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Chevrolet Lumina

 
Wikipedia: Chevrolet Lumina
Chevrolet Lumina
2nd-gen Chevrolet Lumina
Manufacturer General Motors
Production 1990–2001
Assembly Oshawa, Ontario, Canada
Predecessor Chevrolet Celebrity (Sedan)
Chevrolet Monte Carlo (Coupe)
Successor Chevrolet Impala (Sedan)
Chevrolet Monte Carlo (Coupe)
Class Full-size
Layout FF layout
Platform W-body
Wheelbase 107.5 in (2731 mm)

The Chevrolet Lumina sedan , coupe and minivan were first introduced in 1989 for the 1990 model year as a new range of vehicles from the Chevrolet brand of General Motors to replace both the Chevrolet Celebrity sedan, and the Monte Carlo coupe. The Lumina was an answer from General Motors to the Ford Taurus. All Luminas were built at the Oshawa Car Assembly plant, in Ontario, Canada. The Chevrolet Lumina had the longest length from any other W-body car at the time.

Consumers were ultimately confused by having two different vehicles (the Lumina sedan and the Lumina APV minivan) share the same name, and the concept was eventually dropped when the Lumina APV was replaced by the Chevrolet Venture in 1997.

Contents

1990-1994

First Generation
1991-1994 Chevrolet Lumina Euro 3.4 sedan
Also called Chevrolet Z34
Production 1990–1994
Body style(s) 2-door coupe
4-door sedan
Engine(s) 2.5 L Iron Duke I4
3.1 L LH0 V6
3.4 L LQ1 V6
Transmission(s) 5-speed manual
3-speed 3T40 automatic
4-speed 4T60 automatic
4-speed 4T60-E automatic
Length 1990 Coupe: 198.4 in (5039 mm)
1990 Sedan: 197.6 in (5019 mm)
1991-94 Coupe & 1993-94 Sedan: 198.3 in (5037 mm)
1991-92 Sedan & Z34 Sedan: 199.3 in (5062 mm)
Width Coupe & Z34 Sedan: 71.7 in (1821 mm)
Sedan: 71.0 in (1803 mm)
Height Coupe & Z34 Sedan: 53.3 in (1354 mm)
Sedan: 53.6 in (1361 mm)
Curb weight 3496 lb (1586 kg)
Fuel capacity 17.1 US gallons (64.7 L; 14.2 imp gal)
Related Buick Regal
Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme
Pontiac Grand Prix
1990 Chevrolet Lumina sedan
1991-1994 Chevrolet Lumina coupe

The North American Chevrolet Lumina was based on the mid-size GM W platform, which was shared with the Pontiac Grand Prix, Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme, Oldsmobile Intrigue, Buick Regal and Buick Century (after 1996). Although the Lumina became a popular seller, GM was widely criticized in the motoring press for being late to the game in introducing a direct aero-designed competitor to the Ford Taurus. The Chevrolet Lumina's first generation ended production in 1994, making this the shortest-lived generation of the first-generation GM W-body cars.

In 1989, the Lumina became the nameplate under which Chevrolets were raced in NASCAR, more than a year before the model was available to the public. Irate fans bombarded NASCAR with letters protesting the unfairness of Chevrolet being allowed to race an aluminum car.[citation needed]

In 1987 however, GM was experimenting with a high end performance version above the Z34 to continue where the Z34 left off. The experimental "Z50" version as it was dubbed featured all-wheel-drive and an all aluminum 5.0 L 305ci LT1-style V8 which had 285 hp (213 kW) and 280 ft·lbf (380 N·m) of torque. It never made it to production. The whereabouts of these test-cars remains unknown.[citation needed]

Specs

  • Front Head Room 39.9 in.
  • Front Hip Room 51.9 in.
  • Front Shoulder 59.9
  • Front Leg 49.9
  • Fuel Tank 19.9 gallons
1992 model interior

Exterior Colors

  • Black Metallic
  • Bright White Metallic
  • Dark Garnet Red Metallic
  • Light Driftwood Metallic
  • Maui Blue Metallic
  • Medium Adriatic Blue Metallic
  • Medium Garnet Red Metallic
  • Medium Gray Metallic
  • Silver Metallic
  • Torch Red Metallic

Engines

  • 1990-1992 2.5 L (151 in³) Iron Duke I4
  • 1993-1994 2.2 L (134 in³) I4
  • 1990-1994 3.1 L (191 in³) LHO V6
  • 1991-1994 3.4 L DOHC(207 in³) LQ1 V6

Lumina Z34

The high performance version of the Lumina was the Lumina Z34. Along with a performance suspension package, it was fitted with the 3.4 L DOHC LQ1 V6, putting out 210 hp at 5200 rpm, and 215 lb·ftf (292 N·m) of torque at 4400 rpm. Unique cosmetic changes include a factory spoiler and body moldings, a louvered hood, and a unique steering wheel. The grille was also replaced with a body-colored panel with a small outlet, reminiscent of the Ford Taurus SHO.Performance figures are quite impressive for a front wheel drive V6 car,with a 0-60(mph) time of 7.5 seconds,1/4 mile (~400 m) time of 15.5 seconds and a (limited) top speed of 130 mph (209.21 km/h).

1995-2001

Second Generation:
1998 Chevrolet Lumina
Production 1995–2001
Body style(s) 4-door sedan
Layout FF layout
Platform W-body 1.5 Gen
Engine(s) 3.1 L L82 V6
3.1 L LG8 V6
3.4 L LQ1 V6
3.8 L L36 V6
Transmission(s) 4-speed 4T60-E automatic
4-speed 4T65-E automatic
Length 200.9 in (5103 mm)
Width 72.5 in (1842 mm)
Height 1995-98: 55.2 in (1402 mm)
1999-2001: 54.8 in (1392 mm)
Fuel capacity 17.1 US gallons (64.7 L; 14.2 imp gal)
Related Chevrolet Monte Carlo

The Lumina received a major redesign for 1995, with the Monte Carlo name being resurrected for the 2-door version previously sold as the Lumina coupe. The Euro model was dropped, replaced by the LS trim. The LHO V6 was dropped in favor of the L82 V6, also known as the 3100 SFI. This Lumina was also sold with police (code 9C3) and taxi packages after the Chevrolet Caprice was dropped after the 1996 model year.

Initial trim levels consisted of base and LS. Options included an electric sunroof, leather bucket seats, power windows, power driver seat, and AM/FM stereo with CD player.

The LTZ trim was introduced in 1997 to soften the blow from the discontinued Impala SS and Caprice. Its standard features included 16" brushed aluminum wheels, blackwall radial sport tires, sport tuned suspension, a 3.1 L V6 rated at 160 hp (120 kW) and 185 ft·lbf (251 N·m) or an optional 3.4 L V6 rated at 215 hp (160 kW) and 220 ft·lbf (300 N·m) of torque, a rear spoiler, restyled front and rear body clips (resembling the Monte Carlo Z34), a tachometer, and a floor-mounted shifter.

In 1998 the 3.4 L V6 was replaced by the 3800 Series II which made 200 hp (150 kW) and 225 ft·lbf (305 N·m) torque. Despite its increased torque, the 3.8 liter LTZ demonstrated slightly worse performance due to its lowered horsepower, with 0-60 mph (0-100 km/h) times of 7.5 seconds (as opposed to 7.2 for the LQ1) and 1/4 mile (~400 m) times of 15.7 seconds (as opposed to 15.5 for the LQ1). The car has a naturally-limited top speed of 107 mph (172 km/h) and the rev limiter kicks in at 5800 rpm.

Also in 1998, the Lumina received second generation airbags. The front-wheel drive Chevrolet Impala was introduced as a replacement for the Lumina in 2000, although GM did produce 2001 model year Luminas to be exclusively sold for rental fleets. Sales of the Lumina ended in Canada in 1999. US production ended on April 26, 2001. In some Asian countries, the Lumina continued as a rebadged Buick Century/Regal. In Latin America, the Lumina is sold under the Omega nameplate.

Trims

Throughout its lifecycle, the second generation Lumina was available in three trim levels:

Base (1995-2001): The most popular Lumina, the base model came well equipped for its price point. It had standard six-passenger seating, power locks, tilt steering wheel, dual airbags, and air conditioning. Base models were equipped with fifteen-inch steel wheels with wheel covers.

LS (1995-1999): One step above the base, LS models offered aluminum wheels, optional dual zone temperature controls, power windows (optional on Base), tachometer, higher-end stereo with GM's Delcolock, upgraded seats, and an optional 3.4 L DOHC engine or 3.8 L OHV engine in 1998.

LTZ (1997-1999): The top of the line Lumina which included alloy wheels, a choice of the 3.1 L V6 engine, 3.4L DOHC engine or 3.8 L V6 engine (1998-1999 only), power driver seat, dual zone climate control and leather with the option for deluxe cloth. A center console was standard on LTZ (optional on LS).

Engines

  • 1995-1999 3.1 L (191 in³) L82 V6
  • 1995-1997 3.4 L DOHC(207 in³) LQ1 V6
  • 1997-1999 3.8 L (231 in³) L36 V6
  • 2000-2001 3.1 L (191 in³) LG8 V6

Production totals

[1]

Year Units
1995 242,112
1996 224,553
1997 234,626
1998 208,627
1999 139,098
2000 37,493
2001 N/A
Total production 1,086,509

Middle East and South Africa

2000-2001 Chevrolet Lumina SS

1998–2007

Since 1998, the Holden Commodore has been sold as the Chevrolet Lumina in the Middle East and South Africa, and previously in Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand. A coupe version based on the Holden Monaro was also sold in the Middle East as the Chevrolet Lumina Coupe.

2007-Present

Holden released the all new VE Holden Commodore in Australia in 2006. In 2007 it was rebadged and exported from Australia as the newest generation of the Chevrolet Lumina. It is currently being sold in the Middle East and South Africa. The Holden Ute is in South Africa available as the Lumina Ute

Philippines

GM Shanghai has exported the Chinese Buick Regal to the Philippines badged as a Chevrolet Lumina.

References

  1. ^ The Encyclopedia of American Cars, 2006 Edition

External links


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