Search | Site Map | Newsletter | RSS | About CD | Contact Us | Advertise |
|
| Canada's Online Auto Magazine |
|
![]() |
![]() March 24, 2004
2004 Chevrolet Aveo LS sedan By Jil McIntosh With a flourish, Chevrolet has thrown its hat back into the subcompact ring. GM bowed out of this segment at the turn of the millennium, when it retired the Chevy Metro and its clones. It’s back for 2004 with the Aveo, aimed squarely at the Toyota Echo. Aveo 4-door prices are $13,480 for the base and $14,050 for the LS; as the 5-door it’s $13,820 and $14,385. Base models include dual air bags, fixed-delay wipers, rear defogger, floor mats, AM/FM, and on the 5-door, rear wiper and foglights.
Power for all models is from a 1.6 DOHC 4-cylinder that peaks its 103 horsepower at 5,800 rpm, with 107 lb-ft of torque at 3,600 rpm. That’s a bit more torque at lower rpms than Toyota Echo, but it’s also thirstier: 7.7 l/100 km average to Echo’s 6.3 l/100 km. (In real-world driving, my tester returned 8.8 l/100 km, although it had only 500 km and should improve somewhat with breaking-in.)
Instruments, including a tach, are grouped in front of the driver. Heater and stereo controls are nice and simple, with a CD storage bin between them. There are a few design flaws. Cupholders slide out of the dash directly below the heater; park a pair of double-doubles and you can’t access the controls. The wiper mist function is far too touchy, requiring that you push the stalk up long enough for it to catch; miss it, and the wipers stop halfway up. And parents, take note. The owner’s manual warns that if you pull the rear inside door handles while the child security lock is engaged, it “could damage your vehicle”. I’m no child expert, but logic tells me that the sole reason security locks exist is because small children like to pull on inside door handles. What were the engineers thinking? As an urban dweller’s city-mobile, a family’s second car or a “first vehicle” for young drivers, Aveo is up against some firmly-established rivals, including Echo, Hyundai Accent and Kia Rio, as well as sibling rivalry from Swift+. I think it’s definitely a worthwhile contender. A few shortcomings aside, it should do very well for itself. The Aveo is built in Bupyong, South Korea. Technical Data: 2004 Chevrolet Aveo LS sedan
Jil McIntosh's automotive work and her garage includes cars both old and new; she writes for The Toronto Star Wheels, Old Autos, and Canadian Street Rodder. |
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
CanadianDriver is a member of the AOL Canada Media Network. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||