{"id":245447,"date":"2023-11-16T19:49:31","date_gmt":"2023-11-16T19:49:31","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/automotobuzz.com\/?p=245447"},"modified":"2023-11-16T19:49:32","modified_gmt":"2023-11-16T19:49:32","slug":"the-2025-subaru-forester-is-a-next-generation-four-wheeled-duck-boot","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/automotobuzz.com\/car-reviews\/the-2025-subaru-forester-is-a-next-generation-four-wheeled-duck-boot\/","title":{"rendered":"The 2025 Subaru Forester Is A Next-Generation Four-Wheeled Duck Boot"},"content":{"rendered":"
As one of the best-selling SUVs on the market, the Subaru Forester has a loyal cadre of fans who appreciate its practicality, efficiency, and capability. The automaker doesn\u2019t plan to change that with the redesigned 2025 Forester, but repeat customers and conquests alike should still appreciate the stiffer structure, larger cargo area, and added in-car technology. Subaru devotees might even find the heritage-slash-homely design appealing, too.<\/p>\n
Mechanicals are a mixed bag of carryover bits and new engineering. The engine is Subaru\u2019s familiar 2.5-liter flat-four, and in the Forester it makes 180 horsepower and 178 pound-feet \u2013 losing two horses but gaining two torques relative to the previous generation. A continuously variable transmission is standard, as is the latest version of the automaker\u2019s all-wheel-drive system that\u2019s been revised for faster response and active torque vectoring on the rear wheels. Like the old Forester (and current Crosstrek and Outback), the X-Mode system is standard on all but the base trim, helping improve performance off-road.<\/p>\n
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Those features aside, the Forester\u2019s structure has been updated rather significantly. Although it still rides on the modular Subaru Global Platform, the 2025 Forester features full inner frame construction. Subaru attaches the unibody\u2019s side panels to the floor first, then the crossover\u2019s outer skin joins the party. Other unibody construction methods assemble the side panels and outer skin together, then mate them to the floor, but Subaru\u2019s way improves access to key points, allowing production facilities to add strategic welds and use more structural adhesive. The result is 10 percent greater rigidity, to the benefit of safety and handling.<\/p>\n