“The interior of the Eclipse Cross is a pleasant surprise given the price point. We were impressed by the absence of cheap materials—nothing feels particularly inexpensive or looks out of place.” – Car and Driver
Design
The interiors of the Eclipse Cross are also well laid out. The all-back interiors have been garnished with silver and piano black trims all around. A 7-inch infotainment screen takes center stage from where the dashboard swoops down to the AC vents. The climate controls are stacked below it. The overall design looks pleasing and aesthetic. The fit and finish of materials are also up to the mark.
The instrument cluster has analog dials for the tachometer and the speedometer and a small digital screen in between them for various vehicle information. We would have liked a bigger screen though. There’s also a retractable heads up display screen on the dashboard. What’s really annoying is that there is no volume knob. You have to use the touch screen or buttons on the steering wheel. We feel that the touchscreen volume control might act as a deviation more than a convenience.
Seating
In spite of having the maximum wheelbase, the Mitsubishi Eclipse Cross does not seem to have the maximum space inside. However, there is still plenty of space to seat five people comfortably.
The seats themselves are quite comfortable. They come wrapped in leather and are heated as well. There is contrast orange stitching in the trim and even the rear seats can be heated in the top trim. Long drives are fairly encouraged and the body roll is also contained up to a fair extent, thanks to the cleverly placed bolsters.
Model
|
Mitsubishi Eclipse Cross |
Mazda CX-3
|
Subaru Crosstrek
|
Chevrolet Trax
|
Passenger Capacity
|
5 |
5
|
5
|
5
|
Head room Front (cu. ft)
|
39.5 |
38.4 |
39.8 |
39.6 |
Shoulder room Front (cu. ft)
|
56.2 |
53.5
|
56.7
|
54.1
|
Leg room Front (cu. ft)
|
40.9 |
41.7
|
43.1
|
40.8
|
Head Room Rear (cu. ft)
|
37.3 |
37.2 |
38 |
38.8 |
Shoulder room
|
55.1 |
50.4
|
55.6
|
52.8
|
Leg room
|
35.3 |
35
|
36.5
|
35.7
|
When pitted against the competition, the Subaru Crosstrek and the Chevrolet Trax sit above the Eclipse cross. Though marginal, the Eclipse still gets overshadowed by them clearly. The only consolation for the Mitsubishi is the Mazda CX-3 which is the least spacious vehicle of the lot.
Infotainment System
The infotainment system in the Eclipse Cross is fairly good enough. The unit is a touchscreen and there is also a mouse pad to navigate through the system just beside the gear lever. There are some physical short cut buttons along with the mouse pad and some more along with the screen as well. This touchscreen infotainment is further mated to a conventional 4-speaker system. However, the top-trim features a more premium system. It comes with a 710-watt, 9-speaker Rockford Fosgate Punch Audio system which certainly takes things up a notch.
While the system is decent enough and the graphics are good, the response time is somewhat delayed and it could get frustrating at times. Also, using the mouse pad is quite cumbersome and you’d find yourself using the touch screen more often. Some features integrated within the infotainment system include:
- Android Auto
- Apple CarPlay
- Sirius XM Sattelite navigation service with a 3-month subscription
- Bluetooth audio streaming
Interior Features
- LCD Color Multi-information display with S-AWC distribution array
- High Contrast Meters
- 8-way powered adjustable driver’s seat
- Heated Front Seats
- Rear seat slide and recline function
- Rear seat center armrest with cup holders
- Heated and leather-wrapped steering wheel.
- Gloss-black window switch panels
- Soft-touch door trim inserts
- Remote hood and fuel door release lever
- 7-inch infotainment screen with touchpad controller
- Steering wheel audio and phone controls
- Heads up display
- Multi-view camera system
- Automatic Climate Control
- Cruise Control
Cargo Area
The Eclipse shines the best here. It flaunts a cargo capacity of 22.6 cu.ft which is the best in the segment. And if you still need some more space, just fold the rear row down and you would be surprised with a massive space of 48.9 cu.ft. - again, one of the best in the segment. The angled doors could throw some tantrums at you while loading/unloading. However, the low-slung boot takes extra marks here making the hassle convenient up to quite an extent.
Model
|
Mitsubishi Eclipse Cross |
Mazda CX-3
|
Subaru Crosstrek
|
Chevrolet Trax
|
Trunk Volume (ft.3)
|
22.6 |
12.4
|
20.8
|
18.7
|
Cargo Volume with Rear seats folded (ft.3)
|
48.9 |
44.5
|
55.3
|
48.4
|
The Eclipse is the clear crown-bearer here. However, with the rear seats folded, the Subaru Crosstrek inches ahead of the Eclipse. The Chevy Trax trails the Eclipse marginally, leaving the Mazda at the end.