The Chevrolet Impala is a perfect example of why GM nearly went under, and how the Chevrolet brand was adrift without a clear identity. It is a mediocre car, with some very annoying details. It doesn't inspire passion, it isn't a car I would choose to buy. It is a rental fleet queen.
Good Points:
- Quiet, smooth, 3.5L V6 with variable valve timing.
- Clean, if boring, styling.
- Flex-Fuel (E85) capable.
- Unoffensive transmission behavior.
- Decent fuel economy for a larger car (I got 25mpg average on gasoline)
- Huge trunk
Bad Points:
- The OHV V6 is modestly powered at 211HP/214Lb-ft. The 3.6 DOHC GM V6 makes 252HP.
- Only 4 speed transmission.
- Prominent tire noise.
- Wind noise from driver's door seal?
- Cheesy fake wood interior trim.
- Odd wedge shaped sideview mirrors offer reduced visibility.
- Hard plastics abound in the interior.
- Bizarre vertical levers for dual zone temperature control, with very little resistance.
- Pedal-type parking brake intrudes on foot room and interferes with dead pedal space.
- No PRNDL markings on floor shifter (PRNDL displayed on IP).
- Soft, squishy ride with lots of body lean.
- Mushy on-center steering feel.
- No hand-hold to open trunk (you can try to grab the trim, or put your fingers under the trunk lid edge).
2 comments:
Should have rented from Hertz. Nice Camry's and Mazda 6's abound in the fullsize car range.
I got upgraded to an FX35 on my last rental. Wish it was an FX45.
Also been in some nice Mazda CX6 and CX9's over the past few months.
Well, the mobile mechanic bot and the Hertz/Pacrim bot have been here.
I think the only reason Chevy is keeping the Impala around is for a NASCAR template.
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