Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just got the new Traverse. I really like it.
The Acadia was redesigned and now is smaller than the Traverse. There really was no trunk space with the 3rd row up.
The Enclave was nice but I just couldn't figure out how to change gears. I'm sure in time I would have figured it out but it's a cross between an automatic and a stick. I didn't love the car enough to want to figure it out.
The Pilot was nice but didn't have an option of a power third row. That meant that I would have to crawl into the car in order to pull up the 3rd row. Most days I wear a dress and heels so this was a deal breaker for me.
I just didn't want a mini van so I didn't look at them.
Um... the enclave is an automatic transmission. No gear changing necessary.
If you do any kind of mountain driving you don't just leave your car in Drive--you downshift as needed. But if you never leave DC, not a problem that you don't know how cars work.
What are you taking about? I do a ton of mountain driving, not just in WV, but the Alps, Utah, Colorado, Canada, etc. There is no need to manually downshift an automatic.
Have fun replacing your brakes way more often than you need to. Just because you don’t do it doesn’t mean it’s not a good idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just got the new Traverse. I really like it.
The Acadia was redesigned and now is smaller than the Traverse. There really was no trunk space with the 3rd row up.
The Enclave was nice but I just couldn't figure out how to change gears. I'm sure in time I would have figured it out but it's a cross between an automatic and a stick. I didn't love the car enough to want to figure it out.
The Pilot was nice but didn't have an option of a power third row. That meant that I would have to crawl into the car in order to pull up the 3rd row. Most days I wear a dress and heels so this was a deal breaker for me.
I just didn't want a mini van so I didn't look at them.
Um... the enclave is an automatic transmission. No gear changing necessary.
Yes, it's an automatic. But there's something different about how you put it into park and drive. If I remember correctly, you had to move the gear shift over and up or over and down while engaging a button. The sales person said it was a European type automatic shifter. In any case, it didn't work for me. I can drive an automatic. I can drive a stick. I'm too old to learn how to drive some other mechanism. Maybe if I really loved the rest of the car, but I didn't.
No.
The enclave is just a regular transmission. There is nothing different at all about it.
Here's a video that shows what I'm talking about
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c34sZ5oHfuc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just got the new Traverse. I really like it.
The Acadia was redesigned and now is smaller than the Traverse. There really was no trunk space with the 3rd row up.
The Enclave was nice but I just couldn't figure out how to change gears. I'm sure in time I would have figured it out but it's a cross between an automatic and a stick. I didn't love the car enough to want to figure it out.
The Pilot was nice but didn't have an option of a power third row. That meant that I would have to crawl into the car in order to pull up the 3rd row. Most days I wear a dress and heels so this was a deal breaker for me.
I just didn't want a mini van so I didn't look at them.
Um... the enclave is an automatic transmission. No gear changing necessary.
If you do any kind of mountain driving you don't just leave your car in Drive--you downshift as needed. But if you never leave DC, not a problem that you don't know how cars work.
What are you taking about? I do a ton of mountain driving, not just in WV, but the Alps, Utah, Colorado, Canada, etc. There is no need to manually downshift an automatic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just got the new Traverse. I really like it.
The Acadia was redesigned and now is smaller than the Traverse. There really was no trunk space with the 3rd row up.
The Enclave was nice but I just couldn't figure out how to change gears. I'm sure in time I would have figured it out but it's a cross between an automatic and a stick. I didn't love the car enough to want to figure it out.
The Pilot was nice but didn't have an option of a power third row. That meant that I would have to crawl into the car in order to pull up the 3rd row. Most days I wear a dress and heels so this was a deal breaker for me.
I just didn't want a mini van so I didn't look at them.
Um... the enclave is an automatic transmission. No gear changing necessary.
Yes, it's an automatic. But there's something different about how you put it into park and drive. If I remember correctly, you had to move the gear shift over and up or over and down while engaging a button. The sales person said it was a European type automatic shifter. In any case, it didn't work for me. I can drive an automatic. I can drive a stick. I'm too old to learn how to drive some other mechanism. Maybe if I really loved the rest of the car, but I didn't.
No.
The enclave is just a regular transmission. There is nothing different at all about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just got the new Traverse. I really like it.
The Acadia was redesigned and now is smaller than the Traverse. There really was no trunk space with the 3rd row up.
The Enclave was nice but I just couldn't figure out how to change gears. I'm sure in time I would have figured it out but it's a cross between an automatic and a stick. I didn't love the car enough to want to figure it out.
The Pilot was nice but didn't have an option of a power third row. That meant that I would have to crawl into the car in order to pull up the 3rd row. Most days I wear a dress and heels so this was a deal breaker for me.
I just didn't want a mini van so I didn't look at them.
Um... the enclave is an automatic transmission. No gear changing necessary.
If you do any kind of mountain driving you don't just leave your car in Drive--you downshift as needed. But if you never leave DC, not a problem that you don't know how cars work.
Anonymous wrote:The Acadia was redesigned and now is smaller than the Traverse. There really was no trunk space with the 3rd row up.
Yup, I had a 2011 Acadia, loved it and wanted to get another one, but didn’t like the redesign. So a found a 2016 Acadia with 15K miles for 2/3 of the price of a new one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just got the new Traverse. I really like it.
The Acadia was redesigned and now is smaller than the Traverse. There really was no trunk space with the 3rd row up.
The Enclave was nice but I just couldn't figure out how to change gears. I'm sure in time I would have figured it out but it's a cross between an automatic and a stick. I didn't love the car enough to want to figure it out.
The Pilot was nice but didn't have an option of a power third row. That meant that I would have to crawl into the car in order to pull up the 3rd row. Most days I wear a dress and heels so this was a deal breaker for me.
I just didn't want a mini van so I didn't look at them.
Um... the enclave is an automatic transmission. No gear changing necessary.
If you do any kind of mountain driving you don't just leave your car in Drive--you downshift as needed. But if you never leave DC, not a problem that you don't know how cars work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just got the new Traverse. I really like it.
The Acadia was redesigned and now is smaller than the Traverse. There really was no trunk space with the 3rd row up.
The Enclave was nice but I just couldn't figure out how to change gears. I'm sure in time I would have figured it out but it's a cross between an automatic and a stick. I didn't love the car enough to want to figure it out.
The Pilot was nice but didn't have an option of a power third row. That meant that I would have to crawl into the car in order to pull up the 3rd row. Most days I wear a dress and heels so this was a deal breaker for me.
I just didn't want a mini van so I didn't look at them.
Um... the enclave is an automatic transmission. No gear changing necessary.
Yes, it's an automatic. But there's something different about how you put it into park and drive. If I remember correctly, you had to move the gear shift over and up or over and down while engaging a button. The sales person said it was a European type automatic shifter. In any case, it didn't work for me. I can drive an automatic. I can drive a stick. I'm too old to learn how to drive some other mechanism. Maybe if I really loved the rest of the car, but I didn't.
Anonymous wrote:I just got the new Traverse. I really like it.
The Acadia was redesigned and now is smaller than the Traverse. There really was no trunk space with the 3rd row up.
The Enclave was nice but I just couldn't figure out how to change gears. I'm sure in time I would have figured it out but it's a cross between an automatic and a stick. I didn't love the car enough to want to figure it out.
The Pilot was nice but didn't have an option of a power third row. That meant that I would have to crawl into the car in order to pull up the 3rd row. Most days I wear a dress and heels so this was a deal breaker for me.
I just didn't want a mini van so I didn't look at them.