2004 GMC Canyon Pickup Reviews & Ratings

  Read this 2004 GMC Canyon review at UsedCarsChannel.com. These professional and consumer 2004 GMC Canyon reviews include car comparisons, road tests, interior and exterior options and features, safety information, specs, and more.
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2004 GMC Canyon Reviews

 

Welcome to the car reviews section of UsedCarsChannel.com, where you can search for consumer 2004 GMC Canyon car reviews for all trims! How does this car handle? What kind of 2004 GMC Canyon ratings did the car receive? How large is in the interior? Is it comfortable to drive? Learn all of this and more in each of the consumer 2004 GMC Canyon reviews at UsedCarsChannel.com.

 
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GMC Canyon Interior Review

The base Canyon has a no-fault interior right down to its rubber floor mats so you can get in with muddy work boots and not feel guilty. The SLE, however, has more comfort-minded interior with carpeting and more luxurious fabric on its seats.

The new cab allows about four inches additional room from side to side for a roomier front seat and a rear seat in the Crew Cab that more easily accommodates three adults across. Front and rear seats are chair height which, for the driver, allows excellent visibility over the hood and improves leg room for rear seat passengers. The front seats are still the first-class section of the cabin, but those in coach won't have to endure the pain of the old sideways-mounted seats in extended cabs. The Canyon's extended cab is large enough to orient its occasional passengers facing forward.

The instrument panel has large white numerals on a black background with the orange needles that GM loves. Lighting functions are clustered on the dash to the left of the steering wheel; there are no switches in any remote location.

Similarly, the center stack, on a raised portion of the stack on silver-colored plastic, groups the 4x4 functions, the audio and the HVAC functions each with their own. The emergency flasher button is high on the dash where it's easily seen. The cruise control function, however, is the same turn signal stalk system GM has had for decades, albeit refined. Some people hate it; others are don't mind it and are familiar with it.

The Canyon features triple seals around the doors, an example of refinement over the old Sonoma. These not only reduce water and dust intrusion, they also reduce wind noise for a quieter cab.



GMC Canyon Road Test

Our test drive vehicle was a GMC Canyon Crew Cab 4WD with the Z71 suspension. This package gives maximum ground clearance, tires designed for off-roading and a specially calibrated suspension for off-road performance without sacrificing too much on-road comfort.

We found the on-road ride to be remarkably civilized. The Z71 suspension certainly adds weight to the Canyon and there's seat-of-the-pants-noticeable jiggle from the extra weight of the off-road tires. We were able to test the four-wheel-drive system in deep, sucking mud and we climbed a greasy, rocky hillside that in the winter months becomes Pennsylvania's Jack Frost ski resort. The Canyon's performance did not disappoint. There's no doubt when the system engages; there's a small clunk when it shifts into four-wheel high (can be done on the fly) and a bigger clunk when it shifts into four-wheel low (must be stopped and in neutral). No full-time four-wheel drive is available. Four-wheel drive should not be used on dry pavement.

The Canyon feels solid. Its frame is far more rigid than the Sonoma's. This means no rattles or squeaks, and the pickup bed doesn't boom or make any other noise. The suspension is able to work more precisely, without interference from chassis flex, resulting in a better, more controlled ride.

Maximum towing is 4,000 pounds, much less than the Sonoma's 6,000. This was done to improve ride comfort, admittedly at the sacrifice of some utility, but the improvement in ride, particularly at the rear of the vehicle, is remarkable. A washboard dirt road in Virginia didn't make the Canyon giggle like a go-go dancer in overdrive, as many 4x4s would. GM determined that most who tow more than 4,000 pounds do so with a full-size pickup.

We found the Canyon to be stable and predictable around the curves and a solid stopper when the binders were applied, aided by ABS on loose surfaces. The Canyon is a truck, however, so it doesn't corner and brake like a car. We found it generally tending strongly to understeer, meaning that when cornered hard it's more likely to go straight ahead than spin out.

The 3.5-liter Vortec 3500 five-cylinder engine, a dual-overhead cam unit with variable cam timing is rated at 220 horsepower. It develops 225 pounds-feet of torque at 2800 rpm. Its torque, that twisting force that propels the truck from intersections and helps it tow heavy loads up long grades, is spread over a broad rpm range. The all-aluminum engine construction aids in cooling and, because of its lower weight, save fuel and permits quicker acceleration. Recommended fuel is unleaded regular.

The five-cylinder engine idles and cruises quietly, but the uncommon number of cylinders makes a peculiar siren-like sound when accelerating. It's not bad, just different. GMC boasts best-in-class power with this engine, making more power than competitive V6s.

The 175-horsepower four-cylinder engine is essentially the five-cylinder engine minus one cylinder.The GMC Canyon features distinctive packaging and styling from the mechanically identical Chevrolet Colorado. With its new chassis and body, the Canyon benefits from the most recent technology, putting it way out ahead of older designs such as the Ford Ranger.



GMC Canyon Lineup

The GMC Canyon is available in two trim levels: the SL, essentially work truck trim, and the SLE, outfitted in civvies rather than dungarees. The Canyon can be further subdivided into those with two-wheel and four-wheel drive, and again by cab, whether standard, extended or crew. And that's before engine, transmission and suspension choices. Consult your neighborhood mathematician for the combinations and permutations attendant thereto.

SL trim includes 15-inch aluminum wheels, split-bench folding seats in base cloth, vinyl floor covering, AM/FM radio and air conditioning. The SLE adds or substitutes front bucket seats in upgrade cloth, a floor console and armrest, color-keyed carpeting, CD player, a rear seat on extended cab models, and a tilt wheel and cruise control on extended cab and crew cab models.

Adding the Z71 High Stance off-road package raises the Canyon 3.6 inches, and adds about $4,000 to the price. The Z71 package, available with two-wheel or four-wheel drive, includes larger color-keyed flares, fog lamps, tow hooks, leather-wrapped wheel, skid plates (on 4x4 only), locking differential and, on two-wheel-drive models, traction control.

Side-curtain air bags are optional ($235). The power convenience group ($500) includes power windows, locks and mirrors. Leather, heated, power adjustable driver and passenger seats ($1,495) are available as a package on Crew Cab models only.



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