Subscribe to Outside Magazine
advertisement
2009 Winter Buyer's Guide
View the entire 300-plus collection of must-have gear items tailor-made for your adventurous lifestyle. PLUS: A special section on womens gear.
Gear Guy

Today's Question
I'm looking for the lightest breatheable bivy sack out there, any suggestions? answer

What is the best way to carry water on a hike? answer

Gear Girl

Today's Question
What's a good women's analog watch for under $200? answer

What equipment should a new mountain biker buy? answer

Workbench

Skin Care

Gear Upgrade

Make a Ski Sling

User Reviews

User Reviews

Browse Outdoor Gear

Online Favorites

Special Issues

Photo Galleries

save this page print this page email this page
  • share this page

Outside Magazine, October 2006

Review
Hybrid Nation
2007 Saturn Vue Green Line

By Michael Spinelli

2007 Toyota Camry Hybrid | 2006 Honda Civic Hybrid | 2006 Toyota Highlander Hybrid 4WD-I | 2006 Mercury Mariner Hybrid 4WD | 2007 Lexus GS 450h | 2007 Saturn Vue Green Line

2007 Saturn Vue Green Line
2007 Saturn Vue Green Line (+ISM)

2007 Saturn Vue Green Line
The Vue Green Line offers the lowest price of any SUV we tested, and its system is configured to maximize value in small ways—for example, by cutting out and restarting the engine during traffic stops, eliminating gas wasted at idle. The Vue's electric motor isn't designed to propel the SUV on its own, so you won't see a significant mileage bump during low-speed city and commuter driving, as with full hybrids. But the vehicle still offers great highway fuel efficiency. That, combined with a roomy cargo hold, makes the Vue a good road-tripper. The Vue doesn't have a mileage calculator, but a green eco light comes on triumphantly when the car is meeting or exceeding EPA ratings, which are around 20 percent higher than with the gas-only Vue.

MSRP: $22,370 As tested: $22,995 Hybrid premium: $1,500 MPG: EPA, 27 city/32 highway; our average, 25 Decrease in annual greenhouse-gas emissions from comparable gas-only model: 11.1 percent Pros: Price, cargo capacity Cons: Mediocre city mileage, numb road feel

»CLEAN UP: THE BENEFITS OF DRIVING A HYBRID
These days, you can get more than a fuzzy feeling by going green. As part of the Energy Policy Act of 2005, the federal government enacted a system of tax credits for hybrid-car buyers, based on an automaker's quarterly sales. The full credit is $3,400 for buyers of IRS-approved vehicles, but the complex system—which only a bureaucrat could love—encourages early adopters. The amount of the tax benefit decreases if a manufacturer sells 60,000 hybrids in a calendar quarter, then gets progressively smaller in subsequent quarters before eventually being eliminated altogether. (Go to www.irs.gov or www.fueleconomy.gov for information on specific vehicles.) In addition, many states offer income-tax credits and sales-tax exemptions, companies like Google and Bank of America are offering incentives to hybrid-driving employees, and in some metro areas solo hybrid drivers can legally use the carpool lane.




2007 Toyota Camry Hybrid | 2006 Honda Civic Hybrid | 2006 Toyota Highlander Hybrid 4WD-I | 2006 Mercury Mariner Hybrid 4WD | 2007 Lexus GS 450h | 2007 Saturn Vue Green Line



New York-based MICHAEL SPINELLI is the managing editor of Gawker Media's Jalopnik.com.

 Subscribe to Outside and get a FREE Gift!
 Give the gift of Outside Magazine!
 Subscribe to Outside Online's free weekly e-mail newsletter featuring gear reviews, fitness advice, galleries, podcasts, and more.