A better looking Dodge Dakota
It’s been ten years since Mitsubishi
dealers have had a pickup to sell. Thank
goodness because Mitsubishi hasn’t been
selling much of anything these days with buyers
mostly ignoring the brand.
The new Raider isn’t exactly a Mitsubishi,
rather a re-bodied Dodge Dakota thanks to Daimler-Chrysler,
which has part ownership in the Japanese automaker. Both
vehicles use the same platform, engines, transmission
and roll off the same Warren, Michigan assembly
line. Interestingly however, the Raider
comes with a 5-year/60,000 mile bumper-to-bumper
warranty; the Dakota a 3-year/36,000 mile basic
warranty. Pricing is similar but we
think the Raider, with sheet metal completely
unlike Dakota, is a better-looking truck.
The Raider comes in an extended-cab with clamshell
rear-opening access doors and a 6-foot-6 bed
and Double Cab (4-door) with a 5-foot-4 cargo
bed body style. Either can be had with
rear-wheel drive or four-wheel drive. No
long-bed models are available.
There are three trim levels: LS, DuroCross
and XLS. The most basic LS extended cab
uses a 210-hp V6 engine mated to a six-speed
manual transmission and comes standard with
front bench seat, air conditioning, 16-inch
wheels and a CD equipped audio system. LS
Double Cab adds power windows and locks, cruise
control and keyless entry.
The XLS adds larger outside power mirrors,
fog lamps, rear window defroster, 17-inch chrome
wheels, leather seats, power driver’s
seat, heavy-duty battery and cooling system
and a class IV trailer hitch and harness. A
4.7-liter 230-hp V8 is optional on the XLS.
We tested the mid-range DuroCross extended
cab with the V6 engine and five-speed automatic
transmission. Standard features included
fog lamps, sliding rear window, power heated
mirrors, dark tint glass, adjustable steering
column, cargo bed liner, tubular side steps,
and other added equipment.
Where Dakota has a more chiseled look, Raider
appears sportier and more aggressive. Wheel
arches carry the same look as the Mitsubishi
Endeavor SUV only toned-down and more graceful
and seem to roll into the smooth, sloping hood. A
thin upper grille with a large three-point
diamond logo and thick lower bumper supports
the stylish front end.
Inside, Raider shares the same spacious dimensions
as the Dakota. Our tester was equipped
with the standard cloth seats that seemed high
quality. The front seat was comfortable
with ample room. The rear seats in our
extended cab were completely useless for adults
or anyone over the age of 10. The extra
space is convenient however for packages or
groceries.
The interior and dash was more car-like than
truck and looked great with white-faced gauges
and black numbers. The center stack supported
the audio, heating and air conditioning controls,
all intuitive and simple to use. While
attractive, the dash was overly plasticky and
materials a bit on the economy-look side.
On the road, the Raider was quiet, felt stable
with driving characteristics more sedan-like
than truck. We enjoyed our daily commutes
and thought the standard V6 and five-speed
automatic transmission had adequate power and
acceleration. We averaged 18 mpg using
regular, 87-octane fuel. However we recommend
considering the optional 4.7-liter V8 because
of a small difference in price, significant
improvement in performance and relative insignificant
difference in gas mileage from the standard
V6 engine.
Standard safety equipment on our DuroCross
was sparse with only dual front driver/passenger
airbags, anti-lock drum brakes on the rear
as standard equipment. Four-wheel ABS
is optional on the XLS only, ditto for front-seat
side airbags and full-length side curtain airbags. The
Raider has not been crash tested however its
twin, the Dakota, earned a perfect five stars
for driver protection and four stars for front-passenger
protection. The crew-cab Dakota earned
five stars for both from NHTSA. In side-impact
testing, the extended cab also earned five
stars, and both the extended and crew-cab versions
earned a four-star rollover rating. The
Dakota scored a second best “Acceptable” rating
in frontal-offset crash testing from the Insurance
Institute for Highway safety.
Mitsubishi was reluctant to forecast sales
expectations for the Raider but suggest something
in the 15,000 to 20,000 first year range. That
compares to around 110,000 Dakota’s Dodge
expects to sell.
Given the similar pricing, better looks and more
generous warranty we’d pick the Raider
over the Dakota. Either vehicle you’re
getting a nice truck but we feel both falls short
of the excellent newly styled Toyota Tacoma and
Nissan Frontier. However, neither of those
vehicles offers a V8 engine.