Today’s Rare Ride will upset some of you. It’s one of those cars that was very common in its day, entirely disposable, and a prime example of the characterless econobox. Yet because it was such a throwaway, nobody ever saved one – except this one.
Visiting us from 21 years ago, it’s a Chevy Metro with 400 miles.
GM introduced its second-generation Metro for the 1995 model year, a rounded and more modern vehicle than the first Geo Metro on offer from 1989 through 1994. The new Metro was again based on the GM M platform, which was really old by the mid-Nineties. M was a slight update to the 1983 Suzuki Cultus platform, and GM used it on various Suzuki, Chevrolet, Holden, and Subaru vehicles around the globe. Like a cockroach, M refused to die and was in production through 2016 as the Suzuki Cultus for the Pakistan market.
But back to the M Metro. Available as a three-door hatchback or derpy four-door sedan with a nice rear-wheel-arch, the Metro was built in Ingersoll, Ontario at GM’s CAMI Assembly. Speaking of which, Canadians experienced the Metro as the Pontiac Firefly while other markets saw it as the Suzuki Swift. North America itself received a new Suzuki Swift, but only as a lowly three-door between 1995 and 2000. Under Metro’s hood was one of three very small engines: A 1.0-liter inline-three, or two different versions of the same 1.3-liter inline-four. Transmissions were five-speed if manual or just three if automatic. The 1.0 used throttle body injection, made 50 horsepower and was available through 2000. It was the last vehicle on sale in North America with TBI. The other two engines offered fuel injection and produced 72 and 79 horsepower, respectively.
The Metro received a new lease on life in 1998, as GM killed off Geo and introduced a Metro wearing a fancy new bowtie. The branding update accompanied revised front and rear clips, and the arrival of an updated SOHC version of the 1.3 engine with 16 valves. That was the last notable update to Metro through its final year in 2001, where only a sedan was available and only in the LSi trim (I4 powered). Metro was eventually succeeded by the recently departed and Daewoo-developed Aveo.
Today’s Rare Ride is for sale on BaT, a website which attracts sensible people who pay reasonable prices for used cars. It’s a three-door in the bare-bones 1.0-liter specification. Over the last 21 years, it’s had one owner and has traveled exactly 402 miles. It has one (recent) service record at a local Chevrolet dealer. Pretty much everything on the Metro is manual, but it does have air conditioning. At the time of writing, there are six days left in the auction, and the Metro’s been bid to a shocking $10,989. We live in Bizarro World.
[Images: YouTube]
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