Automotive Reviews
Posts tagged Pontiac
2001 Pontiac Aztek GT
Jun 20th
Go ahead and laugh at it. It’s funny-looking. The more creative among you could probably throw insults at it for hours. Mock away; the fact remains that the Pontiac Aztek has kicked the door wide open for an entirely new kind of automobile.
Chrysler’s PT Cruiser had the idea first (in this decade at least), with its minivan-style, multi-configurable interior. But the PT Cruiser is still an economy car at heart. The Aztek is large enough to seriously challenge minivans, sport-utility vehicles, station wagons, and even travel trailers all in one fell, Picasso-inspired swoop. And if you don’t think there’s a market for such an automotive do-all, note that the imitators are already knocking at the gate; Toyota, Buick, Daewoo, and Ford all have similar “crossover” vehicles in various stages of production-readiness. Trust us; there will be more car-truck hybrids like this.
Here’s what the Aztek GT does that’s so amazing; thanks to its large floor area, high roof, and removable seats, the interior can be flipped, folded, and flattened to accommodate just about any need. There’s seating for up to four (five in the standard Aztek), with 45.4 cubic feet of space behind them for luggage. Standard equipment includes a pair of removable bags in each door pocket and a center console that can be removed for use as a small portable cooler. With the tailgate open, the Aztek can carry plywood. Pontiac has also introduced a dizzying array of accessories designed specially for the Aztek, to complement whatever activity one’s lifestyle and hobbies demand. They call the Aztek a “sport recreation vehicle,” SRV for short.
There is a downside. You’ve already seen it. To the vast majority of onlookers, the Aztek is not an attractive car. It doesn’t even manage to be forgettable. It’s a nightmare of contrasting lines and angles even in pictures, but it’s also a fairly large vehicle so the problems are exacerbated when seeing it in the metal. Round headlamps under squared-off glass covers flank a set of Pontiac grille openings up front. A second tier of lights and grilles is above that, with Ram Air slots in the center and bulging orange turn signals above. The Aztek rises toward the rear like a minivan, then drops abruptly away to a featureless, vertical cliff of a tail. The standard 16″ wheels look too small–hardly a surprise, with that massive slab of a body hanging over them. To make matters worse, cheap-looking gray cladding is wrapped around the lower body, high at the front, squared off behind the front wheels, then rising again at the rear. Personally, we tend to like ugly cars, and we’re still undecided on the Aztek.
The interior is just as, er distinctive. Funky textures abound on the dash and console. Pontiac seems to have used as many different styles of button, knob, and vent as they could think of; some are the usual gumdrop style, others are squared off, still others are large and ribbed. A big rubberized handle juts out of the dash next to the glovebox. Once you get used to it all, though, it’s comfortable. The seats are chair-height, like a minivan’s, and the typically contoured Pontiac steering wheel is sized nicely. The console and optional sunroof give the cabin a bit of SUV-style flair, as do the large door pulls and work boot texturing on the dash. Pontiac’s head-up display is available; it projects speed and radio information onto the windshield ahead of the driver. Dual-zone climate control is also standard on the Aztek GT. The available leather and cloth interiors are both handsome, if hard to notice amid the riot of other things to see and feel vying for your attention. The cargo area features radio controls, places to sit, and cupholders for tailgate picnics. What it doesn’t feature are cargo hooks for small items; the Aztek GT would rather shirk mundane shopping trips, it seems. The dual tailgate hampers loading of small items as well.
Once you’ve gotten past the way it looks, the Aztek drives well. 185 horsepower is sufficient to move it along with authority, willing even to squeal the tires in anger, if you feel the need. The 3.4 liter V6 engine is noisier than we’d like, a common Pontiac flaw, but it’s also surprisingly economical. It delivers up to 26 mpg on the freeway, which is better than most V6-equipped SUVs. Our test vehicle was equipped with the optional four-speed automatic transmission; a five-speed manual is also available. All-wheel-drive models benefit from GM’s Versatrak system. It’s an intelligent system, directing power to the rear wheels when slippage is detected and leaving the Aztek in front-wheel-drive the rest of the time.
The Aztek doesn’t feel quite like a minivan. It’s a big, bulky vehicle, but it “drives small,” as they say, thanks to a fully independent suspension on all-wheel-drive models (the front-wheel drive Aztek has a beam rear axle). It’s not as tippy as we expected it to be, given its height, and it’s shorter than most minivans so it responds quickly. The nose is longer than it looks from the outside and it takes a bit of practice to remember where it is from the driver’s seat. Visibility to the rear, however is fantastic. Surprise, surprise, that big double window has its uses after all; the rear blind spot which has inspired reverse radar sensors on minivans is all but nonexistent on the Aztek. Antilock brakes and traction control are standard equipment on Aztek GT. Self-sealing tires are also an option.
Among the available accessories to personalize the Aztek: a roll-out cargo storage unit that can also be used to move heavy loads, or removed and carried like a suitcase; a tent and air mattress to turn the Aztek into a hotel for the night; a multi-configurable cargo net system that can carry up to 270 pounds in four double sided nets; a roof-mounted bicycle carrier; filth-resistant rubber floor mats; and removable hiking backpacks that attach to the seatbacks when not in use.
Even without any of that, however, the Aztek’s versatility is unquestionable. And it’s reasonably priced, too. The Aztek is available in base and GT form; Versatrak all-wheel-drive is available on both models. Pricing for the Aztek GT starts at $24,995. Our test vehicle was equipped with the automatic transmission, leather interior, a six-disc CD changer, and puncture-sealing tires, and stickered for $27,695. Competition? The only other “crossover” vehicle out there right now is the $17,000 Chrysler PT Cruiser, and as we noted, the Aztek is much larger. And frankly, minivans and sport-utilities just aren’t as multi-useful. Take it from us; the idea has already caught on, and the curious-looking Pontiac Aztek will not stand alone for long. Still not sure about the design? Just remember, you can’t see it while you’re driving it.
Specifications:
All specs are for the 2001 Pontiac Aztek GT.
Length: 182.1 in.
Width: 73.7 in.
Height: 66.7 in.
Wheelbase: 108.3 in.
Curb weight: 4043.2 lb.
Towing capacity: 3500 lb
Cargo space: 45.4 cu.ft. (rear seat up); 93.5 cu.ft. (rear seat removed)
Base price: $24,445
Price as tested: $27,695
Engine: 3.4 liter OHV V6
Drivetrain: four-speed automatic, all-wheel-drive
Horsepower: 185 @ 5200
Torque: 210 @ 4000
Fuel capacity: 18.0 gal.
Est. mileage: 19/26
6/2009 update: The Aztek has gone on to be a legend of Edsel-like proportions, of course. Me, I still like ‘em. The basic concept is sound–as evidenced by the “crossover” vehicles so common today. What subsequent crossovers like the Ford Edge, Honda Element, Toyota Venza and Chevrolet Equinox did right was to look a lot better. The Aztek is a strange-looking car, I’ll give it that, and I always loved them just for having the balls to look the way they did. I still like ‘em.
2000 Pontiac Montana
Jun 19th
Who says that a minivan has to be a symbol of complete domestication? Certainly not Pontiac. Soccer moms and cable TV companies aren’t the only ones who can use a versatile hauler of people and things. The 2000 Pontiac Montana is a convincing advance of the theory that a car is mere transportation, but a minivan is an extension of the home–a mobile headquarters for day-to-day erranding or for traveling. Twenty years ago, this was the role of the full-sized station wagon, but minivans and sport-utilities have completely replaced the wood-paneled Vista Cruisers and Country Squires of days gone.
The Montana began life as an option package on Pontiac’s first foray into the minivan arena, the TranSport, in 1998. The option package proved to be so popular that for 1999, the name replaced TranSport as the model name. It carries over into 2000 with no major changes. The rugged-sounding name seems like it might be more appropriate for a sport-ute, but Pontiac has positioned the Montana as “the driver’s minivan with a distinctive sport-utility flavor.” While it lacks a four-wheel drive option, the Montana caters to the same crowd that’s snapping up sport-utes left and right.
From the outside, heavy side cladding and sporty round foglights set the Montana off from other minis. It’s slightly less anonymous than its siblings, the Oldsmobile Silhouette and Chevrolet Venture, although the three GM minivans are differentiated mainly by badges, grilles, and bumpers. Seen together, there’s no mistaking that these three are the same van wearing different suits. In spite of that, Pontiac has done a good job of giving the Montana a family look. The body-colored split grille, heavy fender flares, and sculpted ridges along the van’s sides ensure that it won’t look out of place among the Grand Ams and Firebirds it shares showroom floor space with. Pontiac’s good-looking five-spoke aluminum wheels contribute nicely to the pseudo-sport-ute look.
The Montana’s merits as a mobile home base are immediately obvious once inside. The vehicle seems to be geared toward eliminating the need to leave it for any reason. As with most minivans, front-seat passengers can easily climb between the seats to get to the rear. The power right-side sliding door can be controlled with a switch on the console over the driver’s head, as can the optional power rear vent windows. A net between the front seats and many deep cubbyholes ensure that whatever accessories need to be brought aboard are close at hand, although storage for compact discs and tapes is awkwardly close to the floor. MontanaVision, an optional multimedia entertainment center that installs in the overhead console, keeps rear-seat passengers occupied with a VCR, fold-down TV monitor, CD player, and video game inputs. Seats are comfortable and nicely upholstered whether they are buckets or benches, front or rear. The easily removable folding bucket seats are light enough for one person to carry, and the cargo area that results from removing all of the rear seats is big enough to swallow an upright mountain bike without removing the wheels. To make that bike feel even more at home, the Montana features an onboard air compressor in the cargo area.
Ahead of the driver, black and white instruments are ringed with red, a nod to Pontiac’s sporty image. The steering wheel could use a thicker rim and a thinner center section, although the radio controls in the center of the wheel are a nice touch. Unfortunately, the Montana has retained Pontiac’s irritating self-locking doors, which secure the vehicle when it is put into gear but don’t unlock when the vehicle is turned off. This can be infuriating for drivers who don’t want to unlock the doors every time they get out.
Out on the road, the Montana remains a good companion, as long as it isn’t pushed. This limitation is common among minivans, however; like sport-utes, minivans can’t be treated like sports cars and expected to shine. The Montana feels sluggish and top-heavy, but only when compared to a car. Its stability is above average when compared to other domestic minivans. The ride is much like that of a large American sedan, minus the floatiness. Refreshingly, the driving experience stands head and shoulders above the original minis from General Motors. The Montana stops smoothly and confidently, whereas sudden braking in the original TranSport could be a white-knuckle experience. Because of the rake of the windshield, the Montana’s nose is farther away than it seems to be, a recipe for clipped garbage cans and mailboxes in the hands of the unwary. The perceived sluggishness isn’t because the Montana is underpowered; it’s just that 3942 pounds is a lot of weight for the 185-hp 3.4 liter V6 to move around. Pontiac’s recommended 3500-lb towing capacity sounds like it would be working the Montana awfully hard.
On the other hand, the Montana doesn’t inspire the need to rush. Why run when all of your business can be taken care of from the driver’s seat? Equipped with a cell phone, the Montana is practically a hotel room. All of that weight means that the spacious Pontiac is also very quiet on the road. Passengers won’t have to shout to be heard in this mobile HQ.
The 2000 Montana is available in three- and four-door body styles, and there are two wheelbases available. The four-door is only available on the longer Montana, however. Our test vehicle was one of the four-door, extended wheelbase models and featured everything that could be expected on a well-equipped family vehicle. Par for the course on a minivan these days includes keyless entry, power rear vent windows, front and rear controls for the air conditioning, a power driver’s seat and a roof rack. It stickered for $27,360. Montanas start around $22,000 for a short-wheelbase, three-door model.
Outdoor sports participants take heed: the minivan’s image as a mom-bomb is not entirely deserved. The days of the cool woody wagon are over, but a Pontiac Montana is a heck of a lot easier on the eyes than an Acura Integra loaded down with rooftop bike and ski carriers and a jet-ski trailer. Really, it is.
Specifications:
All specs are for the Montana extended wheelbase model, which we tested.
Length: 201.3 inches
Width: 72.7 inches
Height: 68.1 inches
Wheelbase: 120 inches
Curb weight: 3942 lb
Cargo space: 155.9 cu. feet
Base price: $24,335
Price as tested: $27,360
Horsepower: 185 hp
Fuel capacity: 25 gallons
Est. mileage: 19/26
6/2009 update: Wow. Rose-colored glasses off, now. The Montana turned out to be kind of a shitbox, didn’t it? A well-executed shitbox, perhaps, but I suspect that almost nobody is particularly proud of his/her ten-year old Montana these days. GM even pulled the plug on all of its minivans a few years later, after a somewhat desultory attempt to sexify them a little.
2009 Pontiac G8
May 1st
At the risk of sacrificing journalistic objectivity, I’m going to go on record as saying that I never could stand the Pontiac Grand Prix. It was a decent enough car, I suppose, but the styling and driving dynamics never did anything at all for me; since the current generation’s introduction in 2004, I routinely ranked it at the bottom of the large-sedan class. Whatever Pontiac did with the Grand Prix, it was never quite enough to raise it out of the bottom of the barrel, in my opinion.
For 2008, Pontiac’s thrown out the whole playbook and started fresh, and I’m happy to report that the Grand Prix’ replacement doesn’t carry on the previous car’s underachieving legacy. The all-new Pontiac G8 is better looking, better built, more powerful and more fun to drive than the Grand Prix ever was, and it’s a much more fitting flagship sedan for the Pontiac lineup. The G8 sports rear-wheel drive, world-class build quality and an available 361-horsepower V8 for those seeking serious performance. GM’s “excitement division” finally has a sporty sedan capable of challenging the Dodge Magnum, Nissan Maxima and other large, moderately-priced sports sedans.
It’s surprising how much the G8 looks like a BMW M3. Or perhaps it isn’t, considering that car’s absolute dominance of the performance sedan market. It doesn’t help that Pontiac’s traditional styling cues–a split grille, narrow face and fender flares–are very similar in basic form to BMW’s. The hard-edged G8′s family grille is accented by extravagant air intakes high and low and a powerfully bulged hood. The G8 is a bit larger than the Grand Prix, but it looks more compact, muscular where the Grand Prix was flabby.
The biggest improvement to this car is the introduction of rear-wheel drive, the first Pontiac so equipped since the Firebird went extinct. These days, it’s hard to be taken seriously as a sports sedan if the rear wheels aren’t putting the power to the ground, and so the G8 borrows an Australian-designed platform to route the 256 or 361 horsepower through the “proper” wheels. Engine choices include a 256 horsepower 3.6 liter V6 and the range-topping 6.0 liter V8 in the G8 GT. With the V6, the G8 a decent performer, though it doesn’t quite live up to the promise of those bulging fender flares and fat wheels. 17/26 fuel economy makes up for that, however, and with a nineteen-gallon fuel tank, the V6-powered G8 won’t send you to the poorhouse every week while you try to keep it fueled. A five-speed automatic transmission puts the power to the road; the V8 gets a six-speed. Pontiac disappointed enthusiasts by not offering a manual transmission in the G8. The automatic shifts smoothly and without drama, but it’s too slow to be honestly sporty. Around town, the G8 works as decent sporty family transportation.
The rear-wheel drive and four-wheel independent suspension give the G8 tighter reflexes than you’ll get from an Accord or a Camry. If it’s a bit tauter than some people prefer, just call it “personality.” This car is at home on the freeway, with a relaxed ride. I’m not going to compare it to the Grand Prix, because it’s an apples to oranges situation; the G8 compares more favorably to cars like the Dodge Magnum and Mitsubishi Galant on the open road.
The G8′s interior is more in line with the $26,910 bottom line, though it’s a vast improvement over the plastic-fantastic interiors of Pontiacs past. The cabin in standard black cloth is a dark and serious place–think GTO–but the seats are comfortable and there’s room for up to five passengers. A purposeful, sporty-looking instrument panel and tall console dominate the interior. Apart from a poorly designed armrest on the door whose padding isn’t positioned to keep a ridge of plastic from digging painfully into one’s elbow, the interior is comfortable and the materials feel good. Leg room for rear-seat passengers is generous, and the G8 sports a large trunk as well.
All in all, the G8 is a vast improvement over its predecessor, and a welcome addition to the freshened Pontiac lineup. Those who remember the brand’s heyday in the 1960s and ’70s will be glad to know that Pontiac is rapidly returning to respectability, and the new G8 fits in well with that resurgence.
Specifications:
All specs are for the 2008 Pontiac G8
Length: 196.1 in.
Width: 74.8 in.
Height: 57.7 in.
Wheelbase: 114.8 in.
Curb weight: 3885 lb.
Cargo space: 17.5 cu.ft.
Base price: $26,910
Price as tested: $28,020
Engine: 3.6 liter DOHC V6
Drivetrain: five-speed automatic transmission, rear-wheel drive
Horsepower: 256 @ 6300
Torque: 248 @ 2100
Fuel capacity: 19.2 gal.
Est. mileage: 17/25


