Seven Chevrolets Named Most Popular on Edmunds.com

Sports cars to midsize pickups represented


Edmunds.com announced that seven Chevrolet models were named a 2015 Most Popular on Edmunds.com Vehicle. This is the second year in a row Chevrolet has had seven models win the award.
“Across the board, Chevrolet’s model lineup is the strongest it’s ever been,” said Brian Sweeney, U.S. vice president of Chevrolet. “This award proves that Chevrolet is delivering the exciting designs, innovative technologies and safety features that customers want most.” 
The seven winners cover a range of Chevrolet vehicles, with the Impala, Corvette, Camaro, Traverse, Tahoe, Colorado and Silverado 1500 each earning the honor.
The 2015 Most Popular on Edmunds.com vehicle list includes the three models in each vehicle segment with the highest car-shopper consideration.
Edmunds defines car-shopper consideration as the total of the monthly unique desktop website visitors, measured by unique cookies, to the Edmunds.com research and inventory pages, including model-year detail pages, reviews, build-and-price tools and new car inventory. This data was collected for each model from Jan. 1 to Oct. 31, 2014.

To view Kupper Chevrolet's complete line-up of Chevrolet vehicles, visit us on the lot or online.

Fear of Night Driving? 2014 Chevrolet Impala Can Help

With Daylight Saving Time ending this Sunday, many Bismarck-Mandan area residents will drive in the dark more often. For those uneasy with night driving, the 2014 Chevrolet Impala can help brighten the task.

The enhanced visibility provided by Impala’s headlamps can help Bismarck-Mandan area drivers avoid crashes after dark, the riskiest time of day. According to a study cited by the Federal Highway Administration, the risk of a fatality at night among drivers not impaired by alcohol is more than two times higher than in daytime due to less visibility.

According to a 2009 study conducted by the Lighting Research Center at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, high-intensity discharge, or HID, headlamps like those on the new Impala can help drivers see objects in the road sooner than other types of headlamps, allowing for greater stopping distance.


Safety and customer satisfaction drove design and development of Impala's new headlamps. Designers
benchmarked them against the best in the industry. Impala received the highest possible 5-Star Overall Vehicle Score for safety as part of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s New Car Assessment Program.

“The Impala’s new headlamps are a key to one of the most comprehensive collections of safety features in the segment,” said Bob Kupper of Kupper Chevrolet. “And the designers’ attention to detail help give the car a first-rate appearance.”

All 2014 Impala models are equipped with projector beam headlamp technology, a first for the redesigned flagship sedan. The LS and LT models use halogen projectors, while the up-level LTZ uses HID bi-functional xenon projectors that offer crisper and brighter illumination.

Both types of projector distribute light evenly across the front of the car, providing a wider range of visibility than other headlamps. Impala’s new headlamps use curved reflectors and “prescription” lenses designed to project brighter light farther and with more directional accuracy. They also feature a light shield designed to reduce glare for oncoming traffic.

Impala’s low-profile black-and-chrome headlamps highlight the new model’s exterior, giving it a slightly sinister appearance. Impala’s designers were able to narrow the headlamp opening by eliminating the reflector-optic cavity in favor of a smaller lamp with bi-functional high/low-beam operation controlled in the projector by the light shield.

Extra chrome trim with metallized Chevrolet “bowtie” accents over the side marker reflector stretch horizontally to the corner of the car, emphasizing the sleek appearance of the lamp and the width of the car.
To further enhance the appearance, the headlamp designers placed an inner lens over the turn-signal cavity, helping to obscure the bulb while dispersing its light, giving a dramatic “fire-in-the-hole” appearance when lit.
The LTZ model accents the HID bulb with a light-emitting diode, or LED, halo ring designed to give an expensive appearance while functioning as a parking lamp. The model’s LED daytime running lamps improve visibility at any time of day for Bismarck-Mandan area drivers.