Not exact matches
This car was pretty much equipped exactly as I would order it - love the candy apple red, I thought the
cloth seats were attractive and
seemed durable, though I'd pocket the $ 1850 for AWD in favor of a set of snow tires and save on gas as well.
The soft - touch detailing has added a worthwhile dimension of luxury, and even the
cloth seat upholstery
seems particularly nice.
It
seems that Honda is using the same
cloth for its
seats that it used in the early 1990s.
At first, this more plebeian Outback
seemed closer to Subaru's roots with its
cloth seats and rubber floormats.
Although leather
seating is available on the Power Wagon in Laramie trim, this tester was equipped with
cloth seats and heavy duty front and rear rubber floor mats, which
seem more appropriate given the truck's intentions.
The
cloth seats seemed to be able to dissipate the heat more effectively than the leather
seats did.
The
cloth seat material
seems to pick up stains (even water) and hold them without a good scrubbing.
The standard
cloth interior (leather
seating surfaces are optional) was satisfactory, but the rest of the cabin
seemed relatively cheap.
The $ 28,967 XLE we tested had
cloth seats, a steering wheel covered in what
seems to be plastic (not leather), an old - school key to insert and turn in the ignition, and no heat for the front
seats, which you adjust manually and in only three ways.
This unusual
cloth seat fabric
seems like it would hide just about any dirt or spillage over time — one more tote on Subie's practicality list.
The vinyl and plastics used feel sturdy yet pliable, and though it didn't come with leather
seats, the
cloth on our tester
seemed durable enough to withstand the daily grind, plus the usual coffee and soda spills.
Only the
cloth trim for the
seats gives the game away that this SUV is not quite as it
seems.