Compared with Britney Spears, they don't move too quickly. There's no buzz about minivans.
As more manufacturers crowd in for a share of the 1.2 million units sold each year, the traditional makes have moved upmarket, with increasing refinement and a dazzling array of equipment and features.
Safety-as demonstrated by the comprehensive passive and active systems on the Odyssey and the Toyota Sienna-is also a huge emphasis. And convenience-as in by the Chrysler Town Country's Stow 'n Go seating-has evolved to a high art.
As good as the instrument panel and center console are, a pastiche of LED and LCD displays create visual conflicts. Nevertheless, the leather interior is highly comfortable and functional.
In mere seconds and with nearly effortless, one-handed operation, the second- and third-row seats collapse and tumble through trap doors and settle into wells below the floor, providing a vast, flat load space. With the seats up, the wells can be used for secret storage; in fact, this may be the long-sought, ideal spot for hiding Christmas gifts.
Like the Toyota and the Honda, the Town Country's front and power-sliding side doors are armored with high-strength steel impact beams. Glaringly absent from the Town and Country's options list is stability control, a system available on the Toyota and Honda that can help prevent skids and rollovers.
