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2005
CHEVROLET CAR MODLE GUIDE |
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CHEVROLET
CARS |
Cars
carrying the bow-tie badge of Chevrolet
range from fuel-efficient commuter vehicles
and refined family sedans to slick coupes
and America's sports car, Corvette.
This year, the line expands to include
a new small-scale car called Cobalt,
which divides into coupe and sedan formats.
And expect a new C6 - that's Chevy's
code name for a sixth-generation platform
underpinning Corvette cast as a racy
two-seat convertible or sleek hatchback
coupe.
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Chevrolet
Malibu |
Chevrolet's affordable mid-size sedan
emerged last year as an entirely new
car cast on GM's Epsilon platform with
contemporary body styling and innovative
features in the five-seat cabin. There's
a fold-flat seatback for the front right
bucket and a rear split bench that folds
down for flexibility when arranging
passengers and cargo. Engine options
include the EcoTec 2.2-liter four-cylinder
worth 140 hp or a 3.5-liter V6 racked
at 200 hp. Each plant connects strictly
to a four-speed Hydra-Matic 4T45-E automatic
transmission with clever shift-it-yourself
button on the side of the shifter stalk.
Three trim levels - base Malibu, Malibu
LS and top-grade LT - are available,
with a factory-installed remote starter
package on the list of options, along
with curtain-style air bags. For 2005,
new side-impact air bags for front seats
are standard for Malibu LS, while a
sport appearance package adds alloy
wheels and body-color side moldings.
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Chevrolet
Malibu Maxx |
Think
of Maxx as a comfortable four-door similar
to Malibu's sedan, only the wheelbase
gets more inches in length to add space
to the rear of the cabin and there's
a cascading back door in hatchback format
for easy access to the cargo bay. The
backbench seat slides almost seven inches
fore and aft to vary the space for people
and goods - and increase backseat legroom
to 41 inches. The back of the right
front bucket also folds forward to form
a flat horizontal surface, and backs
of the rear bench, divided into two
sections, fold on the same plane.
Long
cargo items may be stacked on top of
these folded seats and extended from
dash to trunk bulkhead. To shed extra
light into the rear compartment, there's
a fixed skylight overhead with retractable
sunshade. Standard powertrain for Maxx
is Malibu's up-level 3.5-liter V6 producing
200 hp through a four-speed automatic
transmission. Malibu Maxx LS gets new
side-impact air bags as standard gear
for 2005 issues, and there are audio
and entertainment packages available,
such as a six-disc CD changer, DVD-based
video entertainment system for backseat
riders, OnStar telecommunications and
the XM satellite radio service.
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Chevrolet
Impala |
The
Impala line of sedans ranks among the
best-selling passenger cars in America
with a mid-size structure but full-size
cabin space and seats for the whole
family. It's also the most popular Chevrolet.
Two trims - base Impala and upscale
LS - support V6 powertrains. The base
trim uses a familiar 3.4-liter plant
from GM that produces 180 hp. An optional
3.8-liter V6 reaches to 200 hp. Yet
Impala SS (Super Sport) puts a supercharger
on the 3.8-liter six to produce 240
hp. The sport-tuned SS rides on speed-rated
tires capping 17-inch aluminum wheels.
A monochromatic black SS also stocks
twin exhaust pipes in bright stainless
steel, fog lamps up front and a six-gauge
package in the instrument panel. All
Impalas for 2005 carry a new generation
of GM's OnStar telecommunications with
hands-free voice recognition capability.
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Chevrolet
Monte Carlo |
In
two-door coupe format, the Monte Carlo
sits on the platform of Impala and contains
many of the same mechanical components,
yet follows its own tack for exterior
styling and interior features. The volume
model - Monte Carlo LS - totes a 3.4-liter
plant that delivers 180 hp and earns
high fuel economy figures. A new trim
- Monte Carlo LT - has GM's 3.8-liter
V6 that reaches 200 hp. And the Monte
Carlo Supercharged SS puts a blower
to the 3.8-liter plant for a boost to
240 hp through a heavy-duty Hydra-Matic
4T65-E four-speed automatic. Like Impala
SS, Monte Carlo Supercharged SS carries
stronger suspension components and larger
wheels and tires, with large-diameter
discs for brakes and an anti-lock braking
system (ABS).
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Chevrolet
Cavalier |
The
compact economy car from Chevrolet returns
in two-door coupe and four-door sedan
styles with optional seat-mounted torso
air bags. Trims for both coupe and sedan
extend from the base Cavalier to upgraded
LS and the top-end LS Sport rigged with
GM's FE2 sport suspension. All pull
power from a dual-cam 2.2-liter EcoTec
four-in-line engine that makes 140 hp
and mates to either the standard five-speed
manual or optional four-speed automatic.
Cavalier dresses up in optional gear
such as chrome aluminum wheels, a tail
spoiler and leather on the steering
wheel and shifter knob. Audio packages
reach to an optional CD deck that can
play MP3 files and link to OnStar telecommunications
and the XM satellite radio service. |
Chevrolet
Corvette |
Chevy's
svelte two-seat sports car shows up
in the 2005 line on a new platform with
coupe and convertible versions. There's
a sportier posture for the next Corvette
as designers lop five inches off the
length and an inch in width. There's
edgy body styling apparent too with
always-visible headlamps on a pointed
prow with Xenon high-intensity discharge
(HID) lamps. And beneath the hood this
'Vette stocks a new LS2 V8 engine pumping
400 hp. Top speed climbs to 186 mph,
making this the fastest production model
ever.
The
new Corvette rolls on larger wheels
and tires (18-inches up front but 19s
in back), with stronger brakes and a
range of sophisticated chassis control
systems available including three different
suspension settings. Standard gearbox
is a Tremec T56 six-speed manual, with
an upgraded Hydra-Matic 4L65-E four-speed
automatic optional. The coupe has a
removable roof panel on top, while the
convertible's five-layer fabric lid
operates manually or with optional power
controls. An AM/FM stereo radio with
CD deck and MP3 capability drops into
Corvette's revamped cockpit, which contains
form-fitting sport bucket seats divided
by a front-to-rear console. |
Chevrolet
Aveo |
The
itsy-bitsy economy car from Chevrolet
works as a four-door notchback sedan
or five-door hatchback. Both look sleek
and stylish in the manner of curvy European
city cars, as Giorgetto Giugiaro's Italdesign
studios in Turin developed exterior
shapes. Sedan and hatchback vary at
the rear. The sedan shows an arched
roof concluding in a defined trunk ledge
while the hatchback has the roof extending
to the lip of a back door that slopes
to the body-colored bumper. Both reveal
spry manners on a curvy road and deliver
a stable ride quality due to responsive
mechanical gear aboard.
The
1.6-liter in-line-four engine feels
zippy when running on suburban streets.
It musters 105 hp with standard five-speed
manual or optional four-speed automatic
shifter. Aveo's cabin seems far more
spacious than the subcompact dimensions
imply. Seatback folds flat in the sedan
to boost cargo capacity, but on the
hatch its rear seat folds and flips
forward to forge a generous cargo bay. |
Chevrolet
Cobalt |
New
compact-class cars from Chevrolet shape
up as a four-door sedan or snazzy two-door
coupe. Cobalt applies bold styling to
the exterior package and a five-seat
passenger compartment laced with premium
features. Three four-cylinder EcoTec
engines work with Cobalt. Standard is
a 140 hp 2.2-liter plant for base, LS
and LT trims, with a new 2.4-liter engine
at 170 hp for SS coupe and sedan due
at mid-year. However, a new 2.0-liter
four with blower added in Cobalt SS
Supercharged coupe knocks out 205 hp.
The sedan looks stylish in smooth but
tall format, and the coupe mimics that
form in front yet shows a swoopy tail
marked by Chevy's signature round taillamps.
Standards for the cabin are air conditioning
and an audio kit with CD player, with
options extending to heated leather
seats, a sunroof, OnStar telecommunications
and XM satellite radio service. |
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