

#Chevrolet venture 2002 driver#
The four- speed, electronically controlled transmission shifted smoothly but seemed to spend a lot of time wandering from gear to gear as terrain or driver demands outran the horsepower and torque (210 lbs.-ft.). It’s not that it’s a wheezer, but if you’re going to haul the loads this big box is capable of holding, you need more power. This causes it to slog up long inclines and makes one apprehensive when it comes to passing other cars. Its 3.4-liter V-6 engine produces only 185 horsepower.

That’s a plus, but there are minuses to the Venture.įirst, it is underpowered if you load it to passenger capacity. My three kids lost all track of time on a 3-hour journey over the holidays, lost in movies and not once asking, “Are we there yet?” The DVD player even has a 1.5-second video memory that prevents visual blips when you hit that occasional pothole or frost heave. Susie can tune in the Red Sox while Johnny watches “The Patriot” on the 7-inch drop-down screen and Patrick bops to his favorite hip-hop radio station. In fact, you can play the DVD player, the CD player, and the radio all at once, with input fed to any of four wireless headsets that come with the system. You can play DVD movies, DVD audio, and CDs with this system. The Venture comes with a DVD-based audio and video system. And DVD is at the heart of hominess in the new Venture van. Think movies these days and you think DVD. Think Warner Brothers and you think movies. That’s why Chevrolet has produced this Warner Brothers Edition. They want a sense of “home,” even on the road. People are looking for more than simple utility these days. That’s a good thing, but it can also be a bad thing when it comes to selling the minivan. This is a van that seats eight comfortably, has plenty of head- and legroom, and whose rear seat can be taken out for hauling loads other than children. Today’s choices include Ford’s Windstar, a couple of Chrysler vans, Honda’s Odyssey (the best of the lot), Toyota’s Sienna, and today’s test car, one with a name so long you’d need a van to haul it: the 2002 Chevrolet Venture EXT AWD Warner Brothers Edition. Most station wagons and SUVs won’t carrry more than five people comfortably, after all, and when folks call me to ask what to buy to carry six or eight, I tell them to consider either a big SUV, which many of them shun since the shine is dimming on those rigs as well, or go back to the minivan. Yet the minivan endures, perhaps because of its very utility. Soccer moms and Little League dads wanted to drive vehicles with more panache and sportiness than the utilitarian minivan could offer. Then came – and continues to come – the “crossover” vehicle, a transporter that is part SUV, part wagon, part minivan. Then came the revival of the station wagon. No suburban driveway was complete, it seemed, without a minivan. Soccer moms drove minivans in such force that they became a political constituency for presidential hopefuls.

Pwr door locks w/programmable sliding door delayĬity 19/hwy 26 (3.Consider the minivan: Made popular by Chrysler in the 1980s, it became the symbol of the growing, active family.

Glove box/ashtray/dome/rear cargo area lamps
