Third Place
2004 Chevrolet Aveo LS
Give Chevy's new Aveo the once-over, and you'll come away impressed. The interior has the look and feel of a car worth thousands--okay, hundreds--more than its $14,160 as-tested price. The sheens and textures, the circular vents and door handles all coordinate in a convincing attempt at functional, stylish design. And tall, upright seating front and rear affords basketball-team spaciousness, though the rear seatback is reclined too far, and latching the rear belts is often a two-handed job to prevent the latch from disappearing behind the seat cushion.
Outside, the look is clean and crisp with amusing jet-age character lines adorning the rear flanks. Our top-of-the-line LS model boasted a sunroof ($725), remote entry, a height-adjustable driver seat, remote mirrors (manual on the left, power on the right), and a CD/MP3 player with equalizer. The simple-to-operate, two-knob stereo with its 12 buttons and minimal gimmicks offered the fullest range of sound, thanks in part to its preset equalizer and four high-quality speakers.
Our Take: 2004 Chevrolet Aveo LS What's Hot • Upscale interior trim • Full-range stereo sound • Easiest to parallel-park by 1.3 inchesWhat's Not • Ropy shifter • Excessive body roll • Nonlinear handling response Don't Miss If you insist on a sunroof, only Chevy offers one Bottom Line Korean car in all but name and warranty duration |
None of these cars arrives on campus with a track scholarship, but of this trio the Aveo was least suited to sprinting, due to this triple threat: lowest power, highest weight, and tallest gearing. So, not surprisingly, at the dragstrip our Aveo trailed the pack slightly, hitting 60 mph in 10.2 seconds and crossing the quarter mile in 17.6 at 78.6 mph. Sadly, the tall gearing didn't pay off at the gas pump, where the Aveo also finished in third place at 27 mpg over our 700-mile excursion, two to four miles a gallon behind the other cars.
At least the Aveo never feels like a rolling chicane in traffic; it climbs hills with relative ease, and it can merge into freeway traffic without inducing sweaty palms. When whipping the littlest Chevy hard, though, the engine note is fairly coarse, and the vague and imprecise shifter is hard to place accurately. Reverse is up and to the left after lifting a ring, and the feel through all the gears is not unlike that of a broomstick freeing a jammed garbage disposal.