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Cars, trucks: Sold to VW in 1980. Closed by VW in 1987. Current seat of National University of La Matanza. [2] Chrysler Fevre: Monte Chingolo: 1969: 1980: Dodge D-Series Trucks, Dodge 1500: Purchased from Siam Automotores. Sold to VW in 1980. Closed by VW in the early 1990s. Chrysler Argentina: Córdoba: 1997: 2001
The Chrysler A platform was the basis for smaller rear wheel drive cars in the 1960s. These cars are sometimes referred to as A-body cars. Cars using the A platform in various markets around the world include: 1960-1976 Plymouth Valiant; 1960-1981 Chrysler Valiant; 1961-1962 Dodge Lancer; 1961-1963 DeSoto Rebel; 1963-1976 Dodge Dart; 1964-1969 ...
The cars were otherwise mechanically identical. Similarly, the 1988-1992 Premier and Monaco models differed only by styling and shared the same front-wheel drive B-body platform. The Plymouth B-body series ultimately comprised four cars with nearly identical outward appearances (differing only in trim package, drive train and accessories).
Chrysler wordmark. The American car company Chrysler has produced many different models of cars under the brand name. In addition to Chrysler models built in the United States, the list also includes vehicles manufactured in other countries and cars designed by other independent corporations that were rebranded for Chrysler.
The museum was founded in 1994 by Robert E. Petersen, a publishing giant who helped to shape American car culture. Comedian Jay Leno is one of the museum's biggest fans and has had a lifelong love ...
They had wheelbases ranging from 119 to 124 inches, they were generally loaded with features, and all C-Body cars used a torsion bar front suspension design. [ 1 ] In 1969, Chrysler redesigned the C-Body platform to incorporate its new “Fuselage” styling that brought the upper and lower sections of body into one uniformly shaped design, in ...
The company offered reskinned, somewhat shorter full-sized C-body models for 1974, but despite trimming 3.5 inches from the full-size Plymouth [1] and 8 inches from the full-size Dodge, [2] these were still very much full-sized cars and sold poorly in the wake of the 1973 OPEC oil embargo.
The M platform was the final production passenger car with a solid rear axle mounted on Hotchkiss-style, parallel semi-elliptical leaf springs sold in the U.S. [1] The M-cars were built at St. Louis, Missouri and Newark, Delaware with initial debut (LeBaron/Diplomat series) in spring 1977 as 1977 1/2 models, [ 2 ] with production shifting to ...