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2005 chevy cobalt blue book
2005 chevy cobalt blue book






2005 chevy cobalt blue book

The clutch pedal is nice and heavy, and uptake smooth and progressive through the sweep of the pedal. Thanks to equal-length halfshafts, which divide power evenly between the two wheels, there’s no torque steer to speak of and the car accelerates dead straight. As an option - and one I highly recommend for this peaky front-driver - you can also get a Quaife limited-slip differential.įrom a standing start, this thing goes off like a bug bomb. This tranny has a larger clutch plate than the one in the regular Cobalt, 1-inch shorter shift throws and a quicker final-drive ratio of 4.05:1. The smack from the supercharger is complemented by a more robust five-speed transmission, the same cog-swapper as in the Saab 9-3. It will run on regular unleaded, says Chevy, but with diminished power. If you seek further supercharger enlightenment, look to your left: A racy little AutoMeter boost gauge grins at you from the driver’s side windshield pillar.Īs for efficiency, the SS-SC’s fuel economy is rated at 23 miles per gallon city, 29 highway - I wonder what it would be without that wing dragging in the windstream? - and the car prefers 91 octane. In case you missed the badge on the trunk lid, there’s a supercharger under the hood, stuffing up to 12 pounds of water-cooled boost down the gullet of a 2.0-liter, twin-cam four cylinder, producing a maximum whoop of 205 horsepower and 200 pound-feet of torque (compared with the naturally aspirated 2.0-liter’s 145 hp and 155 pound feet of torque). So, why not? Devoted hobbyists aside, most buyers in the sport-compact segment are too busy Xboxing and pounding down Red Bull to fiddle with their cars.ĭespite its be-winged, look-at-me audacity, the Cobalt SS-SC package is far from superficial. Ford, Chevy and Dodge have each gamed this segment pretty well, and each has rushed to offer turn-key screamers to the lads, who can finance it all with low, low interest. If you tried to buy all the performance bricolage yourself - stuff like the 18-inch alloy wheels, Z-rated tires, 11.6-inch front discs and 10.6-inch rear rotors (replacing the Cobalt’s rear drums) and all the urban-hovercraft rocker-panel extensions and front and rear fascia - you would easily spend more than this car’s base price of $21,995. While its fortunes in the high-volume Everyman-sedan market have been ever so sketchy lately, the world’s biggest car company definitely has some mojo in male-enhancement products, limited-production cars such as the Corvette C6 Z06, the Pontiac GTO - now with hood scoops! - and our test car, the 2005 Chevy Cobalt SS Supercharged Coupe, which is a very fine little car despite its resemblance to a cheese slicer.Ī factory-tuner version of the Cobalt coupe, the Cobalt SS-SC - pronounced sick to the yo-boys? - makes a case-closed argument for the wisdom of letting professionals build your car, instead of ordering a bunch of aftermarket junk out of a catalog and having Shane with the tattoos bolt it on. INSTEAD of General Motors, how about Specific Motors?








2005 chevy cobalt blue book