General Comments:
It is very comfortable with heated leather seats, and I fit in it well (I'm 6'-4") I'm used to 2 door cars and the B pillar is too far forward for my likes. It's very quick for its size and fuel economy. It's the fastest big 4 door I've seen that can still get 29mpg on the highway.
It's a pretty practical car yet still decently fun to drive. When that supercharger kicks in you really feel it.
I personally like sports cars, I last drove a Firebird Formula it's a whole different type of car. Speed wise this Grand Prix is impressive for what it is under 7 sec 0-60, but the front wheel drive feels stupid sometimes when your used to rear wheel.
This car is a great compromise if you like speed, but have a family and need better gas mileage than a V-8.
I think it might be an option on them, but mine does not play MP3 CDs or have an input for iPod/mp3 player If I could make one suggestion for the manufacturer; make mp3 a standard. Seriously, that has become the "cupholder" of this era of auto manufacture.
7th Jan 2011, 19:10
People buy a Camry because they like to drive a vehicle that does nothing but get them to point A to point B. A Camry does this task in spades, and all the while will most likely not need much but general maintenance up to 200,000 miles. Grand Prix and like vehicles were made for people who want a little bit more with their vehicle. A little bit more flair with the exterior, plastic clad body panels that look "buff". A little bit more performance (with the GTP package). A little bit more road noise. A little bit more up-keep.
This type of "more" leads to less investment in NVH areas (noise, vibration, harshness) where things tend to break down, because people who drive these "excitement" vehicles drive them as if they were sports cars. Sadly, they aren't built to last if driven hard, and it shows given the amount of bad reviews.
I personally like the Grand Prix nameplate, and wish that the newer G8 car had carried on the tradition of the Grand Prix line. It would have lent a little credibility to its forebearers, especially the late 90's and early 00's.
Alas, we are left with only memories of "fast in a straight line" vehicles with muscle car handling and a teen dream body.