2010 Chevrolet
Suburban |
2010 Chevy
Suburban |
Chevrolet New
Model
|
2010
Suburban
|
Chevrolet Suburban 2500 Generations
For each major redesign, a vehicle is said to begin a new "generation."
The Suburban 2500 is available in LS and LT trims in both 2WD and 4WD. It
can seat up to nine passengers in its three rows of seats. The 2500 comes
standard with a 352-hp 6.0-liter flexible-fuel V8 engine mated to a 6-speed
automatic transmission. All-disc anti-lock brakes, traction control, side
curtain airbags and GM's StabiliTrak electronic stability system with
rollover mitigation are standard.
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DETROIT — Facing a prolonged downturn in sales of full-size trucks and SUVs
and the likelihood of a permanent erosion in their volume and market share,
General Motors executives last May canceled the CXX program — the planned
replacements for the Chevrolet Tahoe and Suburban and their siblings at GMC
and Cadillac.
A story in Sunday's New York Times quotes GM Vice Chairman Robert Lutz, head
of product development, as saying: "It would have been very difficult in
today's environment to spend a couple of billion dollars to do a replacement."
The next-generation Tahoe and Suburban, along with successors to the Yukon
and Escalade, were slated to begin arriving in 2011 as 2012 models, supplier
sources told Inside Line. GM originally had earmarked $2 billion to
completely redesign the big SUVs and retool its assembly plants to build
them.
It is now unclear whether the current models, which went on sale in early
2006, will continue in production until 2011 or will be phased out earlier.
GM has announced plans to close one SUV plant in Janesville, Wisconsin,
consolidating SUV production in Arlington, Texas.
Through the first nine months of 2008, Tahoe sales were down 30 percent.
GM earlier this month said it would kill the midsize Chevrolet TrailBlazer,
GMC Envoy and Saab 9-7X in December because of plunging sales.
GM is not alone among the Detroit-based automakers facing a sea change in
buyers' vehicle preferences. Chrysler last week said it would discontinue
its full-size Aspen and Durango SUVs at year-end, including just-released
hybrid editions.
Inside Line says: Look for the classic truck-based sport-utility vehicle to
completely vanish from the American landscape over the next 24 to 36 months.
— Paul Lienert, Correspondent