down 300 hp and 365 lb-ft, although it has 5,870 pounds to move around, some 198 pounds less than the Cadillac. It reaches its respective power peaks at lower rpm than the Escalade, but it has to make things happen through a four-speed transmission, so the Lincoln feels like it slogs its way to the speed limit.

    As a result, the long-wheelbase Mark LT lags behind the Escalade when it comes to performance and it takes 9.6 seconds to get to 60 mph. The Lincoln brings up the quarter-mile in 17.1 seconds at 80.9 mph.

    The lighter Lincoln did, however, outstop the Cadillac, although neither is exactly the poster child for braking performance. Still, the Lincoln's 134-foot stopping distance from 60 mph is considerably better than the Escalade's 142-foot performance.

    Driving Matters
    The Escalade certainly doesn't make you feel as if it takes a lot of wrestling with physics to get where you want to go. Quick-ratio steering matched with light-effort assist isn't usually a happy combination, yet the Escalade manages to deliver easy carlike maneuverability with reassuring highway stability, and it never feels as if you're tugging at the front wheels with a length of rope.

    The Mark LT also successfully gets beyond the usual truck stereotype when it comes to getting down the highway, but it's trying to be far more reserved than the Escalade, so every control feels carefully insulated from the road, as if you were driving a Lincoln Continental Mark III.

    It's not entirely ridiculous to talk about cornering performance with these trucks. The Escalade has a 0.73g grip on the skid pad, using its big 285/45HR22 Bridgestone Dueler H/L Alenza tires to good effect. It carves up the slalom at 57.8 mph, and it went fast enough to require a little opposite steering lock (which apparently panicked the electronics sufficiently to trigger an inquiry from OnStar about whether we'd suffered some kind of airbag deployment).

    The Lincoln Mark LT provided more thrills on the pavement thanks to its crude leaf spring rear suspension, but it circled the skid pad in a stable, understeering slide at 0.73g, its 275/55SR20 Pirelli Scorpion ATR tires hanging in there steadily. And just like the Escalade, the long-wheelbase Lincoln went through the slalom cones at 57.9 mph.

    On the road, the Escalade has all the supple composure we've come to expect from the latest generation of trucks. The unique way the cabin's C-pillar is structurally tied to the cargo box makes the whole truck feel even more solid, while the coil-sprung rear axle responds relatively well to broken pavement. The Escalade feels large and comfortable, but it has a dimension of liveliness that makes it more enjoyable to drive.

    The Lincoln also goes down the road very well, yet there's so much emphasis on stability that the truck always feels heavy, as if its responses have been thoroughly muffled. The LT gets you there in comfort and silence, but you rarely remember the trip along the way.

    A Truck You Can Drive Every Day
    Trucks sure have gotten nice. They're so nice that the things that separate one truck from another no longer have anything to do with the number of fertilizer bags you can pack into the cargo bed. Instead we tend to make our choice based on the way the cabin can make you forget you're hauling anything like fertilizer in the first place.

    The 2007 Lincoln Mark LT offers a lot of luxury for the money, as it comes in at a base price of just $41,495. But even as you add options to bring up the luxury quotient, it still feels more like a pretty pickup than a real sporting device.

    For us, the Mark LT seems too much like a Lincoln-ized Ford F-150, and it needs more style and especially a more sophisticated powertrain to be enjoyable. There's too much implement, not enough spirit.

    The 2007 Cadillac Escalade EXT pretty well defines what we want from this new breed of SUV-style pickups. It's a truck that doesn't apologize for being big and functional, yet it helps you enjoy the ride with plenty of style. Even better, it has plenty of driving spirit, the kind of performance that makes you excited to get into it every day. It's a must-drive, must-use proposition, not just casual transportation.

    Cadillac makes you pay for the privilege, as its $53,705 base price indicates (a GMC Denali is a more affordable alternative), but the Escalade EXT shows the direction the American pickup must travel if it's going to stay relevant in this new era of breathtaking gas prices.

    The manufacturer provided Edmunds this vehicle for the purposes of evaluation.

    Close

    Share on Facebook Share on Facebook
    Share on Twitter Share on Twitter

    Advertisement

    Tags

    Specs and Performance

    Vehicle
    Engine typeV8
    Displacement (cc/cu-in)6200cc (378cu-in)
    Horsepower (hp @ rpm)403 @ 5,700
    Torque (lb-ft @ rpm)417 @ 4,300
    Brakes, frontFront ventilated disc -- Rear disc
    Steering typePower steering
    Suspension, frontShort and long arm
    Suspension, rearMultilink
    Tire size, frontP285/45R22 110H (M+S)
    Tire size, rearP285/45R22 110H (M+S)
    Tire brandBridgestone
    Tire modelDueler H/L Alenza
    Curb weight, mfr. claim (lbs.)6068
    Fuel typePremium unleaded
    Fuel tank capacity (gal)31
    EPA fuel economy (mpg)13 city/19 highway
    Edmunds observed (mpg)N/A
    Conditions for Testing
    Temperature (°F)65
    Elevation (ft.)1121
    Wind (mph, direction)2.5
    Performance
    0 - 30 (sec.)2.5
    0 - 45 (sec.)4.6
    0 - 60 (sec.)7
    0 - 75 (sec.)10.8
    1/4 mile (sec. @ mph)15.5 @ 90.6
    30 - 0 (ft.)34
    60 - 0 (ft.)142
    Braking ratingGood
    Slalom, 6 x 100 ft (mph)57.8
    Skid pad, 200 ft diameter (lateral g)0.73
    Handling ratingGood
    Sound level @ idle (db)46.3
    Sound level @ full throttle (db)77.6
    Sound level @ 70 mph cruise (db)66.6
    Acceleration commentsWhat an exhaust note! And this thing jumps off the line so hard that the front tires get light. This engine is a beauty throughout the rev range. It pulls all over the tach and gets better in the upper range. Discovered manual mode allows 500 rpm more before rev limiter at 6,000 rpm.
    Braking commentsThe squishy GM truck brake pedal seems to have been banished, yeah. Firm pedal but not hard, yet the ABS pulses come through the pedal.
    Handling commentsSkid pad: Remarkably good grip for such a soft suspension. I could feel the inside rear tire getting light in both directions. Ultimate understeer. Slalom: Steering is very light but also quick-ratio. It's usually not a good combo, but it works in this case. I knew I got the best run when I received a call from OnStar, which thought there had been a collision. I believe countersteering is the trigger that makes the call.
    Specifications
    Length (in.)222
    Width (in.)79.1
    Height (in.)74.5
    Wheelbase (in.)130
    Legroom, front (in.)41.3
    Legroom, rear (in.)39.1
    Headroom, front (in.)41.1
    Headroom, rear (in.)40
    Seating capacity5
    Cargo volume (cu-ft)N/A
    Max. cargo volume, seats folded (cu-ft)108.9
    Warranty Information
    Bumper-to-bumper4 years/50,000 miles
    Powertrain5 years/100,000 miles
    Corrosion6 years/Unlimited miles
    Roadside assistance5 years/100,000 miles
    Scheduled maintenanceNot available
    Safety Information
    Front airbagsStandard
    Side airbagsNot available
    Head airbagsStandard front and rear
    Antilock brakes4-wheel ABS
    Electronic brake enhancementsElectronic brakeforce distribution
    Traction controlStandard
    Stability controlStandard
    Rollover protectionStandard
    Emergency assistance systemNot available
    NHTSA crash test, driver5 stars
    NHTSA crash test, passenger5 stars
    NHTSA crash test, side frontNot tested
    NHTSA crash test, side rearNot tested
    NHTSA rollover resistance3 stars
    CollapseSpecs and Performance Expand Collapse

    Specs and Performance

    Vehicle
    MakeLincoln
    ModelMark LT
    Model year2007
    Style4dr SuperCrew 4WD SB (5.4L 8cyl 4A)
    Base MSRP$42,150
    As-tested MSRP$49,430
    Drive typeFour-wheel drive
    Transmission type4-speed automatic
    Engine typeV8
    Displacement (cc/cu-in)5400cc (330cu-in)
    Horsepower (hp @ rpm)300 @ 5,000
    Torque (lb-ft @ rpm)365 @ 3,750
    Brakes, frontFront ventilated disc -- Rear ventilated disc
    Steering typePower steering
    Suspension, frontDouble wishbone
    Suspension, rearSolid live axle
    Tire size, frontP275/55R20 111S
    Tire size, rearP275/55R20 111S
    Tire brandPirelli
    Tire modelScorpion ATR M+S
    Curb weight, mfr. claim (lbs.)5870
    Fuel typeRegular unleaded
    Fuel tank capacity (gal)30
    EPA fuel economy (mpg)14 city/18 highway
    Edmunds observed (mpg)N/A
    Conditions for Testing
    Temperature (°F)65
    Elevation (ft.)1121
    Wind (mph, direction)2.5
    Performance
    0 - 30 (sec.)3.2
    0 - 45 (sec.)5.7
    0 - 60 (sec.)9.6
    0 - 75 (sec.)14.3
    1/4 mile (sec. @ mph)17.1 @ 80.9
    30 - 0 (ft.)34
    60 - 0 (ft.)134
    Braking ratingGood
    Slalom, 6 x 100 ft (mph)57.9
    Skid pad, 200 ft diameter (lateral g)0.73
    Handling ratingGood
    Sound level @ idle (db)42.5
    Sound level @ full throttle (db)72.6
    Sound level @ 70 mph cruise (db)67.3
    Acceleration commentsThis engine makes a bunch of noise but doesn't produce the expected thrust. Gears feel widely spaced and seem to last forever.
    Braking commentsPedal is firm but not hard. ABS doesn't kick back or groan. "Good" rating considering its size. No fade.
    Handling commentsSkid pad: Unlike some other trucks with tall sidewall tires, the LT doesn't porpoise around the skid pad. Stable, predictable understeer. Remarkably flat all the way around. Slalom: Without stability control, the first run in "2HI" revealed a tendency for oversteer. Switching to "4HI" worked wonders. Steering is really good. I like the feel and the quickness and the weight.
    Specifications
    Length (in.)235.8
    Width (in.)78.9
    Height (in.)76
    Wheelbase (in.)150.5
    Legroom, front (in.)41.3
    Legroom, rear (in.)39
    Headroom, front (in.)40.1
    Headroom, rear (in.)39.6
    Seating capacity5
    Cargo volume (cu-ft)N/A
    Max. cargo volume, seats folded (cu-ft)N/A
    Warranty Information
    Bumper-to-bumper4 years/50,000 miles
    Powertrain6 years/70,000 miles
    Corrosion5 years/Unlimited miles
    Roadside assistance6 years/70,000 miles
    Scheduled maintenanceNot available
    Safety Information
    Front airbagsStandard
    Side airbagsNot available
    Head airbagsNot available
    Antilock brakes4-wheel ABS
    Electronic brake enhancementsElectronic brakeforce distribution
    Traction controlNot available
    Stability controlNot available
    Rollover protectionNot available
    Tire-pressure monitoring systemNot available
    Emergency assistance systemNot tested
    NHTSA crash test, driverNot tested
    NHTSA crash test, passengerNot tested
    NHTSA crash test, side frontNot tested
    NHTSA crash test, side rearNot tested
    NHTSA rollover resistanceNot tested
    CollapseSpecs and Performance Expand Collapse

    Advertisement