JPW12
New Member
- Joined
- August 13, 2017
- Messages
- 6
- Reaction score
- 0
- City, State
- The Woodlands, TX
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- Lincoln MKS Ecoboost
I have a 2013 Lincoln MKS with the Ecoboost engine (V6, twin turbos) so I'm somewhat familiar with the engine in a 2015 Sport Explorer I'm considering for my wife. The problem is, for the life of me, I can't figure out the details of the transmission and suspension.
First, does the Sport Explorer come with any kind of adaptive suspension? My Lincoln has this and its pretty nice. It helps keep the car very flat in the corners. Based on my research the Explorer Sport does not have such a thing. It simply has a sport-tuned suspension that appears to be more robust than the base, XLT, and the Limited. Is this accurate? I did notice the dial in the console of the Sport where you could adjust for hill descent, sand, mud, etc.. Seriously? Sand? Personally, I'm willing to bet hardly anyone uses this dial. I don't ever see myself deviating from Normal unless someone tells me a reason to consider an alternative.
Secondly, in my Lincoln I can choose between SPORT and NORMAL (Drive) transmission. The Sport transmission shifts pretty quick and you can tell the difference. Does the Explorer Sport have something like this? It appears to me that on the stick it only has DRIVE (Normal) and Manual, which I think allows for the paddle shifters, but I don't see anything for SPORT. Is this accurate?
Thanks for any insight. I've looked in the owner's manuals and done Google searches and can't really find a definitive answer to these questions.
First, does the Sport Explorer come with any kind of adaptive suspension? My Lincoln has this and its pretty nice. It helps keep the car very flat in the corners. Based on my research the Explorer Sport does not have such a thing. It simply has a sport-tuned suspension that appears to be more robust than the base, XLT, and the Limited. Is this accurate? I did notice the dial in the console of the Sport where you could adjust for hill descent, sand, mud, etc.. Seriously? Sand? Personally, I'm willing to bet hardly anyone uses this dial. I don't ever see myself deviating from Normal unless someone tells me a reason to consider an alternative.
Secondly, in my Lincoln I can choose between SPORT and NORMAL (Drive) transmission. The Sport transmission shifts pretty quick and you can tell the difference. Does the Explorer Sport have something like this? It appears to me that on the stick it only has DRIVE (Normal) and Manual, which I think allows for the paddle shifters, but I don't see anything for SPORT. Is this accurate?
Thanks for any insight. I've looked in the owner's manuals and done Google searches and can't really find a definitive answer to these questions.