Monthly payment calculator is an estimate and does not include tax, title, license. Pricing may include current promotions, incentives, and/or bonus cash from Toyota Financial Services. Pricing of vehicles on this web site may include options that may have been installed at the Dealership. The cost of entry versus the value you get in the Vue is very favorable, and it’s the type of hybrid I prefer because it doesn’t let technology take over the driving experience.*Price does not include local or state taxes. There simply isn’t a greener or more efficient small SUV for this price on the market. Antilock brakes with traction control do come standard, but there is no rollover mitigation or electronic stability system offered. It did, however, receive the highest rating for frontal crashes. Side curtain airbags are optional, and without them the 2006 Vue received the lowest side-impact crash-test rating from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. The Vue does a decent job in the safety arena but still lags competitors in standard features. XM Satellite Radio and OnStar are available, but OnStar’s new Turn-by-Turn navigation service is not. The Vue is a no-frills machine the big feature here is the hybrid system. Or course, none of those small SUVs get this kind of gas mileage and all are around the same price or more. That space is slightly smaller than newly redesigned rivals in the segment, like the Honda CR-V, Toyota RAV4 and Mitsubishi Outlander. Saturn also managed to stow all the hybrid mechanicals - mainly the large batteries - in such a way as not to lose any cargo space. This will become vital for those learning the proper way to drive a hybrid for optimum efficiency - think, “lots of coasting.”
There’s a small meter in the gauge cluster that shows drivers when the hybrid is charging its batteries through braking, as well as when the electric motor kicks on to assist in acceleration. Besides a few small badges proclaiming its greenness, the Green Line doesn’t look any different from the gasoline models.Īs in a standard Vue, the interior plastic and fabric aren’t top of the class, but for an SUV they come off as utilitarian and would likely hold up well over time.
The Vue’s exterior and interior got a mild upgrade just last year. Even though there aren’t disc brakes on all four corners, antilock brakes come standard. The brakes were also surprisingly solid considering the rears are drums and they’re part of the hybrid system. My sole complaint would be the four-speed transmission, which didn’t deliver silky-smooth gear changes at every moment, but for cars in this price range, that’s not a deal-breaker. I didn’t find the powerplant lacking for acceleration power on the highway, either. When you accelerate again, the electric motor does almost all the work up to a certain speed, but the Green Line does a good job of making the process feel normal.
When you come to a stop the engine pretty much shuts off. Of course, there are a few hybrid quirks that take some getting used to. Road noise was minimal, the ride was pleasing and handling was more responsive than I remember in older Vue models. On the road, I found the Vue a capable companion no matter what type of engine was under the hood. That doesn’t sound like much, but the all-new Honda CR-V only produces 166 hp, so this hybrid is competitive in the market. Combined, they produce 170 horsepower and 167 pounds-feet of torque. The technology powering this hybrid is a standard gasoline-powered 2.4-liter four-cylinder engine mated to an electric motor. I spent a morning with the Green Line and came away surprised at how much value GM managed to pack into this efficient SUV. That compares to the Escape Hybrid’s sticker of $25,655 and 36/31 gas mileage. GM says the most important thing for buyers will be affordability the Vue Green Line starts at $22,370 and gets 27/32 mpg city/highway. It doesn’t offer the extreme mileage of smaller hybrid vehicles like the Toyota Prius and Honda Civic Hybrid, but it does compete with other compact SUVs, like the Ford Escape Hybrid. There’s no bigger buzzword in the car world than “hybrid.” GM is getting in on the act with the Saturn Vue Green Line, the first of the automaker’s new line of “affordable” hybrid systems.