
The base Uplander ($24,350) comes well equipped, with standard air conditioning, power windows, power locks, tilt steering column, cruise control and a decent stereo with a single CD player and MP3 capability. Its second-row seat is a two-place bench, and its third-row seat splits 50/50 to increase passenger/cargo flexibility.
The Uplander LS ($26,995) adds a rear window defroster and wiper, dark-tinted rear glass, remote keyless entry and power rear vent windows. The Uplander LT ($29,385) is the most elaborately equipped, with standard power driver's seat, second-row captain's chairs with a folding utility table between them, a power rear sliding door on the passenger side, brushed aluminum roof rails and a single-screen DVD entertainment system with two infrared headphone sets.
All-wheel drive, which GM calls VersaTrak ($2000), is available on Uplander LS and LT.
Our favorite option is the remote starter ($175), which allows the Uplander to be started from inside the house or across a parking lot. The aftermarket has made a mint with remote starters for years, a nice feature when it's cold.
Second-row captain's chairs are optional on lower-trim Uplanders. Other stand-alone options include rear Cargo Convenience storage bins ($285), XM Satellite radio ($325), traction control ($195), roof rails ($50) and the 3500-pound towing package ($170). Popular option groups include a Premium Seating Package ($1,350) with leather surfaces for the first and second row, power front passenger seat and front seat heaters, a six-CD changer with XM ($620), and a Convenience Package with a power sliding rear door on the driver's side and rear parking assist ($545).
The optional PhatNoize system adds a second video screen to the single-DVD entertainment system and a wallet-sized 40-gig hard drive that slips into the Uplander's overhead rail system. That's enough storage space for 10,000 audio files in virtually any format, or 40 feature films in the MPEG format. PhatNoize has a voice-browsing feature that allows the driver to cycle through menu offerings with buttons on the steering wheel hub and a USB port that allows photographs to be loaded directly from a digital camera. Moreover, the PhatNoize hard drive is easily removed and attached to a PC, to be loaded with whatever an Uplander owner chooses.
Safety features include OnStar (including automatic notification when airbags deploy) as standard equipment. Four-wheel ABS is standard, as are front-impact airbags. Front side-impact airbags are standard on the LT and optional ($350) on other models; GM's StabiliTrak skid-control system ($450) is also an option. Uplander falls short of best-in-class when it comes to safety equipment, however, because it does not offer curtain-style head-protection airbags, which are now offered in some other minivans.
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