Dodge Challenger News: 2009 R/T and SE Models Debut

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So, when the Camaro comes out in 2009 and gets probably identical MPG numbers, will you eat your words?

Nope because if GM doesn't make the Camaro efficient they will have done an epic fail as well. Just because I think GM is the best American company doesn't mean I don't hold them to the same standards that I would the other two.
 
I assume you meant 18mpg.

But really that number sucks, the Blazer got that and it was running around on technology from the late 80's. It's 2007 going on 2008, we should be using better technology to get better fuel mileage while getting more power. What the hell have engineers been working on for the past 20 years besides half-assed designs and bigger cup holders?
 
Joey D
It's 2007 going on 2008, we should be using better technology to get better fuel mileage while getting more power.
I understand your point, but that is simply not a realistic idea. For any manufacturer. As technology went up, weight went up double. My dad's Neon gets high 30s when he drives it prudently (read: when mom drives it). The Caliber struggles to get out of the 20s. And it isn't only domestic manufacturers either. The lowest of the low Honda Civics has dropped nearly 10 MPG. Some manufacturers have gone up, yes, but only a minority.
I feel that your standards are simply too high for the car (or any cars, for that matter) compared to the facts. Especially for performance cars such as these.
Trucks are another matter entirely.

More than likely, the Camaro will be slotted in between the Challenger SRT-8 and GT500 for gas mileage (assuming the 18 combined figure is accurate), and it is no fault of either company for making them that way.
 
When a Suburban can get an estimated 17mpg all around rating I have issues with a smaller lighter vehicle getting the same. A Suburban is bigger then some people's homes and has enough umph to jump start God yet it still can do 17mpg.

I don't have unrealistic standards, the reason automakers keep coming out with this utter crap is because consumers buy it and then they bitch about mileage. I hated the fuel mileage in my truck so I went out and bought one of the most efficient new vehicles I could. Auto companies are dumb, people are eventually going to get sick of rising gas prices and they are going to be demanding better mileage from their vehicles but they won't want to lose the power.

I'm not an engineer so I can't think up anything, but seriously there are hundreds of eggheads right down the street from my house at the Chrysler HQ being paid to figure this stuff out. Add a seventh gear for better highway driving, install lighter parts, I don't know they pay them to think so they should be coming up with something.
 
I understand and agree with all of that. But you can't wag the finger at Chrysler for being right in line with its competitors.
 
Hill start assist?

This car just failed right there.

The last thing I want driving a manual is someone who doesn't know how to. My car has been hit by crap drivers twice in the less than a year that I've had it. Keep bad drivers off the road, don't help them.
 
Keep bad drivers off the road, don't help them.

Then talk to our lawmakers about raising funding to create proper driving classes for our children, because no amount of gagetry is gonna keep the clueless from driving cluelessly. And, while I disagree with the hill start control, I can think of one place on my daily commute where I'd use it daily.
 
I understand and agree with all of that. But you can't wag the finger at Chrysler for being right in line with its competitors.

Yes I can, Chrysler is a terrible company and if they want a leg up on the competition they need to quit building on par products and come up with something better then the competition. I think out of the Camaro, Mustang, and Challenger the last thing I would is the Dodge.
 
So what you are essentially saying is that the only way Chrysler can even compete is by building a product leagues ahead of its competitors? I'm sure even then you would say it isn't good enough... :rolleyes: The fact that you would choose the Challenger last out of the three is hardly an informed decision based on the car's quality, either.
I would still like to know why you feel a high horsepower sports car needs to get outstanding mileage, especially when all of its competitors will be just as good or worse.
 
Yes I can, Chrysler is a terrible company and if they want a leg up on the competition they need to quit building on par products and come up with something better then the competition. I think out of the Camaro, Mustang, and Challenger the last thing I would is the Dodge.

Chrysler used to be a good company, then the Germans ruined everything.
 
It doesn't need outstanding mileage but it still needs to be decent. I'm guessing it will be lower then 18mpg considering the gas tax that is placed on it, it will probably be 14/18 which is awful. Seriously, it is 2008 car need to be fuel efficient while being high horsepower, several cars are already fast and efficient (Golf GTI, Mini Cooper S, Mazdaspeed3). If other companies can figure it out why can't Dodge? Sticking a big V8 in something is past it's prime, we are in an age of forced induction which works better.

Look I'm not expecting them to get 35/40mpg with the Challenger, but over 20mpg isn't asking much. Chevy did it with the Vette and that's a fairly unsophisticated car. I know you are going to say because it's lighter and whatnot and that's exactly right. If companies quit making their cars fat you would see faster vehicles with better fuel mileage.

And yes the only way Chrysler will ever be worth a damn is if it quits half assing it's vehicles and comes out with something revolutionary. It did it with the Caravan back in the 80's so I don't see why they can't do they same thing today.

As far as quality goes all I need to do is see that it is a product of modern Chrysler and I know it will be utter rubbish. The people who buy this car are mis-informed shoppers.

Chrysler used to be a good company, then the Germans ruined everything.

Quite right, I thought Chrysler did a great job with the original Neon (as an economy car), the Caravan, and the Omni. Not to mention the K car which helped out.
 
Seriously, it is 2008 car need to be fuel efficient while being high horsepower, several cars are already fast and efficient (Golf GTI, Mini Cooper S, Mazdaspeed3). If other companies can figure it out why can't Dodge?
A whole bunch of huge flaws in your reasoning:
  1. The Golf GTI, Mini Cooper S and Mazdaspeed 3 are not high horsepower cars. Especially when compared to a 425BHP car.
  2. Those cars? Yeah, they are pretty small. The 300C is a Mercedes S-Class sized sedan, and the Challenger won't be much smaller. Do I need to explain why that is a retarded comparison?
  3. Your standards for fuel efficiency are still those of an idealist who is thoroughly unconnected to reality. Big cars weigh more. High weight lowers fuel efficiency. As does high horsepower, which is needed to make high weight go fast. Combine the two, and it shouldn't be surprising that you don't get that much efficiency. It isn't as simple as "make the cars lighter" no matter how many times you repeat yourself.
Sticking a big V8 in something is past it's prime, we are in an age of forced induction which works better.
And how many Challengers would you expect Dodge to sell if it was sold with a pissant Turbo 4? Or the Camaro, for that matter? You are missing the point of a reborn muscle car, I'm afraid.

Chevy did it with the Vette and that's a fairly unsophisticated car.
No, it doesn't, actually. Unless 18MPG is over 20MPG.

I know you are going to say because it's lighter and whatnot and that's exactly right. If companies quit making their cars fat you would see faster vehicles with better fuel mileage.
You would also see either less safe vehicles or far more expensive cars. Car companies don't make their cars fat by choice. They have to make them fat to fall under government safety regulations. Mazda blew a huge wad of money making the current Miata as light as possible, and it is still heavier than the original. Ditto to cars like the Lotus Elise. Lightweight metals are far more expensive than normal metals, and that cost would be transferred onto a buyer that has 10 or 20 options in any one market.
So, you will either have a rolling 70's deathtrap equivalent or a $60,000 compact car, niether of which would sell.


And yes the only way Chrysler will ever be worth a damn is if it quits half assing it's vehicles and comes out with something revolutionary. It did it with the Caravan back in the 80's so I don't see why they can't do they same thing today.
So you want what is essentially a me-too vehicle to invent a segment? Are you crazy? I also find it pretty ridiculous to say that the only way Chrysler can become good again is by reinventing the wheel. Especially when reviews of the new Caravan are mostly positive, and that other recent attempts to make segment busters by the company have crashed and burned.

As far as quality goes all I need to do is see that it is a product of modern Chrysler and I know it will be utter rubbish. The people who buy this car are mis-informed shoppers.
Actually, you know nothing of the sort. For one, this is the first new Chrysler in non-Mercedes hands. Second, you are clearly letting your one-sided bias cloud your judgement to the point of not even giving the car a chance. It is not the buyers who are mis-informed. It is you.
 
Then talk to our lawmakers about raising funding to create proper driving classes for our children, because no amount of gagetry is gonna keep the clueless from driving cluelessly. And, while I disagree with the hill start control, I can think of one place on my daily commute where I'd use it daily.

Is it because you can't drive hills?

Oh, and 430HP from 6.1L and 18MPG is pretty damned good, 2007 or 1987. My 300HP/2.5L STi struggles to get 20MPG on highway-only travel.

Although Mercedes' E63 (with ~450HP from 6.2L) gets 14-20MPG...at more than twice the price.
 
[*]The Golf GTI, Mini Cooper S and Mazdaspeed 3 are not high horsepower cars. Especially when compared to a 425BHP car.

No but they are fast cars, a car does not need to have a lot of horsepower to be fast unless you are some sort of ignorant redneck who thinks V8's and Van Halen is all you need to go fast.

[*]Those cars? Yeah, they are pretty small. The 300C is a Mercedes S-Class sized sedan, and the Challenger won't be much smaller. Do I need to explain why that is a retarded comparison?

The only car that I mentioned that is small is the Mini Cooper S, the Mazdaspeed 3 and GTI are both 5 door hatchbacks that can easily fit a family of 4 with all their crap.

But that isn't the point of what we are talking about, we are talking about fast cars that also get fuel mileage. I never mentioned anything about size. And if the Concept Challenger is anything to go off of it's really not that large.

Length: 197.8” (5025 mm)
Wheelbase: 116.0” (2945mm)
Front Overhang: 38.9” (989mm)
Width: 78.6” (1997mm)
Height: 57.0” (1449mm)
Track, Frt/Rr: 64.0”/65.1”
Couple: 31.5” (800mm)

(source:http://www.stockmopar.com/2008-dodge-challenger.html)

It's roughly the size of the 2 door Blazer.

[*]Your standards for fuel efficiency are still those of an idealist who is thoroughly unconnected to reality. Big cars weigh more. High weight lowers fuel efficiency. As does high horsepower. Combine the two, and it shouldn't be surprising that you don't get that much efficiency. It isn't as simple as "make the cars lighter" no matter how many times you repeat yourself.

You do not need heavy vehicles, there is so much extra crap on cars now a days that doesn't add anything at all. Dodge could easily make the car weighs less by first putting in a V8 that isn't the size of the moon, seriously a 6.1L V8 is ridiculous...and before you say it so is the Z06's 7.0L.

And yes it is that simple to make cars lighter and it will give you better fuel economy. Did you pay attention in physics at all?

And how many Challengers would you expect Dodge to sell if it was sold with a pissant Turbo 4? Or the Camaro, for that matter? You are missing the point of a reborn muscle car, I'm afraid.

No I'm not missing the point, a bunch of middle aged men think they can be kids again. I just think this "borne again" muscle car bs is stupid to be doing right now. Companies have their head up their ass if they think what the world needs is an inefficient, gas guzzling car. We need higher mileage cars or ones that burn something that does not require fossil fuels.

No, it doesn't, actually. Unless 18MPG is over 20MPG.


Wow you are so wrong on this it's funny :lol:. Even the Z06 gets 24mpg on the freeway and if you average out a base Vette you would be getting 21mpg in mixed driving. Are you going to argue with Chevy now?

(source: http://www.chevrolet.com/corvette/specifications/)

You would also see either less safe vehicles or far more expensive cars. Car companies don't make their cars fat by choice. They have to make them fat to fall under government safety regulations. Mazda blew a huge wad of money making the current Miata as light as possible, and it is still heavier than the original. Ditto to cars like the Lotus Elise. Lightweight metals are far more expensive than normal metals, and that cost would be transferred onto a buyer that has 10 or 20 options in any one market.
So, you will either have a rolling 70's deathtrap equivalent or a $60,000 compact car.

Government regulations do make cars weigh more, but this is where engineers need to get off their ass and instead of just half assing the project they can actually use their brains a solve the problem.

Wrong, heavy cars aren't safer, that's what a vast majority of the idiots driving SUV's think. Mini seems to do just fine when compared to bigger, "safer", vehicles.

(source:http://bridger.us/2002/12/16/CrashTestingMINICooperVsFordF150/)

And the only reason lighter materials cost more now is they aren't used as much, if car companies start using lighter material you would see a drop in the price of them...once again simple economics. Make cars out of plastic, Saturn used to do it.

So you want what is essentially a me-too vehicle to invent a segment? Are you crazy? I also find it pretty ridiculous to say that the only way Chrysler can become good again is by reinventing the wheel. Especially when reviews of the new Caravan are mostly positive, and that other recent attempts to make segment busters by the company have crashed and burned.

When you have a failing company you need something big to pull you out of a hole. If GM is sucessful with the Volt it will help the company out quite a bit seeing as they will be one of the bigger companies to mass produce an electric car that is affordable and available.

Chrysler needs something like that, say a hybrid that actually works well and looks good or an ethanol vehicle that doesn't fail at life. They don't have to build a super efficient sports car, but do something for christ sake since the area I live in can't keep dealing with thousands of lay offs.

And the new Caravan is rubbish, all American vans are. Why anyone would buy a Caravan over a Sienna, Quest, or Odyssey is beyond me.

Actually, you know nothing of the sort. For one, this is the first new Chrysler in non-Mercedes hands. Second, you are clearly letting your one-sided bias cloud your judgement to the point of not even giving the car a chance. It is not the buyers who are mis-informed. It is you.
[/quote]

I'd be careful when you say I don't know anything because obviously you overlook quite a few things yourself *cough* Corvette Fuel Economy *cough*...you aren't a hypocrite are you?

$40,000 will buy you quite a nice car, I would probably have a BMW 335i Coupe for only $705 more as a starting cost. Once we factor in dealer markups I could probably look at something a bit better than the 335i.

I fully believe the Challenger will be junk and only people in America will ever like it, the rest of the world will just laugh because they are actually driving cars that don't epically fail. You can like the car all you want but I'm pretty sure the only reason you like it is because I do not and your life wouldn't be complete if you didn't disagree with me all the time :lol:.

[/sarcasm][/tongue-in-cheek][/totally-not-serious][/joking][/meant to be funny]
 
No but they are fast cars, a car does not need to have a lot of horsepower to be fast unless you are some sort of ignorant redneck who thinks V8's and Van Halen is all you need to go fast.

What?

You've got something against Van Halen?

...Don't ever talk smack about Van Halen...
 
What?

You've got something against Van Halen?

...Don't ever talk smack about Van Halen...

Top Gear joke, you of all people should have picked up on that.
 
Yes, I know, but I couldn't help myself. I love me some V8 and Van Halen power through...

Completely OT: They're coming to Grand Rapids, and I want to see them with Dave so bad, but I don't have the cash. I'm pissed!
 
No but they are fast cars, a car does not need to have a lot of horsepower to be fast unless you are some sort of ignorant redneck who thinks V8's and Van Halen is all you need to go fast.
Then I laugh at you for using this car as a spring board for your silly anti-power rage. This is far from the top of the charts. Why don't you go after Mercedes, who has a twin turbocharged version of an engine larger than the 6.1L Hemi? And then proceeds to place it into cars that weigh nearly 5000 pounds.
Great stereotyping, by the way.

I never mentioned anything about size.
You directly compared the efficiency of a compact car to a midsize coupe. And expect me to buy it as anything but pure garbage?

And if the Concept Challenger is anything to go off of it's really not that large.
Its also based on a platform of a very heavy fullsized sedan. It is heavy for the same reason the 350Z is heavy and the Camaro will be heavy.

You do not need heavy vehicles, there is so much extra crap on cars now a days that doesn't add anything at all. Dodge could easily make the car weighs less by first putting in a V8 that isn't the size of the moon, seriously a 6.1L V8 is ridiculous...and before you say it so is the Z06's 7.0L.
I'm not going to even bother. This has so little to do with the Dodge Challenger and so much to do with your useless, unrealistic environmentalist mentality that its not worth even arguing. I'm guessing you woke up this morning and thought that combating large cars would make the world a happy place. The industry as a whole seems to disagree with you.
Considering that well written look at hybrid cars, I'm surprised just how clueless you actually are to why cars get the fuel mileage they get. Especially when one of your main arguments against this car (barring the usual "Chrysler sucks as a whole because we had a bad product" garbage) was that it had poor fuel mileage when it doesn't actually have poor fuel mileage.
Oh, and by the way, the 6.1L is lighter than the 5.7L.


And yes it is that simple to make cars lighter and it will give you better fuel economy. Did you pay attention in physics at all?
Yeah. Did you pay attention in economics at all? More expensive (read: lightweight) productions costs are passed directly on to a consumer. The consumer sees the entry price and walks away.

No I'm not missing the point, a bunch of middle aged men think they can be kids again. I just think this "borne again" muscle car bs is stupid to be doing right now.
And you would rather have them do it later when it isn't physically possible.

Companies have their head up their ass if they think what the world needs is an inefficient, gas guzzling car. We need higher mileage cars or ones that burn something that does not require fossil fuels.
[Soapbox]Oh no! Gas is so expensive. No one should be allowed to drive powerful cars at all for some reason.[soapbox]

Wow you are so wrong on this it's funny :lol:. Even the Z06 gets 24mpg on the freeway and if you average out a base Vette you would be getting 21mpg in mixed driving. Are you going to argue with Chevy now?
That depends. Are you going to argue with the damn U.S. government, who says that Corvette has a combined of 18? I can use smilies when I'm laughably wrong too, but you seem to be laughing out of turn enough.

Government regulations do make cars weigh more, but this is where engineers need to get off their ass and instead of just half assing the project they can actually use their brains a solve the problem.
So, an problem that government regulations cause that engineers need to fix in some magical way that doesn't involve throwing millions of dollars Chrysler doesn't have to come to the conclusion that they would have to raise the car's price even more to get fuel economy that it doesn't need more of anyways? Talk about answering a question no one asked.

Wrong, heavy cars aren't safer, that's what a vast majority of the idiots driving SUV's think. Mini seems to do just fine when compared to bigger, "safer", vehicles.
Considering you just questioned if I had taken a physics class, it seems completely awesome that you completely ignore the concept of momentum.Especially since it is written in big bold letters: Now keep in mind that this is not a test of how the two cars would fare in a head-on collision with each-other.
In which case, you know, the Mini would have been completely destroyed.
By the way, I wasn't referring to heavier cars being inherently safer simply because they are heavier. I was in fact referring to cars being made heavier by safety devices are safer than cars that are lighter without them.


And the only reason lighter materials cost more now is they aren't used as much, if car companies start using lighter material you would see a drop in the price of them...once again simple economics. Make cars out of plastic, Saturn used to do it.
Except that the lighter materials are inherently more expensive to produce than the cheaper, heavier parts. And no amount of buying them will lower the productions costs. Aluminum will always be more expensive to produce and use than steel.

When you have a failing company you need something big to pull you out of a hole. If GM is sucessful with the Volt it will help the company out quite a bit seeing as they will be one of the bigger companies to mass produce an electric car that is affordable and available.
The funny thing is simply how little the Volt will do for Chevrolet's image compared to the Malibu and CTS. Chrysler needs well put together cars more than they need a money-pit technology piece.

And the new Caravan is rubbish, all American vans are. Why anyone would buy a Caravan over a Sienna, Quest, or Odyssey is beyond me.
Maybe because the new Caravan is not rubbish, and you are just narrow-minded. Especially when compared to junk like the Quest.

I'd be careful when you say I don't know anything because obviously you overlook quite a few things yourself *cough* Corvette Fuel Economy *cough*...you aren't a hypocrite are you?
There is that word again, once again used at a time where it just doesn't apply. Maybe you should look it up.

$40,000 will buy you quite a nice car, I would probably have a BMW 335i Coupe for only $705 more as a starting cost. Once we factor in dealer markups I could probably look at something a bit better than the 335i.
And since when does the car's price have anything to do with its completely and totally decent fuel economy? Its all great that one can cross-shop with cars in completely different segments. Makes me want to go buy an Audi RS6 rather than an Audi R8.

I fully believe the Challenger will be junk and only people in America will ever like it, the rest of the world will just laugh because they are actually driving cars that don't epically fail.
Ah. The good old "Europe can crap on a plate and sell it and it will be worth more than American cars." Always nice to have stereotyping.

You can like the car all you want but I'm pretty sure the only reason you like it is because I do not and your life wouldn't be complete if you didn't disagree with me all the time :lol:.
To be perfectly honest, I hate the damn car. But the fact that you are treating it as if it is a toxic waste dump is colossally unfair, and I would think you would have figured that out when I have defended other cars I don't particularly about that I don't take well to narrow-minded know-it-alls. The fact that you keep getting into fights with me over Chrysler products and nothing else should clue you in to something.
 
It's laughable about how serious you took my comments, maybe I should remove my tongue from my cheek :lol:.

I think I sucked the entertainment out of this though...pity, it burned a good hour.

**Maybe I should edit my previous post since this is the internet and it means serious f'n business.
 
Chrysler to build 10,000 Challengers for this year!

Autoblog
According to Inside Line, Dodge claims it doesn't know where websites and blogs got the idea that it would only build 5,000 Challengers in 2008, the car's first year of production. We can tell you. Automotive News reported it back in late October, and then it was reported by Inside Line. Despite the confusion, the cross-hair brand claims the final production number for 2008 is not set in stone. That's probably because initial demand for its modern muscle car is high, with 6,600 preorders recorded in just three days. Now Dodge is saying it could build and sell up to but not more than 10,000 Challengers in 2008, though only a Limited Edition version of the SRT8 model with the five-speed automatic will be offered. After that, Dodge will add the other Challenger models available with the 5.7L HEMI and 3.5L V6. Production will eventually reach beyond 30,000 units per year. Hopefully for Dodge this initial high demand for the Challenger won't fall too much by the time it begins pumping them out en masse.

[Source: Inside Line]

I wonder how long it will take for Challengers to start sitting on lots.....
 
Pre-production Challenger caught Naked!

challenger2_450.jpg


Autoblog
Autoblog reader Ray O'Connor happened upon an undisguised Dodge Challenger on his way to work in the Detroit area and managed to snap a photo of it from behind the wheel. At first, we wondered whether the HEMI orange car pictured was simply the concept car out and about, because it has been known to traverse public roads before. The ducktail spoiler on the trunklid is not a feature of the concept, however, so we're guessing one of the preproduction cars was stretching its legs a bit. Or maybe Chrysler's taking a page from GM and, like the Camaro, has decided to just get rid of the camo altogether. In any case, the car will finally be revealed to the world next month in Chicago, and we'll be there, as always, to cover it.

It looks pretty good. GM didn't take the wraps off the Camaro until there was about a week left. I wonder why Chrysler did it a whole month in advance.
 
They probably want to drum up a little excitement for the car. It does go on-sale in a little less than two months, and with Chrysler so strapped for cash, I'm sure they're desperate for a hit.

Still, big thumbs up! Its very distinctive, and I'm hoping the performance can back it up!
 
They probably want to drum up a little excitement for the car. It does go on-sale in a little less than two months, and with Chrysler so strapped for cash, I'm sure they're desperate for a hit.

Then why would they show it off in Chicago one month before sales and not Detroit two months earlier for more time to build enthusiasm? Maybe (hopefully not) they think that the Challenger doesn't stand much of a chance against the likes of the Camaro?:scared: Maybe because it won't have nearly as much competition in Chicago?
 
The Camaro production worker who posts on GMI was saying that the "production" version won't be at Detroit this year, so I'm not sure why Dodge isn't bringing the Challenger to Chicago. My guess is that they want to have pre-production ones there that we can sit in, touch and feel, etc. I may be wrong...
 
I'm really hoping this car isn't going to be what the Avanti was to Studebaker: the last fantastic hurrah to a once-great company.

It does look fantastic, too, but they need a competitive car in the lower midsize class (Avenger/Sebring) to save the company. Something like the K-Car...only more reliable and less "Reliant"...

Just thought I'd "Aries" my concerns.

("K-Car" came up and I couldnt' resist the puns.)
 
I'm a little confused as to why fuel economy is an issue in a car generally designed to be a weekend playtoy for midlife crisis Baby Boomers?

Seriously, Chrysler isn't even really aiming this at the same folks who're going to buy Camaros or are buying Mustangs. It's priced at the upper end of the market, appears to have more standard content, and is unabashedly a refresh of the classic Mopar E-body.

While Mustang and Camaro are budget priced, modernly styled (more or less) and aimed squarely at the 18-30yr old single male who's after a fun and stylish ride, Challenger is aimed at guys who were there for the first Challenger.

It's a car that makes sense from that standpoint. Think of it the same way you'd think of a base Porsche 911 (not as a competitor, mind you): A playtoy for old men with disposable income and fond memories of a classic car, but who don't want classic car hassles.
 
Heres the problem:

The Porsche will function easily as an everyday car and get better gas mileage too.

---

I completely understand where you're coming from, don't get me wrong, but it is very disappointing when this car could have been so much, and yet Chrysler ruins something good once again. I still think its going to be a really spectacular car (well, at least I hope it is!), but it won't be anywhere close to the Camaro or the Mustang "II".
 
I don't see the car as a failure if it's succeeds at the goal Chrysler sets for it.

As the press release said, they only plan to sell 10,000 cars in 2008, and hope to sell over 30,000 a year in all trim lines when production is fully ramped up.

In 2006, Ford sold a total of 165,762 Mustangs, all trim levels. I'd say that Chrysler has a COMPLETELY different view of the coupe market than Ford, when it comes to Challenger vs Mustang.
 
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