Originally posted by: LOUISSSSS
Originally posted by: Pocatello
Originally posted by: Marlin1975
Originally posted by: Pocatello
I have no experience with the turbo version, just the regular Cobalt, it's a lot nicer than the Cavalier, but cruder than the Civic or the Corolla. GM is improving, but Honda and Toyota aren't standing still, they redesigned their models much faster than GM, Ford, or Chrysler. Take the Ford Focus in North America, it's essentially the same model from 2000, with a few minor updates. The Chevy Cobalt is also long on the tooth.
2010 Cobalt replacement. Chevy Cruze.
It's still more than a year away from now for the North American market. My worry is that GM is still too slow to respond to market demand. I really like what GM did with Saturn, Saturn has had a lot of fresh products, nice products, but the consumers have given up on Saturn. Consumers have so many choices from so many car companies. Hopefully, it's not too late for GM.
1. didn't the cobalt just come out in 2005? and its being replaced ALREADY?? 4 years for the life of a vehicle?
2. i'm not sure what is so special about the 2011 cruze. its about 2 years away and doesn't offer anything too exciting over its competition. in fact, the supposed 2011 engines produce even less hp. 1.4-liter turbocharged 4-cylinder engine (140hp) & optional engine which is a normally aspirated 1.8-liter (138hp) big EH.
3. pricing from $15k (base model) to $21k which puts it in the league of the civic & mazda 3 & nissan versa & toyota matrix & mini cooper (which can be had around 19-20k) How will this car with nothing special/new platform w/ unknown reliability&performance compete is such a tough segment?
The Cobalt started sales in 2004 with a 2005 model. The Cruze is a 2011 model, so the Cobalt still has another year. A five year cycle is fairly normal. For comparison, the Civic was completely redesigned in 2006 (well, 2006 model). The one before that was completely redesigned.... Oh, I'll let you guess the year on that one just because it's funny. Does keeping the same name make up for the car being completely new or is the Civic really a 36 year old car to you? The same with Toyota.
The second part sounds like you just did a quick look on Wikipedia. We get the 1.4l turbo engine. The 1.6l is for South Korea.
And it's a compact sedan. The price range for compact sedans is $15-22k. Why should a new compact sedan be any different?