Later, after the regular baseball season had started, I sat with General Motors officials at one of the first games at Anaheim Stadium, watching the Angels take on the Texas Rangers. With sales up and positive press out about their new lineup of large SUVs, they were a cheerful lot. Early returns on the Tahoe were so positive, in fact, that GM was cautiously hoping that this vehicle, along with brothers such as the GMC Yukon and Cadillac Escalade, would spur their turnaround and bring luster back to the brands.
The talk made me think of apple pie in Julian, spring training games, real beef hot dogs, and Arizona sunshine...and whether Chevrolet had recaptured the magic with its new Tahoe. Maybe, I thought to myself. It’s that good, the SUV is that good, and such a strong example of American engineering, with its large and powerful engine, spacious interior and smooth design. Save for a few minor nits, it drove like a dream, with responsive rack-and-pinion steering, excellent interior design and plenty of room. People could really get excited about this vehicle. Perhaps. But then I thought of a number: Thirteen point nine.
From Riverside County to Julian, through the desert to 29 Palms, Tempe, Tucson, Calexico, San Diego and back to Riverside County, the 2007 Chevrolet Tahoe averaged 13.9 miles per gallon. At three bucks a gallon -- and climbing -- along with a 26-gallon tank, that’s almost $80 to go about 360 miles. In an old America that eats, drives and does what it wants, in an America that celebrates largess no matter what the cost, this means little. In today’s America, however, where heroes are drug-tested and kids are obese, where the amount of oil in the ground and the distance your car can go on one gallon matters – a lot – that tattooed 13.9 on the hood of the 2007 Chevrolet Tahoe is just not coming together for what people in the good ol’ USA really need. Photos by Patrick Neeman, Brian Chee, General Motors, City of Julian, AARoads
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About Brian Chee
Prior to joining Autobytel in the Spring of 2000, Brian Chee spent 15 years as a writer and editor in his native southern California, his work appearing in a wide variety of regional newspapers and online publications. As an editor at Autobytel, Brian has been quoted in numerous regional and national publications, including the Wall St. Journal and InStyle Magazine. He is responsible for writing, editing and planning content for three of the company’s consumer websites: autobytel.com, autoweb.com and carsmart.com. His “beat” includes vehicle reviews, features, news and Auto Show coverage. Brian considers himself a “SoCal” car enthusiast: the kind who grades a car on how it handles today’s urban and suburban reality of daily traffic gridlock, rising fuel prices and fast-paced lifestyles. Brian is an Eagle Scout, a member of the Automotive Press Association, the Motor Press Guild, and the California State University Advisory Board for Internet Writing. Brian holds a bachelor's degree in Journalism.
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