Chevy Captiva - Any good?
Chevy Captiva - Any good?
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Discussion

mattman

Original Poster:

3,192 posts

243 months

Tuesday 11th October 2011
quotequote all
Wife wants a diesel auto 7x seat 4x4 - nice set of requirements.

Have been looking at used xc90's but noticed that nearly new Chevy Captiva's are quite cheap - I assume this is because they are not that great or wanted - but as its only going to be a kid ferry to school and back, i wondered what the PH collective's experience of these are?

nicebutdim

37 posts

180 months

Tuesday 11th October 2011
quotequote all
the diesel/auto combination is dire on these, there is such a delay in putting your foot down to any power its almost dangerous

minghis

1,576 posts

272 months

Tuesday 11th October 2011
quotequote all

I've got one - a 7 seat auto.

Like an XC90 but half the price. 2 proper rearmost seats, nice and comfy. Reasonably reliable, easy as anything to drive and an ideal school run car, especially if you live in the country and need a bit of extra grip.

Yes, agreed the auto box is not the sharpest in the world but generally it's proven to be a bloody good car for what we want it for, a second car with space for all the family. Auto's seem to be the best choice as despite the 'box being a bit lazy the manuals are reported to have the usual dual mass flywheel problems.

If you need anything specific about these ask away, happy to help.

H100S

1,436 posts

194 months

Tuesday 11th October 2011
quotequote all
I have had three Antara's as company cars. I know the Chevy version has seven seats but otherwise pretty much the same car.

My experience was that I thought all the gearboxes were terrible! Manual got better when warm, the auto was better suited to the car but it was'nt a great gearbox. Both needed to be 6 speed, the engine was underpowered too. When plodding around it was ok but when you wanted a bit more to overtake safety it needed planning. Due to the poor gearbox and underpowered nature of the 2.0 diesel the mpg was very poor.

Through winter though the car was excellent and it was always very comfortable. It even handled ok for this type of car however the steering has no feel at all!

Interior is well speced with gadgets but the quality of the lower interior plastics was very poor and marked quite easily. I would expect after a few years they would be very scuffed.

The used Volvo will be much better quality, it wont loose as much money as a similar priced Chevy either so long term the better buy.

Good newswith the latest ones with the new 2.2 diesel, they now have enough power and 6 speed gearboxes, although i dont think the shift quality has improved much.

The chevy in particular has gone through quite a thorough facelift and interior revision too that make this a better car although the suspension has sacrificed some comfort for road holding.

Edited by H100S on Tuesday 11th October 23:24

Efbe

9,251 posts

187 months

Tuesday 11th October 2011
quotequote all
are you going to be driving it at all, or just her?

and how much does she enjoy/care about driving? also what does she complain about with her current car?

djone101

967 posts

305 months

Wednesday 12th October 2011
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How about another alternative? - Nissan Pathfinder - 4x4, 7 proper seats, Diesel (2.5T) and a good auto box (can also tow 3t if that matters) good reliabilty in my experience. Mega in the snow too smile