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2009 chevy cobalt xfe (25/37 mpg)

Discussion in 'Other Cars' started by aliendroid, Oct 5, 2008.

  1. aliendroid

    aliendroid Junior Member

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    I'm in the process of buying this car right now. Here's my experience:

    We had a second prius on waitlist and we were going to get it for msrp, but the dealership said they were not getting our package level (I wanted one of the cheapest possible). I'm used to being able to get exactly what I want in a car without games. So I went back looking for cars and found that chevy had the XFE cobalt for only around 15,000 and the best fuel economy out there for its class. The first dealer I called tried to switch me over to a malibu on the phone which lost him the sale. The second place I visited had a 2009 XFE on the lot with the 25/37 sticker on the door. The salesman didn't once try to switch me over to a truck or other car. I got to test drive the car: it's very basic, handles pretty good but the best part was the 32 mpg average in city driving that I was able to get and on long 45mph stretches I kept the instant mpg at over 45mpg. I have no doubt that driving on the highway at 65mph will reduce that to 37mpg but I tend to drive slow anyway. I can probably get better than 32mpg in city driving with practice.

    The way I see it is we only need the second car a few times per week, so we would only put around 5,000 miles on the second car per year which would not be worth it to pay the extra 10,000 for the hybrid. The XFE cobalt will get traded in for a volt anyway later on.
     
  2. TonyPSchaefer

    TonyPSchaefer Your Friendly Moderator
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    The switch from the Prius to the Cobalt is entirely up to you, of course, but how much does that thing cost? The base Prius is around $22,000 and you say that the Cobalt is $10,000 less with mileage in the 30s on average. I would be surprised to hear that Chevy would have any problems selling a $12,000 car. And if you can get a brand new one for that I say take it!
     
  3. aliendroid

    aliendroid Junior Member

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    The switch was from a prius on waitlist to the cobalt, we already have a prius which we drive most of the time but when my wife and I need to use the car to do two different things at the same time, that's what the second car was going to be for.
    The end cost is what I'm talking about, the msrp are only 7000 apart, we weren't going to get the prius for less then 27,000 with tax and fees while the cobalt came to a grand total of 16,500 after rebates and no shipping fee and taxes.

    Despite the fact that GM hasn't put the spotlight on the car, and despite the fact that salesmen don't know it exists in the 25/37 mpg version for 2009 they reported that they are selling a lot more than they thought they would.
     
  4. paprius4030

    paprius4030 My first Prius

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    Sounds good as long as you don't have to sit in the back seat. I'm curious why you didn't consider an Aveo which has a much better designed interior and is more roomy.
     
  5. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    I agree, buying a $23,000+ car for 5000 miles a year is a tough pill to swallow. I don't know if I could have actually gone though with the idea, but I would have at least considered buying a 3 - 5 year old, heavily depreciated Ford or GM SUV.
     
  6. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    because the Cobalt is better built and is just as efficient as the tiny 1.6 litre Aveo.
     
  7. paprius4030

    paprius4030 My first Prius

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    Better built???? I happened to go along with my son and his wife when he was looking for an inexpensive car. Tried sitting in both the Aveo and then thought to try a "bigger":nono: Colbalt, after sitting in it for a minute we all thought the Aveo was actually bigger and more comfortable. and 3 grand less.
     
  8. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    You went from "better built" to "bigger" so you're still not countering what I'm saying. Bigger isn't better built. They're two separate things. I had a Cobalt coupe as a rental car over a week and it was quite comfortable and fuel efficient. This is coming from someone who wouldn't buy an American car. Also you didn't cover my fuel efficiency. The Aveo has a dated engine. It's embarrassing that Corollas and Civics get the same mileage as it.
     
  9. paprius4030

    paprius4030 My first Prius

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    Whatever:juggle:
     
  10. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    there's your answer. Bigger != better built. I'm not arguing that it isn't bigger or more comfortable, just bigger != better built.
     
  11. miscrms

    miscrms Plug Envious Member

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    For someone who only needs a small car and only drives 5000 miles a year a smaller car may make more sense. For an average driver, I'd say it makes less sense. Either way, I'm not sure the Cobalt would be on my list. Compare the following info from Consumer Reports and EPA:

    Reliability:
    Cobalt: Average
    Honda Fit: Much Better than Average
    Prius: Much Better than Average

    Customer Satisfaction:
    Cobalt: 45%
    Fit: 81%
    Prius: 92%

    CR Rating:
    Cobalt: 50/100
    Fit: 65/100
    Prius: 68/100

    5 Year Cost to Own:
    Cobalt: $32,250
    Fit: $27,000
    Prius: $27,250

    8 Year Cost to Own:
    Cobalt: $45,750
    Fit: $37,250
    Prius: $38,000

    CR Fuel Economy:
    Cobalt: 24 mpg (AT, EPA 26)
    Fit: 32 mpg (AT, 34 mpg MT Sport)
    Prius: 44 mpg

    EPA Passenger Volume:
    Cobalt: 86 cuft
    Fit: 91 cuft
    Prius: 96 cuft

    EPA Comb Fuel Economy:
    '09 Cobalt XFE MT: 30 mpg
    '09 Honda Fit AT: 31 mpg
    '09 Toyota Prius CVT: 46 mpg

    Seems to me the Fit gives you a lot more for a lot less money over time. For the same amount of money, the Prius gives you even more. IMHO the XFE series are not particularly impressive. Basically they just put a taller highway gear on them as I understand. Chevy made a big deal about the Cobalt XFE being more fuel efficient than any compact car. They neglected to mention that the Cobalt is classed as a subcompact ;) Even so that only held true for highway mileage. Its combined and city mileage is similar to or lower than a number of larger cars (Corolla, Civic, Accent etc).

    Rob
     
  12. miscrms

    miscrms Plug Envious Member

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    I wouldn't put the Aveo on my list either, personally. Add lower safety rating to:

    Reliability:
    Aveo: Worse than Average

    Customer Satisfaction:
    Aveo: 44

    CR Rating:
    Aveo: 33/100

    5 Year Cost to Own:
    Aveo: $27,250

    8 Year Cost to Own:
    Aveo: $38,750

    CR Fuel Economy:
    Aveo: 27 (Hatch MT, 28 Hatch AT)

    EPA Passenger Volume:
    Aveo: 91 cuft

    EPA Comb Fuel Economy:
    '09 Aveo5 MT: 30 mpg (AT 28 mpg)

    Rob
     
  13. Jimmie84

    Jimmie84 New Member

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  14. aliendroid

    aliendroid Junior Member

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    Does the Fit have a turbocharged 260 hp version? You can't use this data to judge my car, I have the 2009 cobalt stick shift XFE which I'm sure is not represented by that data above. $27,000 5 year cost for the prius is a joke, you can't even get the car for that most of the time.

    I've also been driving around town, trying to save fuel, and my average MPG is now 39, in the city, although I use roads with few lights and highways that cross town for part of my driving and I turn off the engine at lights that I know are long, and one might describe my driving as almost hypermiling. My average for the prius is upper 50s. I drive 55 on the highway.

    My 5-year cost calculation for the cobalt is 19,500 dollars based on the miles I drive and the fuel economy that I get with it.

    My 5 -year cost calculation for the prius if we drove the same number of miles as the cobalt would be 29,000 dollars.

    The 32,000 they have for the cobalt above is probably based on the SS cobalt not the 2009 XFE.
     
  15. San_Carlos_Jeff

    San_Carlos_Jeff Active Member

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    For a car that will be getting so few miles I'd definitely save a few bucks and buy used.
     
  16. miscrms

    miscrms Plug Envious Member

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    Silly me, I thought we were having a rational discussion about the merits of a small inexpensive, efficient car vs. the Prius. One would assume that since you came to a Prius list and posted your thoughts on a Chevy, you were interested in hearing what people thought. Intent was never to "judge" anything, nor was it clear that you already own this car. It seemed to me like you were making a decision and wanted feedback. My feedback is I would have made a different decision, but thats just my opinion.

    - We were discussing the XFE, so the existence of the SS is of 0 relevance.

    - The CR numbers are for a LT AT 4cyl, the SS MT costs about $10k more over 5 years.

    - 5 Year cost of ownership considers depreciation not just sticker cost. At the end of the five years, you are left with something of value whether you chose to keep driving it or sell it at that point.

    '09 Chevy Cobalt XFE, 5 Year CO @ 5k miles/yr
    Price: ---- $14,886 (kbb est actual, msrp+dest = $15,670)
    Interest: -- $2,750 (CR, LT AT)
    Insurance: - $6,000 (CR, LT AT)
    Sales Tax: --- $800 (CR, LT AT)
    Maint/Repair:$1,300 (CR, LT AT)
    Fuel: ------ $3,097 (EPA, 5k miles/year)
    Resale: --- ($5,420) (Kbb, private party, good cond, 25k miles '04 Cavalier 4d 2.2L MT)
    5 Year Cost to Own: $20,316

    '09 Toyota Prius, 5 Year CO @ 5k miles/yr
    Price: ---- $22,720 (kbb est actual, msrp+dest = $22,720)
    Interest: -- $4,000 (CR)
    Insurance: - $4,250 (CR)
    Sales Tax: - $1,200 (CR)
    Maint/Repair:$1,500 (CR)
    Fuel: ------ $2,018 (EPA, 5k miles/yr)
    Resale: -- ($20,550) (Kbb, private party, good cond, 25k miles '04 Prius)
    5 Year Cost to Own: $15,138

    '09 Chevy Cobalt XFE, 5 Year CO @ 12k miles/yr
    Price: ---- $14,886 (kbb est actual, msrp+dest = $15,670)
    Interest: -- $2,750 (CR, LT AT)
    Insurance: - $6,000 (CR, LT AT)
    Sales Tax: --- $800 (CR, LT AT)
    Maint/Repair:$1,300 (CR, LT AT)
    Fuel: ------ $7,432 (EPA, 12k miles/year)
    Resale: --- ($4,795) (Kbb, private party, good cond, 60k miles '04 Cavalier 4d 2.2L MT)
    5 Year Cost to Own: $28,373

    '09 Toyota Prius, 5 Year CO @ 12k miles/yr
    Price: ---- $22,720 (kbb est actual, msrp+dest = $22,720)
    Interest: -- $4,000 (CR)
    Insurance: - $4,250 (CR)
    Sales Tax: - $1,200 (CR)
    Maint/Repair:$1,500 (CR)
    Fuel: ------ $4,844 (EPA, 5k miles/yr)
    Resale: -- ($18,250) (Kbb, private party, good cond, 60k miles '04 Prius)

    5 Year Cost to Own: $20,264

    If anything I'd say CR is being very conservative by assuming the Prius will depreciate $11,000 over 5 years, when currently its more like $4k. Arguably that price is inflated at the moment, but you've never been able to buy a 5 year old prius with 60k miles for $12k. The costs on the Fit are all similar to the Cobalt's, but it does better on value over time since Hondas depreciate much slower than Chevys. There was no '04 Fit, so I can't do a direct compare, but CR puts it at ~$8k over 5 years, vs. $11k for the Cobalt.

    Rob
     
  17. miscrms

    miscrms Plug Envious Member

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    Can't really argue with that. A 2004 Civic DX 1.7L MT books for about $9k, and is rated 34mpg combined on the '08 EPA calculation. Pretty hard to beat that from a purely cost based perspective if it meets your needs.

    Rob
     
  18. ksstathead

    ksstathead Active Member

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    A thought on cost of ownership: No certainty that Prius II will hold the current incredible resale once the III's hit.

    I'm just saying...
     
  19. Syclone

    Syclone Member

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    FYI:

    2 reasons not to buy a Cobalt:

    1. From 2 years of racing experience in GrandAM racing - it's a piece of crap.

    2. GM is dumping it either at the end of this model year or in 2009.

    On a positive note:

    Buy a Corolla or a Civic. You can't go wrong, even if you buy the most basic model. Unless you drive them "forever", they will always have a decent trade-in value and your net cost of ownership will end up being less than a Cobalt.

    If overall cost is the opjective, the Corolla will beat out the Prius because it's fuel mileage is up around 38MPG, for the basic engine, driven conservatively.
     
  20. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    Cost difference is only half the picture. Cobalt XFE will be missing these features as well because Prius has them as standard.

    - Automatic Transmission (Choosing manual labor tranny for city driving is not wise)
    - Anti-Lock Brake System
    - Rear Decklid Spoiler
    - Spare Tire and Wheel
    - Traction Control
    - Climate Control (XFE just have AC)
    - Alloy Wheels (I think XFE comes with steel wheels)
    - Controls / Button on Steering Wheel
    - Dual illuminating Vanity Mirrors
    - Side Air Bags
    - Electronic Brakeforce Distribution