| Chrysler's Pentastar-powered minivan is, truly, madly, deeply, one of my favorite vehicles. My first meeting was with the high-buck Town and Country, followed by a very long drive in a Caravan SXT. Great vehicles, both of them, and worth the money. Unfortunately for Chrysler's profit margins, however, the economic outlook in this country for actual working people continues to nose-dive. The company's fighting back with a $20,000 (after incentives and discounts) "America Value Package" Caravan. That's right: for the price of a Honda Civic EX, there's a 283-horsepower, seven-seater van with keyless entry available. To get a sense of whether such a proposition holds any interest for those of us without five children and a slim budget, I rented a 2012 Caravan with slightly less equipment than what you'd find in the 2013 Value Package, and took a little thousand-mile Tennessee excursion.
My long-time readers know that any mention of the Volunteer State in my writing is usually accompanied by some lurid tale regarding a highly dramatic hairdresser in her very early thirties, but I am pleased to announce that we are killing her character off. Let's do that right now, and since you guys all think I make this stuff up anyway I'm going to make it up the way I wanted it to happen rather than the slightly annoying way it actually happened. Plus, you can skip it if you like.
Whew! Glad that's over. Let's get back to the Caravan. As with the American Value Package version, my rental base model had power locks, power windows, air conditioning, a CD player with 1/8″ auxiliary input, cruise control, anti-lock brakes, traction control, all that stuff. What don't you get? Well, there are no LCD screens to be found. The instrument panel won't tell you how many miles per gallon you're getting. There is no power assistance for the sliding doors or rear liftgate. The seats are finished in a hardy-looking but non-luxurious cloth and the only "memory" function they have will reside within your own cerebrum. In other words, the equipment's about what you would get on a top-of-the-line minivan from 1990. So no bitching allowed. The central excellence of the Caravan in all its forms comes down to this: it's easy, pleasant, and effective to drive. The Pentastar makes it fast enough to handle anything from short freeway merges to cut-and-slice traffic. The transmission likes to swap between fifth and sixth a lot on the freeway but the payback is real-world fuel mileage in the 26-30mpg range over longer trips. Visibility is excellent with just a slice of bonnet visible for parking confidence. The wind noise is acceptable and it's no worse than what you get in the current crop of mid-size sedans despite the resonance effect of the big interior space. Even with the cheapo tires fitted to non-R/T Caravans, it's possible to double most on-ramp speed limits and fast lane changes happen without too much roll or difficulty. I suspect that most of the driving dynamics are considerably less pleasant with seven passengers on board, but guess what? The same thing can be said of a Gallardo Superleggera. I've come to believe that most car companies have a core product where their experiences, customer clinics, and engineering ability are most effectively utilized. With Ford, it's the trucks and the Mustang. With GM, it's the Corvette. With Toyota, it's the Prius. For Chrysler, it's the minivan. Intellectually, I know that the Sienna and Odyssey are of equal utility and are possibly more durable, but when I actually sit in the things it's obvious that the competition just doesn't understand minivans as well as Chrysler does. Everything in the Caravan works. Everything makes sense. The sole quibble I have about this vehicle, really, is that the power outlets are located at the bottom of the console. That works for most people but for those of us who want to slap our navigation-capable smartphones on the windshield it makes for a long cable run and a resultant high load on the Micro-USB connector. Finished in basic white, the Caravan was invisible to cops and in the raise-the-black-flag-and-start-slitting-throats mood which characterized my entire run from Nashville back to Ohio I skated by the highway patrol at least twice in excess of 90mph. When a couple of inbred lot-lizard-collectors decided to race their semi-trucks up a long Kentucky hill at fifty miles per hour and block most of the freeway, I forced the Caravan into the kind of highly offensive high-speed run down the far-right lane I used to pull in my Phaetons all the time. It responded with alacrity to both the request for acceleration and the full-tilt braking I needed to sneak back in line when the lane ran out. Having made the same trip in an Altima just four days previously, I tried to determine which vehicle I'd rather make the run in should my client decide I needed to visit Nashville once a week for the rest of my life. Although the Altima was comfortable and competent, it literally didn't do a single useful thing any better than the Caravan did. Acceleration? The Caravan beats it. If you price out 2013 models, you'll find that the Caravan has a slight advantage over the four-cylinder Altima, Accord, and even the Camry. For the same kind of money, you get a bigger engine and a bigger box to carry your stuff. While it's hard to argue against the resale value of the Japanese-brand midsizers, nor would you be wise to discount what a family-carrying minivan will be worth used as the middle class continues its flyover-country vanishing act. And yet, a lot of people will crunch all the numbers, do all the test drives, and still walk away from the Caravan. They'll do it because they've been burned before by minivans foreign or domestic, particularly with regards to transmission durability. They'll do it because they don't need the extra capacity and it feels wasteful to have it even if there's no penalty. But mostly they'll do it because they don't want to be seen in a minivan. Minivans are what station wagons used to be: deeply and terminally uncool. Driving a minivan feels like an abject surrender to all the things our increasingly schizophrenic society despises. Family. Commitment. Modest income. Church. Soccer teams. The old American dream, that stupid knuckle-dragging Ozzie and Harriet crap that was supposed to vanish in a single bright bicoastal flash of Chris Brown, Slow Food, and Hannah Horvath. Who wants to be associated with it? And yet there's freedom in that groove. Rolling up Interstate 65, listening to the Ronald Isley and Burt Bacharach album I bought ironically a few years ago and have been listening to with sincerity ever since, I saw some dumb-ass in a matte-white GT-R swerving through traffic in the most unnecessarily race-y way humanly possible. I studied his trajectory, made a few predictions, and managed to put the big white Dodge right in his windshield as he went for a fast-and-furious pass on a tractor-trailer. He backed off and tried a few lanes over, only to find me in front of him again. Five times he full-throttled his way back and forth across 65′s considerable girth, and each time somehow I just happened to be in his way. Took maybe twenty minutes. I judged the excellence of my ricer-retarding work by how much I could increase the gap between us and an Impala that had remained in the same lane for the whole time. When we started, the GT-R was about to pass the Impala; when I finished, we could barely see the Chevy's generic chrome trunk strip ahead. Finally I gave up the game and this time he sped up next to me, hit the brakes, and waved his heavily tattooed arms at me widly, swearing in a language I couldn't hear but guessed to be Russian. I waved back and smiled in utterly guileless fashion. He threw his hands up. I could guess what he was thinking Stupid old bastard. All over the road. Doesn't know what he's doing. The big Nissan gathered speed and shrank to a distant dot ahead. I waved again. Not the brilliant hero of my own imagination. Not the cold-hearted, bloodlessly manipulative monster of Drama's nightmares. Just a harmless guy in a minivan. Going nowhere fast. Like everyone else. from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com | |||
| | |||
| | |||
|
Friday, February 15, 2013
Trackday Diaries: You should buy a minivan.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Archive
-
▼
2013
(7180)
-
▼
February
(613)
- 2013 Acura ILX Long-Term Test Update: Where’s the ...
- The Electric Seven: Land Rover Reveals a Septet of...
- 2013 Dodge Journey V-6 AWD Test: Practical Pragmatism
- 2013 Geneva International Motor Show: 2014 Volkswa...
- Nine-Speed Transmission to Debut on 2014 Land Rove...
- Ecoboost May Put The Squeeze On Ford’s Canadian En...
- GM’s Euro-Trash: All Agree On Opel Deal, Except Fo...
- Maserati Adds Formerly Deleted Rear Seats and More...
- 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee and SRT Grand Cherokee: F...
- France Hikes Taxes On Diesel Fuel, Auto Makers Pro...
- Pagani Details Sonus Faber Sound System for Huayra...
- Recall Alert: 2007-08 Lotus Elise and Exige
- Jeep Cherokee Won’t Be The Only 9-Speed Soft Roader
- Recall Alert: 2012-13 Porsche 911
- The 3D Printed Car Is Upon Us
- Real Men Own A Tank. But Does It Get You Laid?
- Altezza Lights: A Retrospective
- 2013 Buick Encore: Car Seat Check
- GM Vows To Increase Voltage
- Armistice At Opel: Unions 2, Girsky Nil
- The UAW Is Whistling Dixie, Again
- Turbo Love At First Sight: Buying The Babe Magnet
- Ford EcoSport: Low Cost Crossover Released Into Th...
- KTM X-Bow GT Pushes Boundaries of Grand Touring Na...
- Honda Opens First New Domestic Plant In Nearly 50 ...
- Cars.com Reviews the 2013 Chevrolet Traverse
- America To Increase Car Exports. With A Little Hel...
- Study: Many Average U.S. Households Can't Afford a...
- House Committee Blasts Overpaid Bailed-Out Exes. T...
- Recall Alert: 2012 Hyundai Veloster
- Audi Lets Pair of RS4 Avants Play Paintball, Every...
- 2014 Lexus IS Dissected: New Lexus Look, New Lexus...
- Tesla To Pay Down DoE Loan In 5 Years Or Less
- The Detroit Three After the Big Whoa: An Examinati...
- 2014 Ford Fiesta ST Priced, So is the Rest of Fies...
- Nissan Will Return to Le Mans in 2014 Emphasizing ...
- 2014 Ford Fiesta Starts at $14,795
- SUV Sales Outpacing Family Cars In The UK
- Abu Dhabi Dispatches: How I Nearly Met Jack Baruth...
- Canadian Cars Americans Don’t Get
- Nissan Europe Ramping Up Local Leaf Production
- The Start
- Signs Suggest Automaker, Consumer Confidence Rebound
- Another Car Show, Another MINI: John Cooper Works ...
- World’s Largest Automakers 2013: And They’re Off
- Take it Slow in Snow and Ice
- Piston Slap: Feelin’ Blue, Cobalt?
- Cars.com Family Reviews the 2013 Dodge Durango
- Nissan Confirms GT-R NISMO Being Developed, Will A...
- Volkswagen Shows The Car It Did Not Want You To Ha...
- 2015 Volkswagen GTI: Evolutionary Look, More Power...
- 2014 Kia Sorento “Tight Space” Commercial: Very Fi...
- Fiat’s Ultimate 500 Series: Abarth Fuoriserie [201...
- TTAC Brings You The NISMO Pictures Jalopnik Misses...
- First Drive: 2014 Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG 4MATIC—Now...
- Rolls-Royce Wraith: Final Teaser Distills Design t...
- Luxury Wagons Work to Woo Families
- Name That Exhaust Note, Episode 173
- Teen Driver Deaths Continue to Climb
- Land Rover and JD Power
- 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT First Drive: We Hit t...
- Alfa Romeo’s Latest Giulietta, the Veloce—Italian ...
- AAA: Gas-Price Ascent Won't Stop Anytime Soon
- Treasury To Unload Remaining G.M Stake
- Slip Slidin’ Away: How I Crashed a Geo Metro and L...
- Ditzy Docherty Makes Waves In Deutschland, Blames ...
- Nissan to Develop 2014 GT-R NISMO
- Macca’s Back
- Four Legs Good, Two Legs Better!
- The Ford EcoSport is Just Like a Fiesta, Only Toug...
- Never Mind The Bollocks, Here’s The Tesla Model S
- Musk Blames NY Times For $100 Million Loss, Should...
- Junkyard Find: Electric 1995 Geo Metro
- Dan Akerson Wants a Big Raise, Washington Sugar Da...
- 2013 Toyota Avalon: Car Seat Check
- 2014 McLaren P1: Staggering Performance Estimates,...
- Brabus 800 Roadster: Because the 621-hp Mercedes-B...
- Fiat 500 GQ Edition: For the Classy European Gentl...
- Michelin Clio Cup Kits Promise Big Bang For the Bu...
- AT&T 4G LTE Connectivity Headed for Select 2015 Bu...
- Additional 2014 Alfa Romeo 4C Details, Interior Re...
- 2013 Daytona 500: Jimmie Johnson Wins, But He Isn’...
- Name That Shifter, No. 117
- BMW: The Ultimate Range Anxiety Cure?
- Clek Foonf Makes Extra Room in the Car, but Costs ...
- GM Vehicles to Have 4G Wireless in 2014
- Best Selling Cars Around The Globe: What The Indon...
- What Automotive “How To” Would Mean A Lot To You?
- Honda Took The Wrong D-D-D-Direction With The CR-V...
- GM Heading To Myanmar As Part Of U.S. Trade Delega...
- Susan Docherty Has a Great Idea How To Kill Cadillac
- Ford Adds Spotify to Sync Suite
- How To Turn Any Car Into The Wagon Of Your Dreams
- Comparison Test: 2013 BMW X3, 2013 Audi Q5, and 20...
- Our BRZ's First Causality: Factory Floormats
- Review: 2013 Toyota Venza (Video)
- Girksy To Opel Workers: Allow Me To Rip Out Your H...
- Monday Mileage Champion: Tom Tuttle’s Tacoma
- Are Graphene Micro-Supercapacitors An EV Gamechanger?
- Monday Mileage Midget: Vecchio Combustible Paradisio!
-
▼
February
(613)
No comments:
Post a Comment