Tag Archives: Chevrolet

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 76; How COVID-19 Changed Car Buyers; EV Sales Uptick

EV Sales

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

Whether you drive a car, need a car, or just occasionally bum a ride with friends, you’ve come to the right place. Join the editors of Consumer Guide Automotive as they break down everything that’s going on in the auto world. New-car reviews, shopping tips, driving green, electric cars, classic cars, and plenty of great guests. This is the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast.

Episode: 76

Broadcast date: April 12, 2021

Guest: Jenni Newman

How COVID-19 Changed Car Buyers; EV Sales Uptick

Host Tom Appel and co-hosts Jill Ciminillo and Damon Bell kick off the show by discussing the upcoming GMC Hummer SUV and pure-electric Chevrolet Silverado, as well as the uptick in EV sales. Cars.com Editor-in-Chief Jenni Newman joins us to talk about the effect COVID-19 has had on car shoppers, based on Cars.com’s internal data and survey results. Tom has a “sales-per-dealer” quiz for Damon and Jill, and Damon runs down the latest articles on the Consumer Guide Daily Drive blog, including a Test Drive review of the 2021 Hyundai Elantra SEL and a gallery of currently available new vehicles powered by 3-cylinder engines.

The Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast is broadcast every Sunday on Chicago’s WCPT AM 820 at 1:00 PM CST.

Discussed this week:

Cars.com Pandemic Study

Test Drive: 2021 Hyundai Elantra SEL (with photo gallery)

Missing Pistons? A Gallery of 3-Cylinder Vehicles

Our Favorite Indy Pace Cars

James Garner, Favorite Indy Pace Cars

James Garner

It’s called The Greatest Spectacle in Racing, and with as many as 300,000 people in attendance, it likely qualifies as one of the greatest events in professional sports. First run in 1911, the Indianapolis 500 is part of the “triple crown” of auto racing, which also includes the Monaco Gran Prix and the 24 Hours of Le Mans.

Indianapolis Motor Speedway Logo

Indianapolis Motor Speedway Logo

Now more than a century old, the Indy 500 is steeped in ceremony and tradition. One of our favorite aspects of the race is the pace car—or rather, the pace cars. Though generally selected from the world of production automobiles, the official Indy 500 pace car is usually treated to unique trim and badging, and in some cases even custom bodywork.

For your consideration, we asked a handful of Consumer Guide editors to name their favorite Indy pace cars. No doubt if we had rallied more staff members to share their picks, we’d have an even longer list… it’s difficult to reach any sort consensus on which of the 100-plus Indy pace cars is the best.

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What’s your favorite Indy 500 pace car? Leave us a note. The place for comments is down below.

More fun cars

Our Favorite Indy Pace Cars

Jack Stewart: 1930 Cord L-29

Driven by Wade Morton

1930 Cord L-29 Indy Pace Car

1930 Cord L-29 Indy Pace Car

America’s first production front-wheel-drive car, the Cord L-29, had its roots in the Brickyard. Harry Miller dominated the 500 from the mid-Twenties to mid-Thirties and designed a front-drive Indy car—and the L-29’s front-wheel drivetrain was based on Miller patents. Cornelius Van Ranst was another familiar figure at Indianapolis and also designed a front-drive Indy car; he was tapped as chief engineer on the Cord project. The heavyweight Cord wasn’t especially fast for its time, with a top speed of around 75 mph, but it had fine handling—as expected of a car with a racing heritage.

The Cars of American Graffiti

John Biel: 1969 Chevy Camaro SS/RS

Driven by Jim Rathmann

1969 Chevy Camaro SS/RS Indy pace Car

1969 Chevy Camaro SS/RS Indy pace Car

I’m not exaggerating when I say the Indianapolis Motor Speedway is one of my favorite places on Earth. I first went there for pole-day qualifying in 1976 and ’77, and have been attending the 500—with rare exception—since 1980, so I’ve seen lots of pace cars in action. Most of my favorites actually predate these years though, cars like the streamlined Chrysler Newport phaeton that paced the 1941 race, the 1955 Chevrolet Bel Air, that gold “bullet ’Bird” Thunderbird from 1961, and the 1978 Corvette. But for an absolute favorite, I’ll be Capt. Obvious and name the 1969 Chevy Camaro SS/RS. Ostensibly powered by a 396-cubic-inch “big-block” V8 (it’s alleged that a 427 actually rested beneath the domed “cowl-induction” hood) and sprayed in Dover White paint with wide Hugger Orange racing stripes, it was utterly striking from the get-go. The fact that it is associated with a race won by none other than Mario Andretti gives it an enduring place in motorsports history. The 3675 retail-sale replicas it spawned are perhaps the most collectible versions of a car that’s highly collectible to start with, and Camaros that came after it—including the pacer for the 2011 “Greatest Spectacle in Racing”—have freely traded on the ’69 car’s unforgettable image.

Early Risers: A Gallery of 1960s Camaros

Tom Appel: 1977 Oldsmobile Delta 88

Driven by James Garner

1977 Oldsmobile Delta 88 Indy Pace Car

1977 Oldsmobile Delta 88 Indy Pace Car

I’ve never been much of a motorsports guy, but I am a big fan of General Motors’ new-for-1977 B-Body cars, and an even bigger fan of James Garner. So, my choice is obvious: A custom-built targa-roofed Oldsmobile Delta 88 coupe driven by the star of The Rockford Files is almost too much cool in one place.

The Cars of The Rockford Files

Damon Bell: 1979 Ford Mustang

Driven by Jackie Stewart

1979 Ford Mustang Indy Pace Car

1979 Ford Mustang Indy Pace Car

OK, I’m kind of bending the rules here. My pick—the 1979 Ford Mustang—might not be my all-time favorite pace car (in fact, I don’t even know if I can narrow it down to a single favorite), but my opinion of this particular Indy 500 workhorse has gone from “ehhh…” to “two thumbs up” over the last decade or so. After 15 years of overtly nostalgic Mustang styling (and a decade plus of retro-look Chevrolet Camaros and Dodge Challengers as well), the unabashedly forward-looking design of the early Fox-body Mustangs is looking great to my eyes as we roll into 2021.

I’m also a sucker for unique factory paint schemes and tape-stripe graphics, and the ’79 Mustang Pace Car’s livery is certainly memorable. I’m especially fond of the Pewter paint color—silver with just a hint of gold. The tape stripes and the strobe-fade running-horse decals were considered kitschy for a long while, but in the last few years I’ve seen several high-dollar ’79 Mustang street-machine builds that either use the stock pace-car graphics or sport custom paint schemes that riff on those graphics. What goes around comes around… sometimes in ways you’d never expect.

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Favorite Indy Pace Car Gallery

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Favorite Indy Pace Cars

5 Forgotten Convertibles

Favorite Indy Pace Cars


Quick Spin: 2021 Chevrolet Blazer RS

 

2021 Chevrolet Blazer RS

2021 Chevrolet Blazer RS in Cherry Red Tintcoat (a $495 option)

Quick Spin, Consumer Guide Automotive

2021 Chevrolet Blazer RS AWD

Class: Midsize Crossover

Miles driven: 162

Fuel used: 9.2 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 17.6 mpg

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B+
Power and Performance B+
Fit and Finish B+
Fuel Economy B
Value B-
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy A
Tall Guy A
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 308-hp 3.6 liter
Engine Type V6
Transmission 9-speed automatic
Drive Wheels AWD

Driving mix: 40% city, 60% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 19/26/21 (mpg city/highway/combined)

Fuel type: Regular gas

Base price: $43,700 (not including $1195 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Enhanced Convenience Package ($1660), Driver Confidence II Package ($1650), Cherry Red Tintcoat paint ($495), Storage Optimization Package ($175)

Price as tested: $48,875

Quick Hits

The great: Smooth, strong powertrain; generous occupant space in both the front and rear seats

The good: Polished road manners with a touch of athleticism; long list of available comfort, convenience, and safety features

The not so good: Pricing is somewhat steep compared to similarly capable class rivals; disappointed observed fuel economy compared to EPA numbers

More Blazer price and availability information

CG Says:

If you consult the 2021 Blazer entry at the Consumer Guide Automotive website, you will read a line that tells you Chevrolet’s 2-row midsize crossover is unchanged for the year. That does not mean one of its models hasn’t gotten a bit more distinctive, however.

Attribute it to addition by subtraction. In 2020, all-wheel-drive RSes and Premiers came with a twin-clutch rear axle that could shift torque to the rear wheel with the best traction in poor road conditions. This was a little more complex than the base AWD system used by 2LT- and 3LT-trim models. However, for ’21 only the sport-look RS retains the more-sophisticated setup while the top-level Premier gets the cheaper system that relies on braking intervention to ration out torque.

2021 Chevrolet Blazer RS

The sporty RS is the penultimate model in the Chevrolet Blazer lineup, slotting in below the top-line Premier.

Consumer Guide tested the 2021 RS with all-wheel drive, a vehicle with a starting price of $44,895 including delivery. (A front-drive RS goes for $2900 less.) Available only with a 308-horsepower 3.6-liter V6 engine, it furthers its sportier vibe with a high-gloss-black hexagonal-design grille with Black Ice header bar, black bowtie emblem and RS badging, rectangular bright tips for the dual exhaust outlets, specific lower-body moldings with Black Ice insert, and 20-inch Dark Android machined-face aluminum wheels. There’s red stitching and other highlights in the cabin, where Jet Black perforated leather covers the seats. A 6-speaker audio system is standard, and RS is the trim level at which a hands-free liftgate, navigation, high-definition touchscreen, 120-volt power outlet, ambient interior lighting, automatic heated steering wheel, 8-inch color driver-information display, and front type-A and -C USB ports with auxiliary input jack and SD card reader kick in.

First Spin: 2021 Kia Sorento

2021 Chevy Blazer Cabin

The RS cabin gets sporty trim touches, such as red contrast stitching and red-tinted HVAC-vent bezels, that help keep it from looking too monotone. Chevrolet’s excellent Infotainment 3 Plus touchscreen system is standard equipment.

Built-in driving assists include blind-spot and rear cross-traffic alerts, lane-departure warning, forward-collision alert with emergency pedestrian braking, and teen-driver monitoring. Options that drove the full price of the test vehicle to $48,875 included things like a rear-camera mirror, enhanced emergency braking, adaptive cruise control, and various convenience and cargo-management extras.

Quick Spin: 2021 Toyota Venza Limited

2021 Chevy Blazer Cabin

There’s generous space in both the front and rear seats. The rear seat backs recline, and the seats themselves slide fore and aft to favor passenger legroom or cargo space. The Blazer RS’s perforated seat-upholstery inserts are colored red inside the perforations, which makes for a interesting effect that coordinates with the red contrast stitching.

As when we tested an all-wheel-drive 2019 Premier with the same V6 and 9-speed automatic transmission, the powerteam in the RS was admirably smooth and commendably lively. Selecting “Sport” mode switches on AWD and makes shifts feel more direct. The RS is also the workhorse of the Blazer clan, with a maximum towing capacity of 4500 pounds, and it is better suited to the job thanks to hitch guidance with Hitch View and heavy-duty cooling that are standard on the AWD RS. Our test Premier averaged almost 22 mpg with a majority of highway driving; the RS was closer to 19 with more city driving in the mix. There’s a fuel-saving engine stop-start function, but drivers who might find it bothersome will be happy to know this is one Chevy in which they can turn it off.

Ride is firm yet still comfortable and pleasingly quiet. While steering is a little too light and lacking in feel when in “Normal” mode, it firms up quite a bit when switched to Sport.

Test Drive: 2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer LT

2021 Chevy Blazer Cabin

There’s 30.5 cubic feet of cargo room behind the Blazer’s second-row seats, and 64.2 cubic feet with the rear seat backs folded–respectable, but less than two-row class rivals such as the Ford Edge and Hyundai Santa Fe.

Nice passenger space is offset by overall cargo room that trails other entries in the “small-midsize” niche. Indeed, the Blazer is part of a new breed of crossovers trying not to look like big, square wagons at the willful sacrifice of some load capacity. Rear seats fold flat but leave a tiny gap from the load floor. The RS’s red accents—including the big, round bezels for the air vents—add some zing to what borders on being a stark interior. Personal-item storage is good and the Chevrolet Infotainment 3 system is extremely easy to understand and use.

In general, the modern Blazer is well-suited to the current crossover market that demands more than one-size-fits-all vehicles. The Blazer RS gives shoppers one more particular way to make that point.

Quick Spin: 2020 Ford Edge ST

2021 Chevrolet Blazer RS

The Chevrolet Blazer RS is arguably the sleekest, snarkiest-looking mainstream-brand midsize SUV, and it has a driving personality to match. It’s notably pricier than most similarly capable class rivals, however.

Listen to the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2021 Chevrolet Blazer RS Gallery

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2021 Chevrolet Blazer RS

Meet the 2021 Consumer Guide Best Buys

For GREAT deals on a new or used Cadillac check out Carter Cadillac TODAY!

Recent-History Madness! A Gallery of Car Ads from 2002

 

Car Ads from 2002

2002 Chevrolet Trailblazer

I joined the Consumer Guide team the summer of 2002. That means that, in just a few months, I will have been writing about cars full-time for 20 years. I mention this because I have only recently begun to consider just how much the automotive landscape has changed in the past two decades.

Most obviously, crossovers and SUVs have replaced traditional passenger cars as the general public’s preferred mode of personal transportation. High-technology “driver assistance” features that were barely even considered in 2002 are now commonplace, and often standard equipment. Recall that backup cameras–now a federally mandated safety feature–weren’t even available on new cars back in ’02.

Pickup trucks have changed, too. In some of their high-end trim levels, Ram pickups now rival top luxury-brand vehicles in terms of cabin refinement, and the regular-cab body style is now near extinction.

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It saddens me a little that I am among the few people to recall—let alone care about—a failed attempt to resurrect the Studebaker brand that took place about 15 years ago. I also need to point out that the Kia Sedona minivan now starts around $31,000–considerably more than the $19,000 teased in the ad below.

Collected here are 12 car and truck ads–all but one of them from 2002. (We fudged a bit by including a 2003 Honda Civic Hybrid ad, but since the Civic Hybrid debuted in the spring of 2002 as an early 2003 model, it’s not much of a stretch.) I don’t know how nostalgic you feel yet about the cars of this century, but a close look at the ads below will demonstrate just how much things have changed. Of the dozen cars, seven are no longer in production, and two of the brands seen here are also now defunct. What big changes have you noted over the past 20 years? The place to leave comments is down below.

More classic car ads

A Gallery of Car Ads from 2002

Chevrolet Trailblazer

2020 Chevrolet Trailblazer Ad

2002 Chevrolet Trailblazer Ad

Test Drive: 2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer LT

Chrysler PT Cruiser

2020 Chrysler PT Cruiseer Ad

2002 Chrysler PT Cruiser Ad

Review Flashback! 2007 Chrysler PT Cruiser

Ford Escape

2020 Ford Escape Print Ad

2002 Ford Escape Ad

Test Drive: 2020 Ford Escape Hybrid

Honda Civic Hybrid

2020 Honda Civic Hybrid Ad

2003 Honda Civic Hybrid Ad

Honda Civic Growth Curve: 1986 Versus 2016

Jeep Liberty

2002 Jeep Liberty Ad

2002 Jeep Liberty Ad

Jeep Liberty: A Lesson in “Old Skool”

Kia Sedona

2002 Kia Sedona Ad

2002 Kia Sedona Ad

Forgotten People-Movers: More than 30 Minivans You Don’t Remember

Lexus RX 300

2002 Lexus RX 300 Ad. Coach Edition, Lexus RX 300 Coach Edition,

2002 Lexus RX 300 Ad

The 4 Most Important Vehicles of the Past 30 Years

Mercury Mountaineer

2002 Mercury Mountaineer Ad

2002 Mercury Mountaineer Ad

5 Discontinued Trucks You’ve Totally Forgotten About

Pontiac Grand Prix GTP

2002 Pontiac Grand Prix Ad

2002 Pontiac Grand Prix GTP Ad

Cheap Wheels: 2000 Pontiac Grand Prix GTP Daytona 500 Pace Car Replica

Subaru Outback

2002 Subaru Outback Ad

2002 Subaru Outback Ad

Review Flashback! 2006 Subaru Baja

Toyota Celica

2002 Toyota Celica Ad

2002 Toyota Celica Ad

5 Cheap Coupes You’ve Completely Forgotten

Volvo Cross Country

2002 Volvo Cross Country Ad

2002 Volvo Cross Country Ad

Click below for enlarged images

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Listen to the very entertaining Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2002-Model-Year Ads Gallery

Car Ads from 2002

Test Drive: 2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer LT

Chevrolet Trailblazer LT

2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer LT AWD in Midnight Blue Metallic

2021 Lexus LC 500 Convertible

2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer LT AWD

Miles driven: 440

Fuel used: 13.6 gallons

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B+
Power and Performance C+
Fit and Finish B-
Fuel Economy A
Value B+
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy B+
Tall Guy A-
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 155-hp 1.3-liter
Engine Type 3-cylinder
Transmission 9-speed automatic
Drive Wheels AWD

Real-world fuel economy: 32.3 mpg

Driving mix: 30% city, 70% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 26/30/28 (mpg city/highway/combined)

Fuel type: Regular gas

Base price: $25,600 (not including $995 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Adaptive Cruise Control Package ($620), Convenience Package ($620), Driver Confidence Package ($345)

Price as tested: $28,180

Quick Hits

The great: Fine passenger and cargo room within tidy exterior dimensions; good selection of available safety and convenience/technology features

The good: Fuel economy; pleasant ride and handling

The not so good: Some so-so cabin materials; a bit noisy in highway driving

More Chevrolet price and availability information

John Biel

What size crossover or SUV is right for you? That’s certainly a unique calculation based on multiple factors, with an answer specific to each buyer. Even without knowing you, though, we feel pretty confident in saying the right-sized one is out there because the manufacturers keep making more slot-fillers all the time.

2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer LT

Chevrolet expands its SUV roster for 2021 with the Trailblazer, a new “large subcompact” SUV that revives the name of a midsize body-on-frame SUV that Chevy sold from 2002 to 2009.

Take the latest from Chevrolet, the 2021 Trailblazer, a subcompact that brings the brand’s count of SUV nameplates to seven, from the subcompact Trax to the hulking full-size Suburban. In the Chevy size-and-price hierarchy, it fits between the Trax and the compact Equinox. Trailblazer is built from a new General Motors global vehicle architecture intended to be the basis for a number of small sedans and crossovers; its closest kin in U.S. showrooms is the Buick Encore GX that bowed as a 2020 model.

Test Drive: 2020 Buick Encore GX Essence

2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer LT

The Trailblazer’s dashboard layout is clean and straightforward.  LT models come standard with Chevy’s excellent Infotainment 3 system, and choosing the Convenience Package upgrades the touchscreen to an 8-inch display.

The Trailblazer, which recycles a name used on body-on-frame U.S.-market Chevy SUVs from 1999 to 2009 (as the TrailBlazer), comes in five trim levels: L, LS, LT, ACTIV, and RS. The L comes solely with front-wheel drive, but all others can be had with front- or all-wheel drive. Consumer Guide got its first taste of the new Trailblazer as an AWD LT with a price that started at $26,595 (including delivery) but grew to $28,180 with options.

All AWD Trailblazers come with a 1.3-liter turbocharged 3-cylinder engine and a 9-speed automatic transmission, but in LS and LT jobs, this counts as an upgrade over their standard 1.2-liter turbo three. (A continuously variable transmission is standard in FWD Trailblazers, even those with the larger engine.) Thus, adding all-wheel capability adds $2000 to an LS or LT, but $1500 to the ACTIV and RS.

Test Drive: 2021 Kia Seltos SX Turbo

2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer LT

There’s decent space for adults in both the front and rear seats. The LT is a midline trim level in the Trailblazer lineup, and it comes standard with cloth upholstery. Stepping up to the ACTIV model gets you simulated leather.

The Trailblazer rests on a 103.9-inch wheelbase and stretches out to a full 173.5 inches, which makes it 3.1 and 9.5 inches shorter, respectively, than the Equinox. AWD jobs have a full eight inches of ground clearance, 0.5 inch higher than the front drivers.

Though we categorize it as a subcompact, the Trailblazer hovers right on the line between our subcompact and compact SUV classes. As one of the roomiest vehicles in its class, it boasts comfortable space for four adults. (With the driver’s seat set for this 5-foot, 10.5-inch reviewer, he had legroom to spare when occupying the seat behind.) Headroom is ample in both rows. With all seats up there is room for 25.3 cubic feet of cargo on a flat load floor; when the 60/40-split second-row seats fold almost flat, capacity grows to 54.4 cubic feet. In models from the LS on up, the front passenger seat back folds to make space for long objects.

Test Drive: 2020 Chevrolet Equinox Premier

2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer LT, Cargo Space, rear hatch

The Chevrolet Trailblazer is has 25.3 cubic feet of cargo volume behind the rear seats, and 54.4 with the rear seats folded. That’s shy of the Kia Seltos (26.6 and 62.8, respectively) but still one of the best in the subcompact class.

Appointments are, let’s say, somewhat basic through the LT level. Spongy, padded surfaces are few and far between. The test truck’s seats were covered in standard fabric dressed up with patterned accent panels. The steering wheel and shifter knob had leather wrappings that were part of an adaptive cruise control option package that also included a pull-down center armrest for the rear seat and a 4.2-inch color driver-information display within the instrument cluster. Automatic single-zone air conditioning and an 8-inch touchscreen for the easy-to-use Chevrolet Infotainment 3 system were extra-cost upgrades over the manual A/C and 7-inch screen that are standard in LTs.

The LT does stand out from lesser Trailblazers by virtue of its LED fog lamps, heated power mirrors with body-color caps, silver-painted roof rails, specific 17-inch alloy wheels, silver-painted front and rear lower fasciae, remote-starting capability, keyless access, 10-way power-adjustable driver’s seat, and heated front seats. Some other features included in the base price are a 6-speaker audio system, wireless Apple CarPlay/Android Auto smartphone compatibility, forward-collision alert, automatic emergency braking (including for pedestrians), lane-keeping assist, automatic headlight high-beam control, and teen-driver monitoring. In addition to options already mentioned, the test truck came with added satellite radio, rear USB charge ports, and blind-spot and rear cross-traffic alerts among other things.

Test Drive: 2020 Hyundai Kona Ultimate

2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer LT

All-wheel-drive Trailblazers come standard with a turbocharged 1.3-liter 3-cylinder engine that makes 155 horsepower and is paired with a 9-speed automatic transmission. LTs come standard with 17-inch gloss-black alloy wheels.

The 1.3-liter engine generates 155 horsepower at 5600 rpm and 174 lb-ft of torque at 1600 rpm—13 percent more horsepower and almost 7.5 percent more torque than the 1.2-liter engine makes. That quickly reached torque peak makes a Trailblazer with the 1.3 acceptably lively from a standstill, and the stepped-gear transmission helps it get up to easily maintained highway speed without much fuss. The “big” engine’s downside is that it lacks smoothness at idle or lower speeds, and it’s not particularly quiet. In CG’s testing, the AWD Trailblazer was a solid 30-mpg vehicle—this reviewer averaged 30.1 mpg from 66.3-mile trip with 45 percent city-type driving. However, the suspicion is that a 3-cylinder engine ought to enable it to do better than 26 mpg city, 30 mpg highway, and 28 mpg combined, which are its EPA fuel-economy ratings.

Chevy’s newest small ute is an easy and alert handler, and it tackles pavement bumps reasonably well. However, a bit of road noise does get through in highway driving. All-wheel drive is selectable as a drive mode (“Normal” and “Sport” are the others) in situations where traction help is deemed necessary.

Convenient controls are handy to use, and cabin storage space for incidentals is at least varied if not abundant. On balance, the new Trailblazer strikes us as a price-conscious vehicle, at least to the LT level, where it’s better than austere but hardly plush. Perhaps that’s the right fit for you.

First Spin: 2020 Mazda CX-30

Chevrolet Trailblazer LT

Chevrolet’s new small crossover SUV boasts spunky styling and excellent interior room for its size. Acceleration from its 3-cylinder engine is better than you might expect (at least in around-town driving), the ride is decently absorbent for a small vehicle, and a good range of safety and technology features are available.

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2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer LT Gallery

2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer LT

Chevrolet to unveil a K5 Blazer electric crate motor build at SEMA360, but it isn’t exactly a powerhouse

1977 Chevrolet K5 Blazer electric crate motor conversion.

The Chevrolet Performance 1997 K5 Blazer electric crate motor build, set for reveal at SEMA360. Photo: Chevrolet Pressroom.

With all the excitement surrounding the return of the Ford Bronco, clearly there is plenty of market interest in retro SUVs. And given the promise of the electric crate motor concept as a near-bolt-on solution to give a new jolt of life and relevance to vintage vehicles that are sitting around in barns with non-running engines, Chevrolet’s choice of a K5 Blazer to showcase their forthcoming Electric Connect and Cruise eCrate package at SEMA360 is an unsurprising move.

But here’s what is surprising: in an environment of EV hype centered around sky-high horsepower and torque stats and 0-60 acceleration in just a couple of seconds, are we really supposed to be impressed with an electric crate motor that produces just 200 horsepower and 266 pound feet of torque?

Yes, you read that right. Although GM does say that they are “evaluating additional eCrate packages with higher-performance options,” those are the horsepower and torque figures cited in their press release on the K5 Blazer build ahead of SEMA360, the all-virtual 2020 answer to the elbow-to-elbow-packed live SEMA Show that, in normal years, takes place annually at the Las Vegas Convention Center.

Sure, endlessly boasting about horsepower and torque escalations has become a cliché at SEMA, where, for example, you can perennially expect Mopar to stage a noisy reveal of their latest over-1,000-horsepower hell-something gas crate engine.

But it’s hard to imagine that 200 horsepower won’t seem pretty limp to the SEMA crowd, especially considering that the 1977 K5 Blazer, in its original gas-powered configuration, weighed close to 3,700 pounds.

Nevertheless, the very existence of GM’s electric crate motor program is, in principle, an exciting development for those who like the idea of a modern, clean solution for breathing new life and relevance into cool old cars and trucks.

According to Chevrolet, the show build for SEMA360, which they have dubbed the K5 Blazer E, preserves as much of the stock vintage Blazer as possible, connecting an electric motor and 400-volt battery pack from the Chevrolet Bolt EV while leaving the rest of the original K5 Blazer drivetrain untouched, including the transfer case, driveshaft, and axles. 

The vehicle’s original fuel gauge becomes the state-of-charge display for the battery—a nice touch that, if it becomes standard across GM electric crate motor conversions, will support preservation or original instrument panels as one of the more important elements of the retro vibe of a vintage vehicle’s interior.

Vintage K5 Blazer instrument panel in the Chevrolet Performance electric crate motor conversion for SEMA360

The Chevrolet Performance electric crate motor build preserve’s the K5 Blazer’s vintage instrument panel—including the fuel gauge, which becomes the state-of-charge monitor for the EV battery pack. Photo: Chevrolet Pressroom.

While the press releases on the K5 Blazer EV build and on the Connect and Cruise package do not specify a cruising range—which would obviously vary depending on what vehicle a buyer retrofits—we can perhaps anticipate a rough frame of reference from the 259-mile range expected, according to GM authority, for the 2021 Chevy Bolt.

Although one could probably expect less range than that in a larger vehicle like a K5 Blazer, range gains are certainly reasonable to expect with time, especially as GM looks ahead toward integrating more advanced technologies like their Ultium battery system into their electric crate motor packages, which GM estimates could achieve ranges of 400 miles or more.

Meanwhile, if the K5 Blazer EV build is already making visions dance in your head like electrified Christmas sugarplums of bringing beloved vintage Chevys, Pontiacs, Buicks, Oldsmobiles, or GMCs a new charge of life in an increasingly electrified automotive world, GM says you can expect the Electric Connect and Cruise crate motor package to be available in the second half of 2021.

About The Author

Bill Hayward

Bill Hayward, a writer, marketer, and car enthusiast, is editor and publisher of AutoNewsblaster. Originally a native of the Maryland suburbs of Washington, D.C., he currently resides in South Central Pennsylvania. Contact: auto.enthusiasts.news@gmail.com or 717-968-0883.

For GREAT deals on a new or used Land Rover check out Land Rover Cincinnati TODAY!

Stop-and-Go Madness! A Gallery of Classic Car Ads Featuring Brakes

 

 Car Ads Featuring Brakes

1986 Chevrolet Corvette

In terms of general statistical sexiness, brake performance has long taken a backseat to acceleration. Horsepower numbers are fun, 0-60-mph and quarter-mile times are fun. But braking? Most car guys know that reaching 60 mph from a stop in less than 6 seconds is an impressive feat. How many folks, I wonder, know what a decent time would be for coming to a complete stop from 60 mph?

It’s said that safety sells, but when it comes to classic car ads, the emphasis was always on power. Nonetheless, we did manage to find a number of great print ads extolling the virtues of superior braking performance.

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Note that a few of the ads shared below are not for cars, but for suppliers and insurance firms. Seems that selling safety can be a complicated business.

More classic car ads

1934 Studebaker

1934 Studebaker Ad

1934 Studebaker Ad

10-Gallon-Hat Madness! A Gallery of Cowboys in Classic Car Ads

1935 Plymouth

1935 Plymouth ad

1935 Plymouth ad

Designer Madness! Fashion in Classic Car Ads

1951 Chrysler Corporation

1951 Chrysler Corporation Ad

1951 Chrysler Corporation Ad

Woodie Madness! Classic Ads Featuring Small Wood Sided Wagons

1951 Dow Chemicals

1951 Dow Chemicals Ad

1951 Dow Chemicals Ad

National-Pastime Madness! A Gallery of Baseball-Themed Auto Ads

1953 Bendix-Westinghouse

1953 Bendix-Westinghouse Ad

1953 Bendix-Westinghouse Ad

Thanksgiving Madness! A Gallery of Autumn-Themed Auto Ads

1958 Buick

1958 Buick Ad

1958 Buick Ad

Cocktail Madness! A Gallery of Cars in Liquor Ads

1961 Liberty Mutual

1961 Liberty Mutual Ad

1961 Liberty Mutual Ad

Nicotine Madness! A Gallery of Cars in Cigarette Ads

1965 Chevrolet Corvette

1965 Chevrolet Corvette Ad

1965 Chevrolet Corvette Ad

Grabowsky Madness! 10 Classic GMC Ads

1975 Subaru

1975 Subaru Ad

1975 Subaru Ad

Dead-Brand Madness! 10 Classic Edsel Ads

1976 Delco Moraine

Delco Moraine Ad/1976 Cadillac Eldorado

Delco Moraine Ad/1976 Cadillac Eldorado

Soccer Mom Madness! 10 Classic Minivan Ads

1986 Chevrolet Corvette

1986 Chevrolet Corvette Ad

1986 Chevrolet Corvette Ad

Urgent-Care Madness! 15 Classic Ambulance Ads

1987 Ford F-150

1987 Ford F-150 Ad

1987 Ford F-150 Ad

Canine Madness: 10 Classic Car Ads Featuring Dogs

1987 Pontiac 6000

1987 Pontiac 6000 Ad

1987 Pontiac 6000 Ad

Emerald Madness! 10 Classic Ads Featuring Green Cars

2009 Nissan Titan

2009 Nissan Titan Ad

2009 Nissan Titan Ad

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Car Ads Featuring Brakes Gallery

Car Ads Featuring Brakes

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