Lincoln Blackwood Interior Review
As with the exterior, a good portion of the Blackwood's interior comes from the Lincoln Navigator. There's a wood-and-leather steering wheel, a combination that seems to be emerging as a must-have on any vehicle aspiring to claim a luxury label. The instrument panel, stereo controls and the air conditioning system come from the Navigator. New, however, are thin strips of real, stained oak gracing the dash in front of the passenger and the doors.
The seats, too, are Navigator-sourced. The rear two straddle their own center console boasting a seemingly bottomless storage bin and can be folded flat to accommodate extra-large packages from the likes of Neiman-Marcus or Best Buy.
The cooling system in the front seats worked refreshingly well in Santa Barbara, California. Offering five settings, it promises to have the seats cooled in two minutes. It did.
Storage bins large enough for a handbag or small package hide behind the foldable rear seats.
In addition to the auxiliary power point in the base of dash beneath the climate control panel, there's another in the rear of the front center console, in the door jamb on the right-side rear door and inside the tailgate.
All of this is fine and good and impressive, as long as the Blackwood is the only luxury, sport-utility truck on the market. While not much more than a gussied-up, re-badged Chevrolet Avalanche, the Cadillac Escalade EXT could offer a significant challenge.
The Blackwood does not offer the interior roominess of the Cadillac EXT, though the Blackwood does offer slightly more rear passenger headroom.
In a ying/yang sort of sense, the same holds for the cargo area. Yes, the Blackwood's trunk holds less than 27 cubic feet, but it does so in a luxurious, pampering sort of way.
The EXT's cargo area, on the other hand, is more utilitarian. The trick is the patented Midgate, a foldable wall between the passenger compartment and the pickup bed. With the midgate up, the EXT is a four-door, crew cab-like luxury pickup. Down, the suburbia-standard 4X8-foot sheet of plywood will lay flat on the floor, which extends into the cab to just behind the front seats. In that mode, the EXT's cargo capacity reaches 41.1 cubic feet. And with the tri-fold, semi-rigid bed cover removed, the EXT becomes a short-bed pickup, with all the flexibility that provides.
Lincoln Blackwood Road Test
The Blackwood may look like a truck, but it doesn't drive like one.
Lincoln re-calibrated the Navigator's power steering, front shock absorbers and front suspension and developed a new, leaf/air spring rear suspension especially for the Blackwood, all in an attempt to bestow car-like handling on what's essentially a serious pickup.
The effort mostly succeeds. Steering is lighter than in the Navigator. The constantly adjusting air springs in the rear offer the added benefit of a self-leveling rear suspension.
In addition, the four-passenger cabin effectively shifts the weight distribution rearward from that of even an extended-cab pickup. On the Blackwood, this delivers a near perfect, and very car-like, 50:50 front/rear balance. This minimizes an unloaded pickup's tendency to be light in the rear end, causing the rear tires to lose grip in tight corners. Still, the center of gravity is noticeably higher than in a car, so even though it has fatter tires than the Navigator, drivers will know this is no sports car.
Four-wheel disc brakes with standard ABS do a commendable job of slowing the Blackwood.
Visibility from the driver's seat is good, if not great. Its truck roots dictate thicker windshield and door pillars than on a car. But the elevated seating position lets drivers plan ahead as traffic conditions in front change.
The optional navigation system was less than optimal, however. The maps were fine, if a ways out of the driver's line of sight with the screen mounted at the forward end of the center console below the dash. Like many of these systems, it's not 100 percent and sometimes directed us the wrong way.
Lincoln Blackwood Lineup
Lincoln Blackwood is available as one model ($51,785). And the only option is a navigation system ($1,995).
But that one model includes all the features prospective Blackwood buyers told Lincoln they wanted. Thus, standard on the Blackwood are automatic climate control, six-way power seats for driver and front passenger, leather seating surfaces and air-conditioned front seats (both heated and cooled), which first appeared as an option on the Lincoln Navigator. Also on the list are a power moonroof, Homelink universal remote control (for garage door, security gate or home lighting), power-adjustable pedals, and a memory function for the driver's seat, pedals, and outside (heated) mirrors. The Blackwood also gets the reverse-sensing system originally offered on the Windstar. This warns the driver with a series of beeps if there's something behind the vehicle; the beeping increases in frequency as the Blackwood moves closer to objects behind it. It's a good feature, especially for a big vehicle like this one.