Dodge's Journey has been on the local market for some time, but until now hasn't been much of a trip. Its exterior styling was clunky, the interior verging on industrial.
Maybe it's Fiat's influence in the form of an injection of Italian flair from Chrysler's new European masters, but the latest Journey that goes on sale in a couple of weeks is a car fit for an upmarket forecourt, not a back-street truck stop.
Not only is the - roadkill - ram's head emblem missing from the grille, the bodylines have been smoothed and reshaped to reflect the latest design trends at Chrysler, so it sort of looks like a smaller Grand Cherokee.
Under the bonnet is the company's latest techno pride and joy, the 206kW 3.6-litre Pentastar V6 that's being introduced across much of Chrysler's six-cylinder world. It's a powerful, quiet, yet reasonably economical engine that fits well into the Journey's powertrain. It's 70kW more powerful than the older engine and torque is up by 86Nm, to 342Nm. Overall fuel consumption of 10.4 litres per 100km is the same as before.
Inside, the interior looks good, even in the trim of the SXT base version supplied for Driven's exclusive preview. The dash now looks integrated rather than a series of random components bolted together. An SXT costs $39,990, but leather seats and lots more goodies are included in an upgraded R/T package for $6000 more.