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Saturn Aura Green Line Hybrid Car Overview

Saturn Aura
 

The new Saturn Aura got off to a rip-roaring start when it won “Car of the Year” at the 2007 North American Auto Show in Detroit. The judges raved. Matt DeLorenzo of Road and Track said, “The Saturn Aura is a breakthrough car for General Motors. The road manners are solid, the interior is beautiful, and the overall fit and finish is top-notch.” John Davis of Motor Week called the Aura, “a striking and entertaining family sedan alternative to Camry and Accord.”

That was the buzz from Detroit, and before the Green Line version was introduced. As the Aura Green Line made the rounds to the auto reviewers, the story changed. The styling continued to receive high marks, but a chorus of auto journalists dinged the Aura Green Line for "anemic" performance and a "stripped-down" feel.

Why did the Aura Green Line get accused of being cheap? Because affordablity (a.k.a. cheapness) was General Motors' goal in producing Saturn hybrids. The company argues that consumers won’t buy a hybrid if they can’t justify any extra costs with a quick return. So, all of the company’s first hybrids, including the Aura Green Line, use a less expensive gas-electric system that calls on electric power mostly to prevent the vehicle from burning gas during idle, and only occasionally to give the car a minor boost during certain driving conditions. This technology, commonly called “stop-start“ is a no-frills system for improving fuel economy by about 10 percent.

While Saturn manages to keep the additional cost of the Green Line version within a couple of thousand bucks of the conventional four-cylinder Aura (especially when considering the hybrid tax credit), its real competition is not the standard Aura—but the Toyota Prius and Civic Hybrid. Unfortunately, the bare-bones entry-level versions of those cars are about the same price as the Aura Green Line. And those vehicles beat the Aura Green Line's fuel efficiency ratings by 13 mpg and 16 mpg respectively. To make matters worse (especially for those calculating the environmental impact of driving), The Aura Green Line is rated as a Low Emissions Vehicle (LEV), four steps below its competitors, which score the Advanced Technology Partial Zero Emissions Vehicle rating.

Specifications:

Base MSRP $22,140
Style Midsize Sedan
Seating 5
Mileage 32/24
Tank Size 16 gallons
Emission Rating LEV
0 - 60 Performance 11 seconds
Passenger Space 113 cubic feet
Cargo Space 30.8 cubic feet
Net Power 170 horsepower
Electric Motor Power 6.7 horsepower
Gas Engine Torque 162 lb.-ft. @ 4,400 RPM
Electric Motor Torque 48 lb.-ft.
Displacement 2.4 liter
Battery Output 500 volts
Drag Coefficient .26

 

Reviews:

The 2007 Saturn Aura Green Line succeeds in its mission statement of being a cheap hybrid. While its stripped-down cabin disappoints, its entry-level drive train technology delivers decent fuel economy gains over the V-6 gasoline model.
Cnet

Possibly the biggest thing the Aura Green Line has going for it is that it's a Saturn Aura. The Aura is a handsome car that handles and drives more like a European sedan than a typical GM car. But with its 4-cylinder engine and smaller wheels wrapped in low-rolling-resistance tires, the Aura Green Line loses much of the power and pleasure that marks the top-line Aura.
CNNMoney

At $22,695, the Aura Green Line is the cheapest hybrid on the market, at least until the stripped-down 2008 Prius arrives later this month. However, to get to that price, GM cut some corners. Not enough to turn Picasso into Cezanne as in years past, but still enough to make you scratch your head.
Motor Trend

The Saturn Aura Green Line is a handsomely styled, midsize sedan with anemic-feeling gasoline-electric hybrid power and lackluster fuel economy vis-à-vis its Japanese competitors. And starting in 2008, the Aura Green Line no longer is the lowest-priced hybrid production car. The Aura Green Line, which is priced higher than an Aura with V6 and weighs about the same as a V6 Aura, gets only 164-horsepower from its 2.4-liter, 4-cylinder engine with electric motor assist. And the lower power is noticeable and disappointing.
MSN Autos

My biggest gripe with the regular Aura was its cabin, which has fit-and-finish issues that are hard to ignore. Unfortunately, the Green Line isn't an improvement in this regard; it has some glaring panel gaps you wouldn't expect to see in a brand-new model. Still, if you're looking for a hybrid on the cheap and want a sedan, the Aura Green Line, which starts at $22,695, is a sensible choice that doesn't ask the owner to make any significant compromises.
Cars.com

Saturn Vue Green Line Hybrid Car Overview

Six months after the launch of the Saturn Vue Green Line, General Motors will halt production of the vehicle. In what may be the most bizarre product introduction in auto industry history, GM trumpeted the release of the Vue Green Line last fall—as a sign of the company’s commitment to hybrids and the environment—but will phase out production starting in March, and then start back again in September, replacing the 2007 Vue Green Line with the redesigned 2008 version. This start-stop will leave a six-month gap during which dealers will run out of the Saturn Vue Green Line.

General Motor’s intention to release a hybrid version of the Saturn Vue dates back to the Detroit Auto Show in 2003. At that time, Tom Stephens, GM’s vice-president of powertrain, said, “GM will introduce a Saturn Vue with an advance hybrid system in the latter half of the 2005 calendar year.” Stephens indicated that “drivers can expect fuel economy gains of up to 50 percent” with the hybrid Vue. At the 2003 Detroit Show, Rick Wagoner, CEO of General Motors, also said the company “would be capable of providing more than one million hybrid vehicles per year” by 2007. The removal of the Vue Green Line, which provides a 20 percent fuel economy gain over the conventional version, will reduce GM’s expected 2007 annual hybrid sales by approximately 4,000 units.

GM plans to introduce five new hybrids in 2007: the Chevrolet Malibu, Saturn Aura Green Line, GMC Yukon, Chevrolet Tahoe, and Cadillac Escalade. The company is not releasing projected sales numbers for these vehicles.

The following review is an excerpt from an article written by Bradley Berman, HybridCars.com editor, originally published in the New York Times on Nov. 19, 2006.

The mild-hybrid Saturn Vue Green Line is G.M.’s first gas-electric vehicle, unless you count the company’s ultramild-hybrid pickup trucks. The hybrid field is starting to get crowded—there are now a dozen to choose from—so the pitch for Green Line is “the most affordable S.U.V. hybrid.” In other words, this Vue appeals to your inner accountant. The numbers would impress any C.P.A.

For $22,995, the Green Line delivers an E.P.A. fuel economy rating of 27 m.p.g. in town and 32 in the country, which is the highest highway rating for any sport utility. For comparison’s sake, a conventional gas-only Vue with 4-cylinder engine, front drive and automatic transmission is rated 22 in town, 27 on the highway.

I drove the Green Line on two successive 78-mile highway loops, one well below the speed limit and a second in complete disregard of the 65 m.p.h. signs. As a saint, I achieved an impressive 36 m.p.g. As a sinner, my fuel economy dropped to 24. I have little doubt that a careful foot applied to the Green Line could regularly produce 30 m.p.g. on the highway.

Successful Auto-Stop

Instead of a discrete electric motor that can drive the wheels just like a gasoline engine, the Green Line uses a belt alternator-starter; it shuts the engine off when the car comes to a complete stop, eliminating gas consumption at idle. The Green Line’s 36-volt battery and motor-generator smartly wake up the engine as soon as the driver’s foot comes off the brake pedal.

Kudos to Saturn’s technical team for producing an auto-stop feature that works smoothly and consistently. In contrast, Honda’s system requires the car to return to at least 10 m.p.h. before it will shut down again. In the Vue, you can lift and return your foot to the brake as often as you like—as you would in stop-and-go traffic. Each time, the engine pauses for a few moments at low idle, then drops to a full engine-off stop.

What you can’t do is launch forward in all-electric mode. That feat—the thing that, in the view of many people, makes a hybrid a hybrid—belongs for the moment only to full hybrid systems from Toyota and Ford. Were good mileage the only criterion for likability, this review would be over.

Credits and Debits

The problem, though, is that every automotive credit requires a debit, and accountants’ fingerprints can be seen all over this Vue. Handling is acceptable but not impressive. The 2.4-liter 4-cylinder engine is loud but delivers barely adequate performance. Aerodynamics are a crucial factor in fuel economy, and the Vue’s was improved—to a drag coefficient of 0.36, from 0.38—by lowering the chassis an inch and leaving off the roof rack. Unfortunately, ridges that remain on the roof call attention to the fact that something is missing. The lower profile also leaves the Green Line feeling more like a portly wagon than a high-riding S.U.V. The doors are easy enough to open, but the upright backseat is excruciating; passengers will yearn for the relative comfort of flying cross-country in coach class.

A 36-volt battery pack, which lets the auto-stop function do its thing, is housed in the cargo area. The rest of that compartment is occupied by what Saturn calls a rear cargo organizer; it is a set of hinged plastic dividers so flimsy that my friends guffawed when I showed it to them.

The biggest flaw may stem from the cost-containment measures applied to the instruments. The typical hybrid driver needs real-time information to wring the most miles from the fuel, but Saturn provides only silly green lights and a little dial and pointer. A green “eco” light is supposed to come on when the Vue matches or beats the E.P.A. economy estimates, but I found the flickering light to be worthless. The dial is supposed to indicate when the battery is charging or providing an assist, but a meter to monitor mileage on a specific trip would be much more useful. There is also the Green Line’s overall feel of righteous deprivation. While the Green Line is rather Spartan, the Red Line, a higher-performance Vue, has a distinctive front end, sport suspension, 18-inch alloy wheels, leather seats and much more. The not-so-subtle message: You can spend your money on high-quality fun and get a Red Line, or opt for a big green bummer.

Sadly Wanting

Fortunately, a new Vue is on the way. The 2008 model will be similar to the new Opel Antara that will be sold in foreign markets. The new Vue will also trade its ding resistant but ill-fitting plastic body panels for sheet metal, which will perhaps make the crossover utility feel less like a disposable car.

For now, the Vue Green Line proves that G.M. is capable of improving the fuel efficiency of many of its vehicles at a modest cost. The well-engineered belt alternator-starter could be offered on tens of thousands of G.M. vehicles, virtually eliminating wasted fuel at idle. Yet as an overall package, the Green Line is sadly wanting. G.M. started with a laudable goal, to show that it can deliver gas-saving technology at a discount, but it has fallen far short of other hybrid makers on the execution.

Saturn Vue Green Line
 
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