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nosbusa1700 said:I bought one for my wife.
Did you have any specific questions?
mrmatt said:How does she like driving it daily?
Has she had any issues with the car that needed dealer attention?
Would she buy the car again or recommend it to a friend?
How do you like working on the paint? Paint quality?
I agree with most everything you said. But I question youre pat-on-the-back to Holden regarding the powertrain. I think youre mistaken in thinking its a Holden powertrain... The engine and trans used are buiilt and supplied on this side of world.XRL said:I seriously considered one. I really wanted the wagon, or the ute, but GM's killing of them both off really turned me off from GMs in general. The best way to explain that car is like this. Just like the GTO, Holden built a GREAT car. And then Pontiac got its hands on it, and anything they touched they screwed up.
The car has a fantastic powertrain and platform thanks to Holden, and the interior is spacious as well. The car is just fun to drive as well. But, the car was supposed to be a $30k+ car, but has no option for navigation(and no ability to replace the radio), no memory seats option, no parking sensors option, no HIDs option, etc. They marketed it as a muscle car and as a budget BMW, and its half of both. The sad part? In Australia, you can get all those options and more. Supposedly this is all because the nice features were supposed to go to a long wheel base version (sold in Australia as the Statesman) that was going to be a Buick, but was canceled.
Great driving car, but the rest of the car was horribly handled. If they had just sent the car over unchanged from Holden, including all the options they get, it'd have been a big hit, as opposed to a dismal failure.
Other things to watch. The resale value on them is pathetic. Getting parts for them is pretty much impossible. Guys have been without their cars for a month from minor fender benders or warranty work. You might get lucky and never have an issue, but you might also be unlucky and have constant problems that take forever to fix.
I'm still pulling for it to come back from a different brand. Hopefully with the wagon too. That'd be about the only way I'd consider another GM.
XRL said:I seriously considered one. I really wanted the wagon, or the ute, but GM's killing of them both off really turned me off from GMs in general. The best way to explain that car is like this. Just like the GTO, Holden built a GREAT car. And then Pontiac got its hands on it, and anything they touched they screwed up.
The car has a fantastic powertrain and platform thanks to Holden, and the interior is spacious as well. The car is just fun to drive as well. But, the car was supposed to be a $30k+ car, but has no option for navigation(and no ability to replace the radio), no memory seats option, no parking sensors option, no HIDs option, etc. They marketed it as a muscle car and as a budget BMW, and its half of both. The sad part? In Australia, you can get all those options and more. Supposedly this is all because the nice features were supposed to go to a long wheel base version (sold in Australia as the Statesman) that was going to be a Buick, but was canceled.
Great driving car, but the rest of the car was horribly handled. If they had just sent the car over unchanged from Holden, including all the options they get, it'd have been a big hit, as opposed to a dismal failure.
Other things to watch. The resale value on them is pathetic. Getting parts for them is pretty much impossible. Guys have been without their cars for a month from minor fender benders or warranty work. You might get lucky and never have an issue, but you might also be unlucky and have constant problems that take forever to fix.
I'm still pulling for it to come back from a different brand. Hopefully with the wagon too. That'd be about the only way I'd consider another GM.