On the road, the Honda Pilot feels balanced, with sufficient power and brakes, decent ride quality and handling, and on 4WD models the ability to leave the pavement or tackle pre-plowed snow. Most owners won't go as far as a Pilot will go, but the rugged looks match vehicles that will go farther on a bad trail, so ''off-road'' travel is best kept to scenic byways and mountain motorways.

The 3.5-liter V6 takes on a characteristic Honda growl when you push it and you'll need to be towing or accelerating uphill on an on-ramp to require such grunt. For the most part the engine is in the background, never silenced, never rough, and never annoying. It now uses Honda's Variable Cylinder Management to switch off two or three of its six cylinders to save fuel; the ECO light on the dash shows when you are getting best economy and does not necessarily mean it is running as a three- or four-cylinder engine. Like the all-wheel drive system, the VCM is transparent to the driver and requires no action on his or her part, and apart from some front tire spin under heavy acceleration from rest the front-drive model drives just like the all-wheel drive.

Among the host of three-row crossovers in the 3.5-liter to 3.8-liter V6 class, there isn't a wide range between the slowest and fastest and the Honda feels right in the middle. Where the others may enjoy a slight advantage is with six speeds in the transmission, and/or the ability to address each of them separately or in a ''sport'' mode for quicker response. The Honda Pilot shifter offers an OD Off switch which locks out the top two gears, so if you want fourth to control speed on long hill descents or winding roads you're out of luck. Toyota's and Mazda's come to mind as better in these respects, and to a lesser extent, GM's / / / family.

Since the Honda Pilot is among the lightest of the eight-seat crossovers the suspension can be tuned for ride comfort without requiring undue stiffness for control. It swallows up most road surfaces with aplomb and never bottomed out on dirt road whoop-de-doos when driven sensibly but briskly. No single noise source stands out and normal conversations are quite possible at highway speeds. The Michelin tires on the premium model may last longer or prove better in severe snow but you'd need instruments far more sophisticated than your behind to show any other advantage. The stability assist is one of the lesser intrusive such algorithms and if it comes into play you probably won't notice as you'll be busy wondering how you got into a bad situation.

Relative to some other recent crossover redesigns, the Pilot seems to ride a bit softer than the GMC Acadia et al and has less body roll than the Highlander, though the Acadia may enjoy a slight advantage in steering feel. The most sporting drive in the segment is Mazda's CX-9, though we wouldn't venture as far from the beaten path in that as we would in a Honda Pilot, and the Pilot is more maneuverable than any of them.

With a bit of forethought to join the visibility and crossover philosophy brakes would hardly be needed at all, yet the Pilot performs as the others in this regard and all electronic braking aids are standard. If you see something bad about to happen, just stand on the pedal as hard as you can and keep steering, you might just drive around it.

Honda labels the all-wheel-drive model 4WD, but they have no low-range gearing nor default rear drive. The 4WD models deduct 1 mpg from EPA ratings.