1998 Chevrolet Venture

1998 Chevrolet Venture 2 Dr STD Passenger Van
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Fuel economy: N/A
True Cost to Own®: Not available

Used TMV from $1,908

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What Edmunds Says

Not Available

Pros

Standard ABS. Standard side airbags. Optional traction control. Optional child safety seats. Optional power sliding right side door. Powerful V6 engine.

Cons

Rear seats are uncomfortably close to the floor. Toothy chrome grille.

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Available Models

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Base

  • 3.4L V6 engine 
  • Automatic transmission 
  • Side/Curtain Airbags 

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Used TMV from $1,908

APPRAISE YOUR CAR submodelindex:0,make:Chevrolet, submodel:Venture, year:1998, trim.trimName:Base, zip:nozip

LS

  • 3.4L V6 engine 
  • Automatic transmission 
  • Side/Curtain Airbags 
  • Traction Control 

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Used TMV from $2,211

APPRAISE YOUR CAR submodelindex:1,make:Chevrolet, submodel:Venture, year:1998, trim.trimName:LS, zip:nozip

What's New for 1998

Venture is the first minivan to get side-impact airbags. Other changes include the availability of a cargo van edition, a wider variety of dual door models, and an optional power sliding door on regular wheelbase vans. Power rear window vents are also added for 1998. Front airbags deploy with less force thanks to second-generation technology.

Review

If you think Chevrolet's minivan resembles a popular household mini-vac, think again. The hideous Lumina Minivan has gone to that plastic recycling center in car heaven, replaced by a conservative, steel-bodied family hauler that was developed in concert with GM's European Opel division. The Venture, as the van is so aptly monikered, is an outstanding entry in the minivan market, featuring an available driver's side sliding door, optional traction control, optional integrated child seats, standard antilock brakes and enough power to make it fun to drive.

Two versions are available on two different wheelbases; base or LS trim on a 112-inch or 120-inch wheelbase. Choose between three- or four-door body styles, and all Ventures come equipped with a 180-horsepower 3.4-liter V6 engine. Designed to satisfy consumers on either side of the Atlantic Ocean, the Venture surprises with a communicative chassis, sharp steering, and nimble handling while providing room inside for up to seven passengers and a good amount of their belongings.

Like to drink and drive (soda, water or juice, that is)? The Venture accommodates with cup and drink box holders galore. Don't worry too much about Junior spilling Hawaiian Punch either, because Chevrolet Scotchgards all fabrics at the factory. Several seating configurations are available, with the most user-friendly but least comfortable setup being the multi-configurable modular buckets. Weighing just 38 pounds each, they're easy to install, remove and re-arrange, but they're mighty uncomfortable for adults. Front buckets are much more soothing for elder backsides.

Cool stuff includes optional rear seat audio controls that allow rear passengers to listen to a CD via headphones while front passengers catch NPR on the radio. Also available are rear seat heat and air conditioning controls, a load-leveling suspension complete with auxiliary air hose and daytime running lamps that illuminate parking lights instead of headlights. Uncool is the toothy chrome eggcrate grille up front that screams "MOMMOBILE." At least there's no fake wood siding, no body cladding and no gold package.

Our main reservation about the Venture concerns crashworthiness. Last year, the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety conducted 40 mph offset crash tests of the Pontiac Trans Sport, which is essentially a clone of the Venture. The Trans Sport did not fare well in the test. True, there are no federal regulations in place regarding offset crashworthiness, but the Ford Windstar has performed wonderfully in both offset and head-on crash testing. The National Highway and Traffic Safety Administration crashed a Venture head-on into a fixed barrier later in the year, and the van performed well. Contradictory results mean consumers will have to weigh this van more carefully against the competition.

One new feature added to the Venture for 1998 might sway favor in Chevy's direction. This stylish minivan is the first of its ilk to receive standard side-impact airbags for both front passengers. Other changes include the addition of a cargo van model, and expanded availability of dual door and power sliding door versions. Rear vent windows are now power operated, and second-row captain's chairs are newly available with seven-passenger seating.

We like the Venture, in case you hadn't already guessed. Pontiac and Oldsmobile serve up versions of the same van (Oldsmobile's is called Silhouette) and any of the three would make a dandy alternative to Chrysler and import minivans. In the case of the Chevy, though, we'll wait for stylists to offer an LTZ model with body-color grille (yeah, like that's gonna happen).

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