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About Jim Glover Chevrolet:
Jim Glover Chevrolet opened its doors in 2001 and has provided second-to-none Customer Satisfaction thereafter. Our dealership is located on 18 beautiful acres at 31st and Memorial which is centrally located and easy to access from any where in Tulsa. The selection of new and pre-owned vehicles is outstanding, so finding a new or used vehicle will never be a problem. We are a locally owned, privately held dealership with only one agenda: To be the best New and Used Chevrolet Dealership while maintaining the best overall customer satisfaction in the process. Among these traits you will find a friendly, knowledgeable staff in both the sales and service areas of the dealership, coupled with customer-friendly store and service hours. We provide an "At Home" experience which makes the Automotive purchase process more enjoyable and relaxing than what would be found elsewhere in the area. We invite everyone to come out and enjoy the benefits of The Jim Glover Chevrolet Experience, where great personal and professional relationships are made.
Some Topics for Discussion:
SUV’s Technology Found On Chevrolet Products:
2007 Chevy Suburban Stabilitrac
2007 Chevy Tahoe Anti-Roll-Avoidance
2007 Chevy Trailblazer ActiveEngine Management
2007 Chevy Avalanche Magnetic Ride Control
2007 Chevy Equinox Traction Control
2007 Chevy HHR Allison Transmission
Duramax
Silverado Pick-up Trucks E/85 Ethanol
2007 Chevy 1500 Classic Flex/Fuel Capable
2007 Chevy 2500 Classic H.I.D.
2007 Chevy 3500 Classic H.U.D. Heads-Up-Display
G-Meter
2007 Chevy 1500 New Body OnStar
2007 Chevy 2500 New Body XM Satellite Radio
2007 Chevy 3500 New Body RDS
Electronic Assisted Steering
Sedans
2007 Chevy Impala
2007 Chevy Malibu
2007 Chevy Cobalt
2007 Chevy Aveo
Coupes/Sports Cars
2007 Chevy Corvette
2007 Chevy Cobalt SS/SC
2007 Chevy Monte Carlo SS/SC
2007 Chevy Impala SS
2007 Chevy Malibu SS
Convertibles
2007 Chevy Corvette
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Name: David
11-22-2006
Send Comments To Our Blog: I was wondering if you had anyone give you details on the fuel milage on the new diesel 2500?
I currently own a 2007 crew cab 4X4 with 6,000 miles and I am getting about 16.5 miles to the gallon with no load. I was under the impression I would get closer to 20 miles to the gallon.
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Reply:
David the fuel mileage on the Duramax diesel will range between 12 miles to 22 miles to the gallon. I know that is a big difference. You can look here http://www.62-65-dieselpage.com this is a forum for Chevrolet diesel trucks. You will also find useful information here http://www.thedieselpage.com/mileage.htm I believe after 10,000 to 15,000 miles your fuel mileage will increase.
Frank Davis
Jim Glover Chevrolet
Internet Director
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12-11-2006
WE WOULD LIKE TO CONGRATULATE PADDY METCALF OF PAWHUSKA FOR WINNING THE FREE TRIP OFFERED BY JIM GLOVER CHEVROLET. THE METCALFS HAVE NOT YET DECIDED ON COZUMEL OR CANCUN, OR THE CRUISE. WE WILL KEEP YOU UPDATED. THANK YOU ALL FOR PARTICIPATING.
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From: Gary Clark
I was wondering if there were reports of the stock tires for 2005 Chevy Cobalts wearing fast. I have just over 16600 miles on mine and all four tires are at the tread indicator mark and the fronts are past even though I had Smith Chevy rotate my tires with my oil changes. I think this is a little too soon for them to wear since I bought the car brand new and the tires came on it. I have to replace the tires this Friday which is too soon after buying the car for this to be done. If there is anything that has come up about the tires please let me know so if I don't have to pay for them, this close to Christmas, I will not have to. Other then this one experience with my tires I have been extremely pleased with Jim Glover and plan to come back in the next 18 to 24 months for another vehicle. Thank you for your time and addressing the problem.
Response From Eric Teehee
I checked with my service advisors and both of the "front-end" mechanics and none of them have seen any TSB's (trouble shooting bulletins) indicating a problem like that. One of them did say, however, that if the tires are not kept properly rotated (which you have done) then the back tires will chop themselves up due to the car being so light weight in the rear. There are a couple of websites out there that may be able to help you out. They are free of charge but you must register as a member. They are: www.gmdelta.com, and www.yourcobalt.com . I subscribe to a forum for Ford Contours and it has definitely saved me a ton of time and money. Maybe this will help out. Let me know if you have any other questions. I would love to help.
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Paddy Metcalf and his wife will be going on a four day cruise, we look forward to hearing from them to see how it went.
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January 5th 2007
Name: Mike
E-mail: @hotmail.com
Send Comments To Our Blog: I purchased a 2007 Malibu on Dec. 2, 2006 and on Dec. 7th it would not start. After waiting 20-25 minutes, it started and worked fine until Dec. 31st. It didn't start for 20-25 minutes and when it finally did, a light on the dash showed "not under full power" and the car would only accelerate to 60mph. Is there a TSB on starting problems for the 07 Malibu?
Response from Eric Teehee
Mike,
I checked with my service advisor and there are no TSB's for a no-start condition on '07 Malibus. There will be no problem setting up an appointment to bring the vehicle in. It could be something as minor as a failing Crank Position Sensor which will cause a no start condition. We will have to run a diagnostic test on the vehicle to retrieve the code from the computer and diagnose the issue from there. The gentleman you will want to see or speak with is Todd Galliart in the service drive. He is very knowledgable and can get everything taken care of for you. To schedule an appointment with him or ask any other questions you may dial him directly at 918.660.7581. Thanks for utilizing the Blog and please let us know if we can help in any other way
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Monday, January 08, 2007 12:33 PM
Name: cash
E-mail: @AOL.COM
Send Comments To Our Blog: HOW TO INSTAL A NEW RADIO IN MY 94 FULLSIZE CHEVY TRUCK
Respone from Eric Teehee
Cash,
In order to install a new radio in your Chevy 1500 you must first remove the dash bezel that surrounds the gauge cluster and radio. This can be done by simply prying the bezel/surround off. It is held in by tabs that can be pulled out and popped back in. It is easier to have the key in the ignition in order to lower the gear shift lever (assuming this is an automatic) to its lowest position (low). Also tilt the steering wheel down as far as possible. Once you pop the surround off you will have access to the four bolts that hold the radio in place. Go ahead and remove these. Next you will have to remove the lower dash panel (next to the driver’s knee). From here you must reach up and into the rear of the radio to release the four harnesses that send the signals to and from the radio. This is a very tight are and there are sharp aluminum bracketry so wear some sort of glove to avoid cutting yourself. This is the hardest part of the install and reinstall of the new radio. There is also sometimes an amplifier that is in the way making it difficult to reach the harnesses. This amplifier is bolted to part of the aluminum bracket with 10 or 12 MM bolts if I remember correctly. If this is in your way, simply unbolt it and move it to the side as best as you can. Assuming you make it this far without giving up (you’ll find that this won’t be a fun project) you can now remove the factory stereo from the housing. The next parts you will need are the Install kit from Metra or another reliable company (you can find these install kits at any electronics store that sells aftermarket CD players) which will cost you anywhere from 15-30 dollars. All the kit does is replace the factory housing that bolts to the inside of the dash. It is made of ABS plastic. Take the aluminum “can” that slides over the radio and fit it into the new install kit. Using a screwdriver, pry the tabs in all the way around the “can” in order to hold it firmly in place to the install kit. The install kit will likely need to have some brackets attached to it before you secure the “can” to it. The brackets are provided in the kit and generally have instructions to help you along. The other piece of gear that you need to have is the wiring harness adapter. This adapter is color coded to the wiring harness that comes with the new radio. All you have to do is match the colors and connect them together using a good quality crimp connector. I never used the orange wires which enable the dimmer switch to control the dimmer on your new radio. I have found that doing so often blows fuses. Your truck doesn’t have a power antennae, so don’t hook that wire up either. Once you have this done go ahead and connect the factory harness to the newly connected harness adapter and radio harness. The factory harness will only fit to the harness adapter one way, so don’t force the connection. Once you have this done, pull all the slack you can down into the area under the dash leaving just enough room to connect the radio harness and harness adapter to the back of the radio. Position the radio in place and bolt in the install kit using the brackets that you attached to the kit. Once it is secure go ahead and test that the radio functions properly before you button everything back up. It is never fun when you have everything back together and find that it doesn’t work right. If all is good, reinstall the dash bezel/surround and underdash panel. Finally, enjoy. Please let us know if you have any other questions.
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I own a 2004 corvette. I may be interested in having a remote start installed on my car. Is it available and what would be the cost?
Gary W
Gary
Remote Start can be had with any aftermarket alarm system that supports that function. It can even be done on manual transmission cars now. There are also kits that can be purchased to work in tandem with your factory alarm. I used to install car audio/navigation/alarm systems and it is my experience that anything made by DEi is a quality system as well as Clifford and AutoPage. The AutoPage alarm is great due to the fact that it actually shows you on the remote (via LCD screen) when your vehicle is started and notifies you if the alarm has been tripped by vibrating or beeping. It will even show you which part of the vehicle was touched when setting off the alarm. Other things that you may want to consider if you purchase a full on alarm system is how much insurance liability is guaranteed if the vehicle DOES get stolen or broken into. Most of these systems can be bought through our parts and accessories department as well as be installed here (which I recommend due to the more complicated alarm systems that come standard which may need to be bypassed if you choose an aftermarket system). The cost on these systems vary. You could expect to give anywhere from 250.00-600.00 dollars. The installation is an extra charge based on the functions that are supported which you choose to have operable. Let me know if you have any other questions regarding this.
Eric Teehee
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2006 contest winner
Frank
Just got back from the trip that Jim Glover sent us on. It was great, 87 degrees in cosumel. I had a cold so I could not dive but we enjoyed a ATV excursion thru the jungle. The ship was great and I think I gained 10 pounds while on the ship. Thank you very much for such a wonderful trip, and thanks to Spears travel for setting it up.
Thankfully
Paddy T. Metcalf
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Thunder on the Tundra: Toyota Trucks Ahead in 2007 Recalls
Our Buy American Mention of the Week!
by Roger Simmermaker
February 18, 2007
If you’ve merely done a moderate amount of Internet surfing or cracked open a newspaper lately - just about any newspaper - you’ve undoubtedly seen the news that Toyota has once again passed Ford in worldwide auto sales and may pass GM sometime this year.
But what you may not have seen is that Toyota has already passed both Ford and GM in a different category - automotive recalls.
Although we’ve barely passed mid-February, Toyota has already recalled 533,417 vehicles this year in a mix that, according to www.AutoRecalls.us, includes Tundras Sequoias and Camrys. That puts Toyota on track to recall more than the over 1.76 million autos they recalled in the U.S. and Japan in 2006, and the 2.2 million they recalled in 2005 when they recalled more cars than they built.
What’s more, the current recall related to the Turdra trucks and Sequioa SUVs is similar to the same defect in 800,000 of the same vehicles in 2005. Maybe somebody at Toyota isn’t paying attention?
Hopefully the American consumers are. Recall numbers by domestic companies (GM and Ford) so far this year are as follows: Ford, 128,163; Chevrolet, 4,829; and Pontiac, 1,602.
Chrysler - a German company masquerading as an American company with plans to start importing cars from China in 2008 - has recalled 77,432 vehicles so far in 2007.
To be sure, high recall numbers are not good. Auto companies would much rather prefer high sales numbers instead. As I’ve already mentioned, the media is abuzz that GM may lose its crown this year to Toyota in worldwide auto sales. But for that to ever happen in the U.S. sales category, it’s going to take several more years since GM has a U.S. market share of 24.3% compared to 15.4% for Toyota. Even Ford, despite their recent troubles, has a higher domestic market share than Toyota at 17.5%.
But if GM loses their worldwide crown this year, it may actually turn out to be a blessing in disguise. Here’s why:
First, GM spent 17% less per vehicle this January compared to last January, which means they are more profitable on a per-unit basis. In fact, GM expects to report a profit for the most recent quarter.
Second, it may be good for GM to step aside temporarily, for now, and let Toyota take all the ammunition that is always aimed at the top dog of the industry so there is less pressure and fewer distractions. And when GM combines their more-solid profitability and their improved quality together, their public perception will also improve.
Then they can use these admirable qualities to prepare to surge back on top at the precise time Toyota is in the top slot with their recall surge in the news. Toyota’s timing at being number one worldwide would create further skepticism about whether they really deserve their reputation for untarnished quality.
According to Business Week’s January 22, 2007 issue, Toyota has recalled 9.3 million vehicles in the last three years, which is nearly four times the number of recalls in the three year period prior to 2004.
Other recent news that won’t sit well with a Camry-conscious public is the class-action lawsuit recently settled by Toyota regarding ruinous oil sludge buildup covering 3.5 million Toyota and Lexus (yes, Lexus) vehicles.
Optimistic statements by Toyota executives aren’t going to cut it for long - particularly when they don’t match well with reality. Denial in the Camry-company camp seems to be setting in. Toyota’s North American president Jim Press recently disputed the suggestion that his company no longer enjoys a large lead in reliability over the American competition. Speculating on the thoughts of American car company well-wishers while speaking at the recent Chicago Auto Show, Press said "I think there’s some hope that the gap in quality is closing, but it really isn’t."
Oh, really? That’s a pretty strong comment considering Toyota recalled 1.27 million vehicles in one swoop in 2005, recording the biggest-ever recall in history for a Japanese car company.
But, recalls notwithstanding, the evidence that the quality gap is closing is pretty indisputable, and the evidence has been piling up for more than just the last couple of years. With the following facts, you can make your argument for American car quality fully bulletproof - even among your most ardent foreign car-defending friends.
* A February 10, 2003 Business Week told of how undeniable it was that GM cars are better built than they used to be. The article cited an improved J.D. Power quality ranking and a Consumer Reports recommendation for 13 of GM’s vehicles (equal to 41% of their sales volume) compared to just five recommended GM vehicles for the previous year. The Chevy Impala beat the Camry in a quality survey, and Buick beat BMW.
* Business Week also reported September 23, 2003 that GM boosted its productivity 23% in six years while Toyota’s productivity remained flat, and that GM’s most-productive factories now beat Toyota’s most-productive factories.
* A 2004 Consumer Reports ranking selected the Buick Regal as the most reliable among family sedans, beating the Toyota Camry, Honda Accord and Nissan Maxima. They also gave recommended ratings for four Ford models, including the Ford Focus.
* J.D. Power and Associates awarded Cadillac’s Lansing Grand River assembly center its highest honor - the Gold Plant Quality Award - in 2004.
* An August 4, 2004 Wall Street Journal article said Toyota’s lead in quality and reliability has narrowed in some segments and disappeared in others. Quality problems were reportedly "mushrooming."
* The Toyota Camry hasn’t been awarded the best in its segment since the year 2000, but many Americans continue to regard it as the number one model in terms of quality. Toyota’s Kentucky Camry plant was awarded with high initial quality rankings by J.D. Power from the late 1980s through the 1990s, but it plummeted to number 26 in 2002, improving to only number 14 in 2004, while two GM factories and one Ford factory took the top three spots that year.
* In a J.D. Power Initial Quality Survey of new 2004 cars, Chevy placed second behind Honda and Toyota sank to number three.
* As far back as at least 2003, Business Week has reported that American consumers regard certain foreign cars as better built than American cars, even when facts prove otherwise.
* Fast-forwarding to 2006, J.D. Power shows Mercury, Buick and Cadillac beat Toyota in a list of dependable cars. Two Buicks and a Mercury took the top three midsize car awards; Mercury, Ford and Buick took the top three large car awards; Ford took the midsize van award and the midsize truck award; and GMC and Cadillac took the large MAV (multi-purpose activity vehicle) and large premium MAV awards, respectively.
* In an article about trust issues, Business Week’s December 11, 2006 issue stated "GM’s quality nearly equals Toyota’s." Perceived quality among the American public is another story, however. The difference between the actual quality of American cars and the perceived quality of American cars is the "perception gap."
* In the same article, J.D. Power’s director for retail research said "Actual quality is so close" - discussing the quality rankings of GMC, Chevrolet and Cadillac placing them on par with both Honda and Toyota.
* And most recently, of course, the Ford Fusion and Mercury Milan beat the Honda Accord and Toyota Camry according to Consumer Reports.
What’s needed among automotive senior executives, and much of the media as well, is a return to intellectual honesty. Everyone tends to have their favorites and biases (mine are pretty obvious) but I pride myself in sticking with the facts to back up my comments.
When Toyotas North American president says that the quality gap isn’t really closing, he’s not being intellectually honest.
Some editorial writers aren’t either. When Douglas Brinkley trumpeted Indiana’s success in a Wall Street Journal article last year for attracting a Honda plant to their state - even though it took $140 million in tax credits and incentives - he wasn’t what you would call "intellectually honest." In an apparent attempt to convince the reader that Honda doesn’t send any automobiles to the U.S. from outside the country, he said the following: "Turning farm fields into factories, that’s what Henry Ford used to do. Today, in the heartland, it’s being done by Honda - a company that doesn’t manufacture imports but builds American-made cars."
Such statements lead the reader to think that some Japanese companies make all of their cars in the USA. Hardly. In fact, according to a January 8, 2007 Wall Street Journal article, the NAP ratio - a ratio that compares how many cars are built in North America vs. the number of cars imported - is slipping for Toyota. And according to Toyota internal documentation, the ratio is going to worsen next year.
Occasionally I’ll find an editorial writer that dares to step away from the foreign biases of others in the same industry and rate cars objectively, rather than relying on the mindset of the question "will American cars ever match the Japanese cars in quality?"
Editorial Director for Consumer Guide Automotive Mark Bilek departed from the typical mindset of his colleagues back in June of 2005 by declaring that the Ford Five Hundred was the best car he’d ever driven.
That’s good news for Ford, since the Five Hundred is being renamed the Taurus and will get several more second-looks because of the Taurus’ higher name recognition. Billek said he judged the Five Hundred based on "what it is" and how well it "fulfills its mission." Based on this, his opinion was that the Five Hundred was "simply the best full-size sedan sold in America."
I am confident, however, that people like Toyota’s Jim Press can be somewhat honest in their statements about the competition from time to time. He did say that the "car of the show" at the Detroit Auto Show in January was, for him, none other than the Chevy Malibu. Maybe there’s hope for intellectual honesty after all.
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