General Motors
hasn't always had the best of luck with building subcompact cars with
examples ranging from the Aveo, the Metro all the way down to the good
old 1976-mid 1980's Chevy Chevette/Pontiac T-1000 which may have done
more to damage this company's reputation for building small cars that
aren't built as well as their Japanese competitors. Now, it wouldn't be
an odd occasion to see any Civic on the road, even one of the classic
CVCC hatchback models but we are pretty sure you'd be hard pressed to
find many Chevette's from this T-Platform doing much more of anything
than rusting out in a field somewhere.
Rust, as well as often
subpar build quality, cost cut materials choices and engines that were
never all that frugal and always rather loud and unpleasant to the ear.
For cars like this and the Ford Pinto they invented the term "subcompact
penalty box," with that term sometimes fitting nicely to models like
the admittedly reliable Nissan Sentra. But with the bankruptcy of
General Motors a new car company truly did arise from the ashes as this
Sonic subcompact (available as a sedan or hatch) has not only become a
worldwide sales hit for Chevrolet but is also the very first financially
profitable small car that the monolithic automaker has ever built in
its history.
How that happened was one part Governmental
pressure due to GM's earlier bankruptcy and the UAW (United Auto Workers
Union's) desire to keep the North American plant that builds these fun
to drive and aggressively stylish small cars due to a work sharing
agreement of some kind. Chevy even gave the car a stylish dashboard
using a motorcycle's minimalist gauges as inspiration for the
speedometer/tachometer other secondary controls. The result is mightily
impressive with even the beloved Honda
Fit's interior fit and trim and plastics seeming a tad secondary to the
Sonic and what it offers even just in LT trim. It also took all of the
abuse our canine road tester Indiana Mae could toss its way.
Our
test LT model stickered just a couple hundred dollars above $18,000 but
came with a six-speed automatic transmission, a zesty and eager even
with four on board 1.5 liter turbocharged 138 horsespower/148 lb. feet
of torque 4-cylinder motor, 15-inch alloys, Bluetooth, USB-Audio, a nice
sounding 6-speaker AM/FM/CD system as well as for an extra $200 we
added Chevy's brilliant and brilliantly simply MyLink system. Not only
does it add a large 7-inch color screen for all your infotainment needs
including the ability to utilize a navigation function through it for
about $50 additional dollars. Good luck finding that offer anywhere
else.
Of course, this new Sonic LT we drove also came with our
expected cruise control, power windows, air conditioning, keyless entry
and much more. But what really struck us most was how tightly and
carefully built that this vehicle felt, almost as if it knew there were
mistakes to be made up for in the past. Well, Chevy, you really didn't
need to but in the Sonic you have created a true subcompact class
leader. Please, drive on by your Ford dealer past the Fiestas and get
yourself a 2013 Chevy Sonic.
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