Freshened for 2006, the Honda Pilot's styling remains conservative, yet greets the world with a good deal more authority than before. The front fascia is beveled and blunt, with more definition than the 2005 model's mug and much more than the smaller 's fluid wraparound face. These changes are designed to make the Pilot look more like a truck. New complex headlights, a wide, chrome-bar grille, and clear-lens taillights raise the bling factor a couple of notches.

The wheel arches are aggressive enough to offset any impression that this is a toy truck, but subtle enough to be consistent with the Pilot's likely hangouts in upscale neighborhoods and suburban mall parking lots. Large Honda badges on the grille and liftgate make it clear that the company is proud of the Pilot, and expects customers to feel the same way.

Honda has limited the amount of matte-black plastic bodywork that seems to be increasingly popular on sport utilities, and we appreciate that. Body-colored moldings give the Pilot EX a more refined, upscale look. The Pilot's only nod to this allegedly rugged SUV-ness is the step on the rear bumper (a good thing) and rubberized plastic guards under both bumpers. Roof rails are standard on the EX, but if you want the crossbars that actually turn them into a true cargo rack, you'll have to get them as an accessory from your dealer.

The Pilot shares its platform with the sport-utility and minivan, both highly successful vehicles. The Honda Pilot shares its engine, transmission, all-wheel-drive system, and brakes with the Acura MDX.