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October 30, 2009

Hey Fiat: What About the Chrysler 200C?

By Rob Einaudi

Editor-in-Chief

There were some great comments in my blog about Fiat’s plan for Chrysler. Apparently, the Sebring is getting the axe. Well, what about the 200C concept that was shown at NAIAS? Remember that? This is truly what the Sebring could/should be. I sure hope it doesn’t end up in the dustbin.

Hey Fiat: What About the Chrysler 200C?

October 28, 2009

Chrysler and Fiat: a Modest Proposal

By Rob Einaudi

Editor-in-Chief

There was a fair amount of noise generated by yesterday’s Wall Street Journal article on Fiat’s plans for Chrysler. Ray Wert at Jalopnik has the Cliff notes. Ok, here’s my take:

Chrysler

Yes, redesign the 300C, yes keep the Town and Country, sure go ahead and kill the PT Cruiser. But keep the Sebring. Only, it needs to be a mid-sized RWD sedan (see my notes on the Dodge Avenger below).

Dodge

Go ahead and kill the Caliber and the Nitro. Not sure about the Grand Caravan, and I have no opinion on the Journey. But let’s keep the Avenger. Like I said the with Sebring above, this car needs to be a mid-size RWD sedan. Think of it as a modern day Dodge Dart. Heck, maybe just call it a Dart. It should be available as a two and four door, maybe as wagon and convertible as well. Power should come from efficient four and six bangers. AWD should be an option. Now, I think the next generation Challenger should be based on this new mid-sized RWD platform as well. The Challenger needs to shrink a bit if it’s gonna stay competitive. Redesign the Charger as a big TWO DOOR muscle car. Call the four door version of the Charger a Magnum or Coronet.

Ram Trucks

Seriously? Is this for real? Just keep ‘em Dodges.

Jeep

Go ahead and kill the Commander and the Compass. Of course keep the Wrangler and the Grand Cherokee. But I think they should keep the Patriot. Jeep needs a car-based Subaru Outback fighter and the Patriot is a half-decent offering, though it needs some love. They also need an affordable Cherokee-type vehicle. The Liberty never really did it for me. So why not just bring back the Cherokee? Oh yeah, Jeep needs a small pickup, too. Bring back the Comanche.

Fiat and Alfa Romeo

I’m very happy to see Fiat and Alfa come back to the US. The Fiat 500 is very cool and should do well. And I’m stoked about the Mito and Milano. But where the heck is the Alfa Spider?

So what do you think of my plan? Totally unrealistic? Not possible with the new CAFE standards? Probably. But it’s nice to dream…

Chrysler: A Modest Proposal

September 24, 2009

Coming to the USA

By Chris Trout

Troutster52

The American auto manufacturing companies have continued to stand under the scrutinizing spotlight of media attention since the government issued the bailout “loans.” Government Motors is scrambling to shave some weight from their oppressive cost structure and prove their sustainability. All the while, the media all but deifies Ford for their pass on free taxpayer money. Despite all this attention on Ford and GM, Chrysler just drifts in and out of the headlines. As many of you are aware, Fiat bargained for a portion of Chrysler, rescuing them from bankruptcy and hopefully breathing some new life into both companies.

With all this impending change, I thought it appropriate to expose some of the background on this Italian auto manufacturer and venture to guess what we might expect to see coming from both Chrysler and the family of Fiat brands.

Continue reading after the jump!

Thanks to Fiat.Com and Alfa Romeo.Com for the Photos!

Continue reading "Coming to the USA" »

August 24, 2009

Nostalgic Cars at Simpson Design

By Antonio Alvendia

Antonio Alvendia

We’ve had mega coverage of the Pacific Northwest’s incredible drift scene lately, so how ’bout a stroll down the path less traveled with some Olde World European classics? These are cars you won’t see hanging their tails out in a wall-scraping slide, but that doesn’t mean they’re any less fascinating. To find them, we had to hop onto one of Washington’s many state ferry boats and hitch a ride to Whidbey Island, about an hour north of Seattle and home of Simpson Design. Continue reading and view more photos on MotorMavens

July 2, 2009

CarDomain Obscure Muscle Car Parking Lot: the Dual Ghia & Ghia L6.4

By Jim Brennan

UDMan

Welcome to the CarDomain Obscure Muscle Car Parking Lot, a regular feature which aims to expand the notion of what a muscle car is, and to see if something Italian can be classified as one. It’s time for something a little different, and in honor of the merger between Chrysler and Fiat, we are going to highlight the “Italianate Chryslers” of the past. Can these Designer Italian bodied beauties be classified as true Muscle? Let’s take a look at the svelte, yet powerful Dual Ghia, and it’s successor, the Ghia L6.4.

Continue reading after the jump!

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June 10, 2009

The Jeep Jinx: Will Fiat be Next?

By Rich Truesdell

Automotive Traveler

Many have heard of the Sports Illustrated Jinx: An athlete or team is pictured on the cover of the magazine, then proceeds to lose an important game, match, or competition. Is there an automotive counterpart?

First let me say that I am a Jeep owner, a Jeep historian, and a Jeep enthusiast. I own a 1969 Jeep Super Wagoneer, I’ve published more than a dozen Jeep articles, and I’ve attended many Jeep Jamborees, Camp Jeep events, and have twice driven the Rubicon Trail from start to finish in a Jeep, so it pains me to write about something that can be considered a coincidence or superstition: the Jeep Jinx. But the facts are inarguable; virtually every one of the corporate entities that has owned the Jeep brand has fallen on hard times and most are no longer with us.

Continue reading over at Automotive Traveler.

May 27, 2009

Fiat Freaked Out by Chrysler's Vanishing Value

By Brian Lohnes

BangShift.com

By a general consensus, most gearheads feel that the Chrysler takeover by Fiat will end in some sort of disaster. The question is only if it will be long-term disaster, short-term disaster, or the latest option, an explosion on the launch pad.

Several pension funds in Indiana have filed court paperwork that if recognized would delay the merger/sale/government takeover of Chrysler to the point that it would not longer be feasible and the company would be liquidated and essentially dissolve in front of our very eyes. The documents have been filed because those pension funds are not being paid their outstanding debts while other debtors with less debt and less tenure are being paid first.

Interestingly enough, the papers filed by the funds are asking the court to check the constitutionality of what is happening and state their concern that the government does not have the authority to do what they are doing.

This has much larger implications that Chrysler. If the case is taken up and makes its way up the food chain we could literally be seeing a scenario with the Supreme Court ruling on this. If that happened, Chrysler would be dead and buried, but the legal precedent would be huge.

Click here to see the whole Reuters story and join us in counting down until Fiat jumps ship.

Fiat

May 4, 2009

Fiat Attempts to Add GM's Opel Operations to Its Chrysler Acquisition

By Rich Truesdell

Automotive Traveler

In some ways the concept is so audacious that it could not have been imagined just a few months ago. Fiat’s Sergio Marchionne is well on his way to positioning Fiat as an auto producer on the same scale of Toyota and Volkswagen. In a February interview that appeared in the April 2009 issue of UK’s Car magazine, Marchionne said that there will only be six major auto makers standing when the current round of consolidation concludes in the next 24 months. With these aggressive steps, first with Chrysler and now with Opel, Marchionne is trying to insure that Fiat is among the survivors. The near-doubling of Fiat’s stock in the last 12 month is clear evidence that Marchionne is a force to be reckoned with. Continue reading at Automotive Traveler

Fiat Attempts to Add GM's Opel Operations to Its Chrysler Acquisition

May 1, 2009

What Lies in Store for Chrysler?

By Ron Honig

WaytooFurious

Being a Mopar nut it has been very disheartening for me to watch Chrysler implode recently. If things proceed as planned, and Chrysler does wind up in the hands of Fiat, what will the result be? Although it is funny, hopefully its nothing like this cartoon that was in the Herald Sun today.

bumpers

April 28, 2009

Speed and Beauty on Display at the 2009 All-Italian Show

By Sam Barer

Sound Classics

Coming of age in the Pacific Northwest during the Ford, Carter and Reagan administrations, exposure to Italian cars came in small and sporadic doses. Sure, there were the less-than-rare sightings of Fiats and Alfas, but the only Lancia I remember was my third grade teacher’s blue Beta Coupe, there was a kid at school whose father had a grey Ferrari 308 GTS, and I once – just once, I saw a white Lamborghini Countach driving up Clyde Hill driving home from high school.

This makes the phenomenal turnout at the Fiat Enthusiasts Northwest club’s annual All-Italian show at the XXX Rootbeer in Issaquah, WA more amazing. With 100 beautiful Italian machines congregating in one Seattle-area suburb, it’s proof that world has changed drastically in just a few decades.

Fiat, Maserati, Alfa Romeo, Lancia, De Tomaso, and Lamborghini were all well-represented. Ferrari had the best showing with nearly a third of the total field wearing a prancing horse badge.

And, of course, the color of the day was Rossa Corsa. Between the cars and clothes, there was more red at the show than in all the Tarantino movies combined. Continue reading after the jump!

Continue reading "Speed and Beauty on Display at the 2009 All-Italian Show" »