2014 Chevrolet Impala
Redesigned 2014 Chevrolet
Impala among top family sedans
Prices: $26,725-$35,770
The full-size Impala was introduced as a top-line Chevrolet in 1958 and
became so popular it was nicknamed “America’s
Sweetheart” by 1965, when a huge number were sold. The
redesigned 2014 full-size Impala is also a model Chevy can brag about.
The full-size car market isn’t what it was in the 1960s, but
there are a good number of auto buyers who want a full-size sedan with
convenience and luxury features. Many are aging baby boomers who fondly
recall the big 1960s American sedans.
The new front-wheel-drive Impala should satisfy such folks as retirees,
family hauling parents and businessmen taking clients to lunch or golf
outings. It has the same solid platform as the Cadillac XTS and Buick
LaCrosse.
Rivals include the Ford Taurus, Toyota Avalon, Hyundai Azera, Kia
Cadenza, Nissan Maxima and Chrysler 300.
The Impala has new, sleek styling with sculpted body sides and a
rear-fender swelling line seen on the venerable 1958 and 1965 Impalas.
There are three available engines that combine performance and fuel
efficiency. There also is a new interior with a flowing design and
increased front/rear legroom for a limo-style feel. The huge trunk has
a wide but rather high opening due partly to the car’s rakish
styling. Rear seatbacks fold forward and sit flat for more cargo
room.
The quieter “dual-cockpit” cabin no longer has the
old Impala’s rental-grade interior. It’s
comfortable in there, with supportive front seats, easily read backlit
gauges, convenient controls, a wraparound flow of the instrument panel
into the door panels and soft-feel materials—not to mention
the upscale look of the seat stitching.
The instrument panel has an easily read 4.2-inch color display with
reconfigurable features for the driver information center. An
eight-inch touch screen is matched with the available Chevy MyLink
system on upscale models, which also have perforated leather seating.
Rear windows lower all the way, but the stiff rear-seat center is best
left to the fold-down armrest with its dual cupholders.
The wheelbase is about an inch longer at 111.7 inches, with a slightly
wider rear track than the previous model’s. Overall length is
201.3 inches. All wheels are large. They’re available in 18-,
19- and 20-inch sizes.
The new Impala is heavy, at approximately 3,800 pounds, so you
can’t fling it around as you would a sports sedan. However,
steering, handling and braking are quite good. The ride in this rigidly
built sedan is excellent. Fast cross-country cruising would be a
breeze.
Safety features galore include 10 air bags and available
full-speed-range adaptive cruise control, crash-imminent braking,
forward-collision alert, lane-departure warning and side-blind-zone
alert. An available rear-cross-traffic alert is especially handy when
backing out of crowded parking areas.
Also offered are a rear camera with dynamic guidelines, ultrasonic
rear-park assist, brake “pre-fill” to help shorten
stopping distances, hill hold/start assist and rear-park assist. Much
of that stuff once was offered only for luxury cars.
Other options, depending on the model, include a $1,050 tilt-sliding
power sunroof with fixed glass aft of the sliding glass, a pushbutton
start, heated steering wheel and front seats and upscale sound systems.
There are base LS, mid-range LT and top-line LTZ Impala models. They
cost from $26,725 to $35,770. I tested the $29,950 2LT model with a
3.6-liter 305-horsepower V-6.
There’s also a 2.5-liter 196-horsepower four-cylinder and a
2.4-liter 182-horsepower four-cylinder with an
“eAssist” feature that provides electrical assist
in certain conditions to help save fuel. (It’s scheduled to
be available at the end of 2013.)
I’d like a potent V-8 to be offered, but the V-6 provides
fast starts (0-60 m.p.h in 6.5 seconds) and swift, smooth highway
performance. Punch with the four-cylinder engines won’t be as
impressive, but they still have decent horsepower. And final-drive
ratios are tailored to each engine to provide the best performance and
fuel economy.
Estimated fuel economy is 19 miles per gallon city and 29 highway with
the V-6 and 21 and 31 with the 2.5-liter four. Chevy estimates that top
economy is an impressive 25 and 36 from the 2.4-liter four with
eAssist. All engines are advanced, with direct fuel injection, dual
overhead camshafts, four valves per cylinder and continuously variable
valve timing.
Only 87-octane fuel is required.
Engines work with a six-speed automatic transmission. It’s
very responsive, but has an annoying console shifter that
doesn’t easily slide from one gear to another, as, for
example, when shifting from Park to Drive.
Also, there are no manual control paddles, so manual shifting of the
automatic is done with tiny “plus “(for upshifts)
and “minus” (for downshifts) signs atop the shifter
handle. I found it best just to leave the versatile automatic shifter
in “Drive” mode, although manual shifts are crisp.
The first Impala was a smart move on the part of Chevrolet. So is the
new one.