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The plant built the LX vehicles: the Chrysler 300, the Dodge Charger, and the Dodge Challenger. Kenosha "Main" Plant – Portions of the Kenosha Main Plant (later Chrysler's Kenosha Engine plant with some new additions) at 52nd Street and 30th Avenue continued to be run by Chrysler as an engine-production factory.
The Chrysler M Platform (or "M-Body") was an intermediate-sized automobile platform used by Chrysler motors from 1977 to 1989. It was a successor to the F-body , as used on the Dodge Aspen/ Plymouth Volare .
Chrysler sold its equity stake to Mitsubishi in 1993, and Diamond-Star Motors was renamed Mitsubishi Motors Manufacturing America (MMMA) on July 1, 1995. [3] Despite the departure, the two companies have maintained various co-operative manufacturing agreements since and considered all vehicle produced until 1995 [ 9 ] as Diamond Star Motors.
1975–1978 Chrysler A390 — 3-speed manual, all-synchromesh [4] 1976–1980 Chrysler A833 — 4-speed manual overdrive (NPG) [5] 1981–1986 Chrysler A460 — 4-speed manual transaxle; 1983–1984 Chrysler A465 — 5-speed manual transaxle; 1984–1990 Chrysler A525 — 5-speed manual transaxle; 1987–1989 Chrysler A520 — 5-speed manual ...
The crash sent the taxi careening onto the sidewalk, where the vehicle hit the 51-year-old woman and two men, 44 and 49. The woman was “pinned” against a fence by the vehicle, a police source said
The first use of the Challenger name by Dodge was in 1959 for marketing a "value version" of the full-sized Coronet Silver Challenger. From model years 1970 to 1974, the first generation Dodge Challenger pony car was built using the Chrysler E platform in hardtop and convertible body styles sharing major components with the Plymouth Barracuda. [1]
Learn how to download and install or uninstall the Desktop Gold software and if your computer meets the system requirements.
The K-car platform was a key automotive design platform introduced by Chrysler Corporation for the 1981 model year, featuring a transverse engine, front-wheel drive, independent front and semi-independent rear suspension configuration—a stark departure from the company's previous reliance on solid axle, rear-drive unibody configurations during the 1970s.