Re: Chrysler Changes

From: Matt Brenneke (brenneke@gmail.com)
Date: Sat Nov 14 2009 - 15:03:28 EST


Just as an FYI, the truck plant in Fenton got shut down and left with
the old Chrysler assests with the brankruptcy, so no more 1500s or
caravans are built in St. Louis anymore.

I believe the only one of the big 3 still building vehicles in St.
Louis area is GMs van plant in Wentzville.

-Matt

On Nov 14, 2009, at 1:43 PM, jon@dakota-truck.net wrote:

>
> Jason Bleazard <dml@bleazard.net> wrote:
>
>> Bill Pitz wrote:
>>>
>>> A Ram 2500 was out of the question for me as soon as I opened the
>>> door
>>> and looked at where it was manufactured. :-(
>
>> The news just keeps getting better.
>
>> According to Wikipedia, Chrysler builds *all* of the 2500/3500
>> models in
>> Mexico. Nobody builds exclusively in the US anymore, but if you're
>> looking for a US-built truck then yeah, you're SOL. (Although some
>> of
>> the Mexico plants have really respectable quality records... when I
>> had
>> my Neon, everyone knew that the Mexico cars were much more likely to
>> keep their paint.)
>
>
> This stuff obviously changes all the time, but just for reference,
> my '01 3500 was built in St. Louis. According to my FSM, other
> options for the Ram in '01 were Dodge City and Lago Alberto (the last
> one being Mexico, obviously).
>
> The last year I have info for is 2006; in that year, the two US
> plants were the same with the Mexican option being Saltillo. I don't
> have information that breaks out the HD versions though, so it could
> very well be that all 2500/3500 are being built in Mexico with only
> 1500s being built at Dodge City or St. Louis. That seems to be the
> consensus from a bunch of web sites that turn up after a quick Google
> search, confirming the info Jason found at Wikipedia.
>
> If someone were looking to buy a truck that is "made in the USA"
> (actually that's not 100% possible anymore, maybe "assembled in the
> USA" would be more accurate) for political reasons, then that could
> present a problem, but as far as quality goes, personally, I'd
> actually *prefer* a vehicle that was assembled in Mexico to one that
> was built using UAW labor. A non-union shop tends to foster the
> rather quaint and outdated notion that an employee's quality of
> workmanship has a bearing on their continued employment and pay rate.
>
>
> --
> -Jon-
>
> .- Jon Steiger -- jon@dakota-truck.net or jon@jonsteiger.com -.
> | '96 Kolb Firefly, '96 Suzuki Intruder, Miscellaneous Mopars |
> `-------------------------------- http://www.jonsteiger.com --'
>



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