click analytics

» Archive for the 'Dodge' Category

Out ‘n about: Dodge Caravan R/T goes shopping

Monday, September 8th, 2008 by admin

Reader Joe Donaldson was out taking photos over the weekend when he happened upon a more-interesting-than-normal Dodge Caravan parked outside a Best Buy. While we generally find the terms “interesting” and “Dodge Caravan” to be mutually exclusive, we’ll grant an exception here, because what Don stumbled upon was none other than a Caravan R/T sporting manufacturer tags. Is it the very same Caravan R/T that we saw in Detroit back in January? Who knows, but from the looks of things, it’s identically equipped, with the hood scoop, darkened grille area, big wheels, Brembos, dual exhaust, and the requisite badging. We’re not particularly big on minivans, but we thought that the Caravan R/T show car was pretty cool, and seeing it in the wild does nothing to change that opinion.

2009 Dodge Journey R/T

Saturday, September 6th, 2008 by admin

The 2009 Dodge Journey carries the size and shape of a typical crossover, and it has seating for seven and all the amenities you could possibly ask for at $30,000. On paper, the Journey has a plenty of things in its favor, yet we had our doubts.

First off, it looks a lot like the Dodge Caravan, which works against the Journey when considering that many crossover buyers want to avoid the minivan stigma. It’s also based on the less than impressive Chrysler Sebring platform, which we have found to be just awful. Then there is Chrysler’s corporate 3.5L engine, which is less powerful, refined and efficient than similarly sized engines from its competition. Chrysler’s recent track record for vehicles that are less than class competitive also lent support to our notion that the Journey might be a letdown. Regardless, we tried to clear our minds of these things when the Journey arrived for a week-long stay in the Autoblog Garage. Hit the jump to see how Chrysler’s new crossover fared.




Our well equipped Journey R/T FWD finished in Inferno Red Crystal Pearl Coat Dodge came equipped with a sunroof, leather seating surfaces, a navigation system, second row DVD screen, and MyGig multimedia system among its many options. We basically got the “works” package, which tipped the price up considerably from the $26,785 base price of the Journey R/T to $32,375.

On the outside, the Journey has clean, straight lines and an athletic stance. The design also holds true to the main design themes of Chrysler’s crosshair division. Our R/T model came equipped with large 19-inch chrome wheels that are shaded by the vehicle’s bulging wheel arches. The minimalist corporate crosshair grille helps keep things simple up front, yet doesn’t help the Journey make a memorable impression in the very crowded CUV segment. True story: on two occasions we walked right by the Journey while trying to find it in a parking lot. That doesn’t happen when you’re driving Nissan’s new Murano, for instance.

Chrysler has struggled with interiors over the past several years, and the Auburn Hills-based automaker worked hard to get things right with the Journey. Materials are considerably better than they are in the Dodge Avenger, for example, with soft-touch surfaces on the dash and a more comfortable center console. Unfortunately, the improvements over other Chrysler interiors just aren’t enough. For instance, while designers provided a flat surface for the driver’s left arm to rest on the window sill, it’s made of hard plastic and made our arm sore. The arm right below that’s built into the door has a little give to it, but it’s too low for a short arm to reach. The Journey’s seats are also stiff and lacking in proper thigh support for long drives.

One thing Chrysler excels at is adding nifty features that make life easier for both the driver and passengers, and the Journey excels in this area. There is a storage area under the front passenger seat, a place above the glove box to keep your beverage cool, and gaming ports for the LCD screen. Oour personal favorite is the integrated child safety seats, which can be accessed by simply pulling a cord. As the father of two five year-olds, it’s nice not switching car seats between my wife’s car and mine. The integrated safety seats also mean I don’t have to haul around two thoroughly stained pink booster seats that just get in the way when the kids aren’t in the car.

We were left scratching our heads, however, with Dodge’s decision to put seven seats in a space that can only comfortably fit five. The third row is so small that my 12-year-old and her friend had their knees up to their chests because there was no leg room. To make room for the ill-fitting third row, Chrysler also had to move the second row forward, which has far from class-leading leg room as it is.

While the crossover segment isn’t where you’d expect to find a well-heeled, athletic chassis, the segment overall has improved greatly in this area over the past couple years. Given that the Journey is based on the floating, ponderous Sebring platform, we didn’t have high hopes for it. Fortunately, our bias was easily stripped as the Journey was surprisingly capable on the open road. A trip to Chrysler’s Chelsea proving grounds showed that the Journey could take hard cornering with relative ease and not a scary amount of body roll, and the Journey felt solid and in control on rough pavement.

Steering was another area where the Journey surprised us based on our exposure to the Sebring, as it provides good feedback of the road beneath your feet. While the Sebring’s lifeless steering wheel is downright scary, the Journey’s actually communicates the road to you and isn’t so overly assisted that it feels like a wet noodle in your hand.

Chrysler’s 3.5L V6 is the top shelf engine offered in the Journey, and while it provides adequate grunt to get you going, this ancient mill is still far from similar engine offerings by Toyota, Honda, Nissan, Ford and GM. With 235 horsepower and 232 lb-ft of torque, It’s missing too much twisting force off the line and during highway passing situations. After driving other CUVs with 3.5L and larger V6 engines, the Journey gives the impression that there’s an even smaller engine under hood. The six speed-automatic transmission, however, felt smoother than one we tried in the Sebring, which felt choppy and ill-calibrated. We would have liked the slush box to hold its gears a little longer during spirited driving, but Chrysler did provide a manual shifting mode. The Journey averaged a ho-hum 20.6 mpg during our time behind the wheel, which is almost exactly what we got in the much larger and more powerful Ford Flex.

While our one week with the Dodge Journey R/T was anything but exciting, Chrysler’s newest crossover did perform beyond our expectations. Unfortunately, our expectations for the Journey were low, and this segment is filled with machines that virtues more appealing than the Journey. Chrysler has done a great job differentiating the Journey from its competition with neat features like storage bins and integrated child seats, but the issues we have with it are much more fundamental. While not quite good enough to stack up against the best vehicles in its class, the Dodge Journey R/T should find a few buyers who are enamored by its tricks.

Dodge Nitro and Jeep Liberty to merge into one vehicle

Saturday, September 6th, 2008 by admin

News out of Toledo is that Chrysler plans to drop either the Jeep Liberty or the Dodge Nitro within four years and merge the two vehicles into one. These two ‘utes are built on the same exact platform, use basically the same engines and are built in the same Toledo plant. There is no good reason for both of them to exist, which makes us wonder why they ever did in the first place and why it will take three years to correct. Regardless, considering that Jeep will always be the off-road brand, it would make most sense to keep the Liberty name going. Losing the Nitro, meanwhile, might actually help Dodge improve its image as a volume performance brand.

This convergence of duplicate vehicles is part of Chrysler’s Project Genesis plan. Under the plan, dealers will begin to offer Chrysler, Jeep and Dodge vehicles under the same roof. Other nameplates that are or should be converged include the Jeep Compass/Jeep Patriot and Dodge Durango/Chrysler Aspen, the latter of which could see themselves replaced by a new model with Jeep underpinnings.

Chrysler’s Jim Press talks brand strategy at WAJ this week

Saturday, September 6th, 2008 by admin

Chrysler has unveiled a few plans for the future and, rather than using past successes to carve the path, will adapt its course according to the changing market. While speaking at the recent Western Automotive Journalists’ dinner, Chrysler President Jim Press touched on the need to generate brand identity amongst Jeep, Dodge and Chrysler. While each brand currently has a core theme, Jeep – off-road, Dodge – volume and performance, Chrysler – affordable luxury, there have been many recent deviations, such as the conglomeration that is the Jeep Compass. Press hopes to put an end to that trend and focus the company’s aim at the automotive enthusiast. Toyota can keep the automotive appliance title, Press wants Chrysler to appeal to drivers rather than consumers.

Nevertheless, actions speak louder than words and Press backs up his claims through the current curtailing of vehicle production and the scheduled release of seven new vehicles come 2010. Like other manufacturers, Chrysler is aggressively pursuing alternative powertrain configurations, particularly electric drive. In case no one has noticed yet, 2010 will be a big year for the American automotive industry. It will be the point when the roller coaster ride reaches its end and some folks end up with motion sickness while others get a rush of adrenaline. Hopefully Chrysler can find themselves in the latter category.

Chrysler design done with the ‘edge,’ going organic

Thursday, September 4th, 2008 by admin

Trevor Creed resigned from the position of Chrysler’s head of design, and as of today is succeeded by Ralph Gilles, the man who designed the 300C. Since every change at the top comes with a “new sheriff in town” speech — or at least one-liner — this is what Gilles had to say: “It’s definitely time for a new aesthetic at Chrysler. … We’re done with the ‘edge’ look.”

Gilles says he wants the Pentastar’s cars to look more “organic.” This being art, however, that could really mean anything. For concrete examples and practical considerations he mentioned the Dodge Zeo and Chrysler Ecovoyager, and said that he wants to design “sexy” cars that will appeal around the world. Intriguing statements from the gent known for a car that epitomizes the American muscle sedan, but we are all in favor, and we say “aye.” The only question is how soon will they start the redesign, and what will organic look like?

CONFIRMED: Nissan Titan to get HEMI-fied

Thursday, September 4th, 2008 by admin

Even in a down pickup truck market, the all-new Dodge Ram should be a boon to Chrysler and not just because it’s a far better truck than the one it replaces. The new Ram will also be the next Nissan Titan, a deal that helps Chrysler keep its truck factories running closer to maximum capacity. With Nissan borrowing Ram mechanicals and engineering, the assumption has been that Chrysler’s 5.7L HEMI V8 was going to be part of the package. Nissan officials have continually denied that any decision about the truck’s engine of choice has yet to be made and that its own Evolution 5.6L powerplant was still under consideration.

Chrysler chairman Jim Press put any speculation to rest when he declared at an LA Motor Guild meeting recently that the Nissan Titan would indeed receive HEMI power. After our friend Mike Levine from Pickuptrucks.com broke the news, Nissan responded by saying that it has made no decisions concerning the HEMI engine and when it does, the announcement would come from Nissan. It makes sense that the next Titan would be HEMI-fied, especially considering that the engineering needed to mate the HEMI and Ram platform has already been done and paid for, and part logistics are already in sync with truck assembly. Plus, the new HEMI produces a class-leading 390 horsepower and gets decent fuel economy for a big, burly truck engine. Nissan could do much worse.

Kuwait orders 150 Dodge Charger police cars

Thursday, September 4th, 2008 by admin

Choosing them for their portrayed image of “strength and power,” officials in Kuwait have ordered 150 Dodge Chargers to be modified as police vehicles. As the Charger is the leading volume vehicle for Chrysler LLC in the Middle East, the choice doesn’t come as much of a surprise. Delivery of the cop cars, however, isn’t expected to take place for another couple months. In the meantime, the lot of them are heading to Canfield Equipment Service in Michigan where they’ll be fitted for their new Kuwaiti roles in traffic, security, and emergency response. (Here’s hoping none of our readers get a chance to check them out from the back seat once they’re in service).

2009 Dodge Journey R/T

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008 by admin

The 2009 Dodge Journey carries the size and condition of a common crossover, and it has seating for seven and all the luxuries you am able to probably ask for at $30,000. On paper, the Journey has a heaps of Times in its favor, yet we had our doubts.

First off, it appears a lot as if the Dodge Caravan, that operates against the Journey when getting ready to so most crossover homeowners would like to prevent the minivan stigma. It’s as well centered on the dwindled as opposed to amazing Chrysler Sebring platform, that we own discovered to be merely awful. Then there is Chrysler’s corporate 3.5L engine, that is lessened powerful, refined and compact as opposed to similarly sized engines from what i read in its competition. Chrysler’s the latest track peak for vehicles overly are ebbed as opposed to course competitory as well lent substantiation to our idea this the Journey should be a letdown. Regardless, we tried to obvious our minds of these types of conditions when the Journey arrived for a week-long remain in the Autoblog Garage. Hit the jump to see how Chrysler’s new crossover fared.

First Peek: 2009 Dodge Ram R/T

Thursday, May 8th, 2008 by admin

09 dodge ram rt, 09DodgeRamRt, 2009 dodge ram, 2009 dodge ram rt, 2009DodgeRam, 2009DodgeRamRt, dodge ram, dodge ram rt, DodgeRam, DodgeRamRt, ram, ram rt, RamRt

You know those videos that sometimes automatically start playing when you visit automaker websites? You know how you usually click right past them? Sometimes, they’re worth paying attention to. If you visit to the 2009 Dodge Ram website, you’re treated to a tour of the truck by Ralph Gilles and Mark Allen. Before the design guys give their spiel, however, you get a very brief glimpse of a poster showing ‘09 Ram body styles and options/accessories. There, clear as day, is a shot of the forthcoming Ram R/T.

When the new Ram was initially unveiled, PickupTrucks.com confirmed that the R/T was indeed on the way. Word at the time was that the R/T would be a standard-cab, 4×2, short-bed truck with a HEMI, 5-speed auto, and a 4.10 rear axle ratio. As you can see in the photo at right, the truck gets a monochrome treatment (a la the Ram Sport), a deep chin spoiler, and a hood reminiscent of the one used on the Challenger R/T and SRT8. As PickupTrucks.com reported, expect the Ram R/T’s powertrain combo to deliver a sub-7 second 0-60 time. It’ll be interesting to see the R/T’s marketplace reception, given that gas prices are likely to continue climbing for the foreseeable future. Unfortunately for Chrysler, it’s a less-than-perfect environment for welcoming a new performance-oriented truck. Nothing a little cash on the hood and a locked-in gas price can’t fix, right? Thanks for the tip, David!

[Source: Dodge]

Dodge Challenger SRT8 sports G-meter, built-in 0-60 timer

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008 by admin

challenger, dodge, dodge challenger, dodge challenger srt8, DodgeChallenger, DodgeChallengerSrt8, rcd, srt reconfigurable display, srt8, SrtReconfigurableDisplay

We wade through an unhealthy amount of press releases each day, so even when something big hits – like the release of the Challenger SRT8 – we sometimes miss the occasional detail. Such is the case with Dodge’s new pony car, which apparently comes equipped with an “SRT-exclusive Reconfigurable Display” (RCD). What does that mean? Well, you can customize the readout at the bottom of the SRT8’s 180 mph speedo to display 0-60 acceleration times, 60-0 braking times, 1/4-mile times and g-forces to see if your numbers and Dodge’s agree. According to the video after the jump, you can also log your best runs and see how you faired at a later (read: safer) time.

Read