The Dodge Dakota is a mid-size pickup with a
full-size attitude. Dakota is the largest pickup in its class and the only
mid-size truck available with a V8. Dodge claims its 7150-pound maximum towing
capacity is by far the best in class.
Full Review 2006
The Dakota looks big. With sales of basic small
trucks in steady decline, the market is headed toward bigger, more powerful,
better-equipped pickups. The current Dakota is substantially longer than the
previous-generation (pre-2005) version, with styling that mirrors the recently
redesigned Durango SUV. The Club Cab version of the Dakota achieved a five-star
safety rating in frontal and side-impact crash tests conducted by the federal
government.
For 2006, the rear doors on Club Cabs have been
redesigned to open wider. Sirius Satellite Radio now comes standard on 2006
Laramie models. Special-edition packages have been added to personalize your
2006 Dakota.
If you want a pickup that's big and brawny, but not
as big as a full-size, you should visit your local Dodge dealer. Dakota is
available with a choice of V6 and V8 engines. Underway, the Dakota is smooth and
quiet. The steering is light for easy maneuverability in crowded parking lots
and the Dakota responds quickly on mountain roads and tracks nice and straight
on the highway.
Trims and Styling 2006
Dodge Dakota comes in two body styles: The Club Cab
is an extended-cab version with small, reverse-opening rear doors to access the
rear compartment and a 6 1/2-foot bed. The Quad Cab is a crew-cab style with
four full-size doors and a 5-foot, 4-inch bed. The standard engine is a
3.7-liter V6. It comes with a six-speed manual transmission. A 4.7-liter V8
engine is available for all models ($785-$860). A high-output version of the
4.7-liter V8 is available for the SLT and Laramie. With either V8, a six-speed
manual transmission is standard; a five-speed automatic is optional.
ST Club Cab ($19,785) and Quad Cab ($21,185) come
standard with air conditioning, AM/FM/CD stereo with audio auxiliary jack,
tinted rear windows, front disc/rear drum brakes with rear-wheel anti-lock
(ABS), and 16-inch steel wheels.
SLT Club Cab ($21,540) and Quad Cab ($22,940) are
upgraded with cloth bucket seats with a full-floor console, chrome bumpers, fog
lamps, power mirrors, windows, and locks with keyless entry, 16-inch
cast-aluminum wheels.
Laramie Club Cab ($24,750) and Quad Cab ($26,240)
add leather bucket seats with six-way power driver's seat; Alpine AM/FM/CD/MP3
audio with six-disc changer, 288-watt amplifier, and Sirius satellite
capability; leather-wrapped steering wheel with remote audio controls;
auto-dimming day/night rearview mirror; UConnect Hands-Free Communications
System with Bluetooth wireless technology; security alarm; Sentry Key engine
immobilizer; an overhead console; and automatic headlamps.
Four-wheel drive is available for all models,
traditional part-time 4WD (which adds about $2,850) or full-time 4WD with an
electronically controlled locking center differential ($395) for SLT and Laramie
models with V8 and automatic transmission.
Options include Sirius Satellite Radio ($195), the
premium 276-watt, 288-watt, and new 508-watt sound systems, heated seats,
four-wheel ABS ($495), towing packages ($455-$525), and 17-inch chrome wheels
($820). A sunroof is available for the Quad Cab. An optional hands-free
communications system that uses Bluetooth technology integrates a compatible
cellphone with the truck's audio system.
Option packages for 2006 include TRX, TRX4
Off-Road, R/T, and Night Runner. Each is available in the Club Cab or Quad Cab
configuration.
TRX includes unique five-spoke/five-lug 16-inch
aluminum wheels and Goodyear Wrangler off-road tires; tow hooks; a limited-slip
differential; and TRX decal on the cargo box. The TRX package is available on
2WD ST, SLT and Laramie. TRX4 Off-Road includes everything in the TRX package
plus painted shocks; an increased ride height of one inch; heavy-duty service
package; skid plates; TRX4 Off-Road cargo box decal; and slush mats. R/T is an
SLT with the high-output 4.7-liter engine and: 17-inch five-spoke/five-lug
chrome-clad aluminum wheels; hood scoop; sport appearance package (in Red Flame
or Black only); body color grille surround; chrome exhaust tip; cargo box
decals; R/T identification on headrests and instrument cluster; and Satin Silver
accents for the center stack and door remotes.
Exterior Design and Overall Look
The Dodge Dakota looks massive and menacing. The
redesign for 2005 stretched the Dakota nearly four inches, with almost all that
extra length devoted to front crush space and deeper bumpers to meet future
crash standards.
The intersection of the front fenders with the
multi-element, twin-lens headlamps and raked chrome grille makes the whole
design work beautifully.
Dakota's frame is shared in part with the Durango
SUV.
All models come with front and rear tow hooks and
tie-downs in the bed.
Styling and Interior Features
The angular center stack houses the sound system,
climate controls and vents. The thick four-spoke steering wheel features audio
and cruise controls. Interior room, even for tall drivers is excellent.
Club Cabs have auxiliary rear doors that swing open
nearly 180 degrees.
Quad Cabs feature four huge doors; the rear doors
open out to nearly 90 degrees, so ingress and egress are very good. Quad Cab
interiors are roomy. By making the Dakota larger, Dodge expanded the Quad Cab
interior to nearly 56 cubic feet. The rear seats are deliberately stepped up on
their bases so that rear-seat occupants can see out more easily, and they are
split into 40/20/40 folding sections with two rear cupholders. Rear-seat room is
generous for family use, with 33 cubic feet of storage behind the rear seat.
First Drive 2006
Thick glass, big mufflers, and generous sound
insulation throughout the body and firewall help reduce noise.
The V6 feels a bit light on power for this big,
heavy pickup and it doesn't offer a big fuel economy advantage.
The 3.7-liter V6 is rated 210 horsepower and 235
pound-feet of torque. The 4.7-liter V8 generates 230 horsepower and 290
pound-feet of torque. The 4.7-liter High Output V8 is rated 260 horsepower and
310 pound-feet of torque, thanks to higher compression and more aggressive valve
timing. A V6 4WD automatic is rated 15/19 mpg City/Highway by the EPA; a V8 4WD
automatic rates 14/19. Our Quad Cab with the standard 4.7-liter accelerated with
uncommon vigor and a wonderful exhaust note. The transmission has perfectly
spaced ratios for trucking, and worked without complaint, roughness or
harshness, even in high-rpm full-throttle upshifts. For towing, there's a
Tow/Haul setting that alters the shift pattern of the automatic transmission.
The Dakota comes with rear-wheel anti-lock brakes
as standard safety equipment, but four-wheel ABS disc/drum brakes are optional.
We deliberately tried the rear ABS on a straight, flat, dry road for several
maximum-g stops with no load and no passengers, and it worked well, keeping the
unladen, light-in-the-rear pickup straight and coming to crisp stops four times
in a row without locking the rear wheels.
2006 First Conclusions
The Dodge Dakota is on the large end of the
mid-size pickups.
An Edmunds.com review says "The new interior was designed for comfort, and
options like plush heated leather seats, steering wheel audio controls and
satellite radio make the Dakota more carlike than ever."
ConsumerGuideAuto names this one of their recommended picks for 2006. Dakota is unique in its class, with its brawny style, generous
size, powerful V8 engines for towing, and plenty of room for a typical family.