John Welsh said:
In this thread, the last post of page 1 is about the stripper version of the Grand Caravan known as the American Value Package and page 2 is about Taurus X.
American Value... ecch. That sends up all kinds of red flags. Coming from an industry where "value engineering" means stripping out any features and functions the law doesn't require and replacing the good stuff you specified with something significantly cheaper and not nearly as good, that's scary. Almost sounds like a Wal-Mart special edition. Thanks for the warning.
And you've also shown me that I may break my "no VW garbage" rule, but only if that VW garbage is a Dodge.
I think I'm going to go lie down.
Hoondavan said:
Live the minivan life. I've found happy passengers are more important than a happy driver...especially when the "driver" has a fun backup car(s). I tried to find a good compromise w/my VW Alltrack (AWD, manual transmission, decent size storage & a rooftop box + 30mpg)...but SWMBO and Kid still prefer our 2008 Honda Odyssey 10/10 times. Since you need AWD, go with a mopar or Toyota Sienna. Both have plenty of power, tons of storage and power sliding doors are convenient for loading/unloading kids. As your kid gets older you'll appreciate the ability to bring your family + 4 or 5 of the kiddo's friends along with you.
Hearing you loud and clear on this one. It's all a damned strange concept to me, since neither my wife nor I grew up surrounded by tons of other people - we are both relatively introverted people from quiet (bordlerine reclusive) families, and not drawn to group settings or "fun" activities that involve transporting a whole mess of somebody else's rodents around. But I do appreciate the practicality of the van configuration, even if we're only toting our own.
We don't need AWD. We have it, and it's come in handy, but it's not a requirement.
Robbie (Forum Supporter) said:
Exactly! And the first time your 4 year old cracks the inside door handle in the target parking lot during a gust of wind that catches your big heavy long door and slams it into the new mercedes you parked next to, you'll really wish you got a car with sliding doors.
Or when your hands are full of stuff and the side of the car is caked in winter road slime (and so is the ground) and you don't have a button on your key fob to just push through your pants pocket and the door magically opens, you'll really wish you got a car with sliding doors.
I really can't say enough about how key sliding rear doors are for a family hauler, especially of young ones.
Had to chuckle. I'm the guy who parks at the end of the parking lot. If I park next to a car, the car is on my side. But it's a fair point. Door dings aside, the sliding door has its merits.
Dude, I've never even had keyless entry, let alone touchless smart key wizardry. We have nowhere to go but up!