Curb weight of the hatch is 2820lbs. Weight of the 4 door is 2850.
Both LT's with 1.8l autos. expect the manuals to be about 15-20 lbs lighter.
i build them let me tell you its alot more peppy than you would expect
...i already found 3 cruze owners who got screwed by their chevy dealers after engine problems ( denied warranty coverage because of the trifecta tune upgrade)...
I would like to know this as well.,haven't heard any reports of problems. As far as warranty is concerned hey should have taken it off before they went in. The dealer CANNOT trace a tune from trifecta performance.
let me ask anyone who care to answer this:
why doesnt chevy just do this tune in production if it can be done for $200 and adds 40 hp. they could sell the car for alot more than $200 more and they would sell by hotcakes?
why doesnt chevy just do this tune in production if it can be done for $200 and adds 40 hp. they could sell the car for alot more than $200 more and they would sell by hotcakes?
im not asking because i believe the tune caused real issues, im curious more from the side of the business decision by gm.
The answer to that is long. But it has less to do with reliability than you might think. The production vehicles sold to the general public have to pass extreme tests and be very consistent. Emissions vary with different fuel types / brands / qualities / climate / driving conditions - the car has to meet the emission standards at all times under all of these AND by a lot to be competitive with others. The drivetrain would require more expensive and heavy parts with more power to last for a very long time under various conditions with added power. Fuel economy may be affected, although sometimes the added torque at low rpm and increased combustion efficiency can actually help it, it DOES take more fuel molecules to keep the proper mix if more oxygen molecules are present.... there are very logical and understandable reasons that GM and other manufacturers detune production vehicles. The people that enjoy very high performance are not the average consumer.
In a nutshell, GM has decided that current tune and power levels give the best possible all around combination of emissions, fuel economy, driveability, reliability and production / warranty / maintanance cost. If you want to step out of the stock performance envelope, it is your responsibility to be willing to accept a slight risk in one of the other areas. We should be glad that they routinely overbuild the hardware, that you can even tune 40-50 hp with minimal risk into a 1 liter engine under $20k. This is not the case with all vehicles. Like I said, some concrete evidence of failures and warranty denials would be nice to go with the thousands of trouble free satisfied tuned guys / gals.