Consumer Reports isn't worth the paper it's printed on. A few years ago they announced that they would no longer just give Toyotas favorable ratings without testing them- as they had been doing for years. And that kind of b/s wasn't new for them. In about 1980, CR said a Pinto was a terrible car and recommended against buying one- but a Mercury Bobcat- same car, different trim- was a more reliable than average used car. When Fairmonts appeared with the first steering column mounted multi function switches, CR called them awkward- but the multi function switch in the Audi of the same model year was "innovative". When the first Mazda Navajos appeared, CR raved that they felt "tight and Japanese"- they were 2 door Explorers with Mazda emblems and they used square headed, double sided, 8 cut Ford keys- complete with Ford emblems. Their position is that every vehicle should be bought with the base engine because no one needs more power. They also recommended basing the decision where to buy only on price, we used to get a lot of customers from super market style dealers who provided poor service after the sale.