LS ($25,770) adds an overhead console, a roof rack, and aluminum wheels, and makes the power sliding door standard on the passenger side. A power sliding door for the driver's side is optional.
LT ($29,880) rides on the long wheelbase exclusively, and comes with second-row captain's chairs and separate front and rear air conditioners. Traction control and a touring suspension with automatic load leveling are standard as well.
The Warner Bros. Edition ($30,040) adds a DVD-based entertainment center that should take the "are we there yet?" out of even the longest trip. Some owners say it has eliminated the phrase, "Don't make me stop the car and come back there," from their parental repertoire. That alone could easily be worth a thousand bucks. Like the LS, the Warner Bros. Edition comes only on the longer wheelbase.
Extended-wheelbase LS, LT, and Warner Bros. versions can all be ordered with Versatrak all-wheel drive (AWD). An independent rear suspension, four-wheel disc brakes and 16-inch wheels are part of the AWD package.
LATCH (Lower Anchors and Top tethers for Children) child safety seat anchors come standard. GM's OnStar communications system comes as standard equipment on LS, LT, and Warner Bros. models. Also available is an ultrasonic rear parking aid to alert drivers about hard-to-see objects hiding behind the van.
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