![]() We've taken OnStar navigation for a test drive, and although it works reasonably well, you have to pay $26.90 a month for the Directions & Connections plan. ![]() Buyers get one complimentary year of OnStar's Safe & Sound plan. No Bluetooth cell-phone integration or onboard navigation is offered, but the Aura comes with OnStar. A subwoofer would have added some oomph to the sound. The sound quality is above average, a little muddy in the midrange but no distortion at higher volume. The system uses eight speakers, with two tweeter/woofer combos mounted on the rear deck, a woofer in each front door, and tweeters mounted in the A pillars on either side of the windshield. The stereo also has an auxiliary input jack in its face, a convenient feature for hooking up an MP3 player or an iPod. One particularly nice feature of this stereo is that it can hold up to six pages with six presets on each. XM satellite radio is optional with this stereo. The CD changer handles MP3 discs and does a good job of showing ID3 tag information, letting you choose to view the song title, the artist, the album, or the folder name. Its monochrome amber, dot-matrix display isn't very modern, but its six-disc in-dash changer is. ![]() The major tech element in the cabin is the stereo. The rubberized material over the dashboard is nice, though. The panels also felt a little loose in our review car, which doesn't bode well for long-term durability. The result doesn't fool anyone, and we don't know why Saturn would even try. In an attempt to look luxurious, surfaces are covered with glossy plastic intended to look like wood, which is passable, and the aforementioned molded plastic panels in the door, which attempt to match the seats with a stitched leather look. The Aura's cabin is roomy, as befits Saturn's largest sedan.
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