|
Chrysler LLC is an American automobile manufacturer that has
been producing automobiles since 1925 and from 1914 under the Dodge
name. From 1998 to 2007, Chrysler and its subsidiaries were part of
the German based DaimlerChrysler (now Daimler AG) after an arduous
deal falsely sold to stakeholders as a "Merger of Equals" in 1998.
Prior to 1998, Chrysler Corporation traded under the "C" symbol on
the NYSE. Under DaimlerChrysler, the company was named
"DaimlerChrysler Motors Company LLC", with its U.S. operations
generally referred to as the "Chrysler Group".
On May 14, 2007 DaimlerChrysler AG announced the sale of 80.1% of
Chrysler Group to American equity firm Cerberus Capital Management,
L.P., although Daimler continues to hold a 19.9% stake. Chrysler
LLC is the new name. The deal was finalized on August 3, 2007.
After the announcement of the spin-off to Cerberus, the Chrysler
LLC, or "The New Chrysler", unveiled a new company logo on August 6,
2007 and launched its new website with a variation of the previously
used Pentastar logo. Robert Nardelli also became Chairman and CEO of
Chrysler under the ownership of Cerberus. Chrysler is now the
largest private automaker in North America.
History
1936 Chrysler Airflow Series C-9
Founding and
early years
The company was founded by Walter P. Chrysler on June 6, 1925, when
the Maxwell Motor Company was re-organized into the Chrysler
Corporation.
Walter Chrysler had originally arrived at the ailing
Maxwell-Chalmers company in the early 1920s, having been hired to
take over and overhaul the company's troubled operations (just after
having done a similar rescue job at the Willys car company).
In late 1923 production of the Chalmers automobile was ended.
Then in January of 1924 Walter Chrysler launched the well-received
Chrysler automobile. The Chrysler was a 6-cylinder automobile,
designed to provide customers with an advanced, well-engineered car,
but at a more affordable price than they might expect. (Elements of
this car are traceable back to a prototype which had been under
development at Willys at the time that Walter Chrysler was there).
The Maxwell was then dropped after its 1925 model year run, although
in truth the new line of lower-priced 4-cylinder Chryslers which
were then introduced for 1926 were basically Maxwells which had been
re-engineered and rebranded.
It was during this period that Walter Chrysler assumed the
presidency of the company, with the company then ultimately
incorporated under the Chrysler name.
Vehicle
Marques
In 1928, Chrysler Corporation began dividing their vehicle offerings
by price class and function. The Plymouth brand was
introduced and aimed at the low-priced end of the market by
reëngineering and rebadging Chrysler's 4-cylinder models. At the
same time, the DeSoto marque was introduced in the
medium-price field. Shortly thereafter, Chrysler bought the Dodge
Brothers automobile and truck company and launched the Fargo range
of trucks. By the late 1930s, the DeSoto and Dodge divisions would
trade places in the corporate hierarchy. This proliferation of
marques under Chrysler's umbrella might have been inspired by the
similar strategy employed successfully by General Motors. Beginning
in 1955, Imperial, formerly the top model of the Chrysler brand,
became a marque of its own, and in 1960, the Valiant was introduced
likewise as a distinct marque. In the US market, Valiant was made a
model in the Plymouth line and the DeSoto name was withdrawn for
1961. With those exceptions per applicable year and market,
Chrysler's range from lowest to highest price from the 1940s through
the 1970s was Valiant, Plymouth, Dodge, DeSoto, Chrysler, and
Imperial. After acquiring AMC in 1987, Chrysler fulfilled one of
AMC's conditions of sale by creating the Eagle marque to be sold at
existing AMC-Jeep dealers.
By 2001 and as of 2007, the company has three marques worldwide:
Dodge, Jeep and Chrysler.
Other
Marques
MoPar oil filter,
1956-1962 design
Airtemp logo on window of air
conditioned Chrysler Corp. vehicle
In the 1930s, the company created a formal vehicle parts division
under the MoPar brand (a portmanteau of Motor Parts),
with the result that "Mopar" remains a colloquial term for vehicles
produced by Chrysler Corporation. The MoPar (later Mopar)
brand was not used in Canada, where parts were sold under the
Chryco and AutoPar brands, until the Mopar brand was
phased into the Canadian market beginning in the late 1970s.
The company also launched the Airtemp marque for stationary
and mobile HVAC. The first AirTemp installation was in 1930's
Chrysler Building.
Airflow
In 1934 the company introduced the Airflow models, featuring an
advanced streamlined body, among the first to be designed using
aerodynamic principles. Chrysler created the industry's first wind
tunnel to develop them. Buyers rejected its styling, and the more
conventionally-designed Dodge and Plymouth cars pulled the firm
through the Depression years. Plymouth was one of only a few marques
that actually increased sales during the cash-strapped thirties.
The unsuccessful Airflow had a chilling effect on Chrysler styling
and marketing, which remained determinedly conservative through the
1940s and into the 1950s, with the single exception of the
installation of hidden headlights on the very brief production run
of 1942 DeSotos. Engineering advances continued, and in 1951 the
firm introduced the first of a long and famous series of Hemi V8s.
In 1955 things brightened with the introduction of Virgil Exner's
successful Forward Look designs. With the inauguration of the second
generation Forward Look cars for 1957, Torsion-Aire
suspension was introduced. This was not air suspension, but an
indirect-acting, torsion-spring front suspension system which
drastically reduced unsprung weight and shifted the car's center of
gravity downward and rearward. This resulted in both a smoother ride
and significantly improved handling. A rush to production of the
1957 models led to quality control problems including poor body fit
and finish, resulting in significant and early rusting. This,
coupled with a national recession, found the company again in
recovery mode.
1960s
Starting in the 1960 model year, Chrysler built all their passenger
cars with Unibody™ (unit-body or monocoque) construction, except the
Imperials which retained body-on-frame construction until 1967.
Chrysler thus became the only one of the Big Three American
automakers (General Motors Corporation, Ford Motor Company, and
Chrysler) to offer unibody construction on the vast majority of
their product lines. This construction technique, now the worldwide
standard, offers advantages in vehicle rigidity, handling, and crash
safety, while reducing squeak and rattle development as the vehicle
ages. Chrysler's new compact line, the Valiant, opened strong and
continued to gain market share for over a decade. Valiant was
introduced as a marque of its own, but the Valiant line was placed
under the Plymouth marque for US-market sales in 1961. The 1960
Valiant was the first production automobile with an Alternator
rather than a electrical generator as standard equipment. It proved
such an improvement that it was used in all Chrysler products in
1961. The DeSoto marque was withdrawn from the market after the
introduction of the 1961 models due in part to the broad array of
the Dodge lines and the general neglect of the division. The same
affliction plagued Plymouth as it also suffered when Dodge crept
into Plymouth's price range. This would eventually lead to the
demise of Plymouth several decades later. An ill-advised downsizing
of the full-size Dodge and Plymouth lines in 1962 hurt sales and
profitability for several years.
In April 1964, the Plymouth Barracuda, which was a Valiant
sub-model, was introduced. The huge glass rear window and sloping
roof were polarizing styling features. Barracuda was released almost
two weeks before Ford's Mustang, and so the Barracuda was
chronologically the first pony car. Unlike the Mustang, Barracuda
did not rob sales of other division's models. In spite of
Barracuda's generally acknowledged better build quality, handling,
braking and performance than the Mustang, the Mustang still outsold
the Barracuda 10-to-1 between April 1964 and August 1965.
Expansion
into Europe
In the 1960s Chrysler expanded into Europe, attaining a majority
interest in the British Rootes Group in 1964, Simca of France and
Barreiros of Spain, to form Chrysler Europe. For the Rootes Group
one outcome of this take over was the launch of the Hillman Avenger
in 1970 (briefly sold in the US as the Plymouth Cricket), which sold
in Britain alongside the rear-engined Imp and the Hunter. Due to the
industrial unrest rife in Britain during the 1970s the former Rootes
Group got into severe financial difficulties. The Simca and
Barreiros divisions were more successful, but in the end the various
problems were overwhelming and the firm gained little from these
ventures. Chrysler sold these assets to PSA Peugeot Citroën in 1978,
which in turn sold the British and Spanish truck production lines to
Renault of France .
More successfully, at this same time the company helped create the
muscle car market in the U.S., first by producing a street version
of its Hemi racing engine and then by introducing a legendary string
of affordable but high-performance vehicles such as the Plymouth GTX,
Plymouth Road Runner, and Dodge Charger. The racing success of
several of these models on the NASCAR circuit burnished the
company's engineering reputation.
The 1970s brought both success and crisis. The aging but stalwart
compacts saw a rush of sales as demand for smaller cars crested
after the first gas crisis of 1973. A large investment in an all-new
full-size lineup went largely to waste as the new 1974 vehicles
appeared almost precisely as gasoline prices reached a peak and
large car sales collapsed. 1974 would also mark the end of the
Barracuda (and the similar Dodge Challenger) after the redesigned
ponycars introduced for 1970 had failed to attract buyers in the
shrinking market segment. At mid-decade, the company scored a
conspicuous success with its first entry in the personal luxury car
market, the Chrysler Cordoba. The introduction of the Dodge
Aspen/Plymouth Volare twins in 1976 did not repeat the success of
the discontinued Valiant/Dodge Dart line, and the company had
delayed in producing a domestic entry in the now-important
subcompact market. Chrysler Europe essentially collapsed in 1977,
and was offloaded to Peugeot the following year, ironically just
after having helped design the new Plymouth Horizon and Dodge Omni,
on which the desperate company was pinning its hopes. Shortly
thereafter, Chrysler Australia, which was now producing a rebadged
Japanese Mitsubishi Galant, was sold to Mitsubishi Motors. The
subcompact Horizon was reaching the US market as the second gas
crisis struck, devastating sales of Chrysler's larger cars and
trucks, and the company had no strong compact line to fall back on.
Later the Horizon was produced and developed in Finland and marketed
in Scandinavia as Talbot Horizon. After the Peugeot bought Talbot
and the new version of Horizon was named as Peugeot 309.
Government
loan guarantees
A Dodge Aries. The "K-cars" are
generally credited with saving Chrysler from bankruptcy.
The Chrysler Corporation on September 7, 1979 petitioned the United
States government for US$1.5 billion in loan guarantees to avoid
bankruptcy. At the same time former Ford executive Lee Iacocca was
brought in as CEO. He proved to be a capable public spokesman,
appearing in advertisements to advise customers that "If you find a
better car, buy it." He would also provide a rallying point for
Japan-bashing and instilling pride in American products. His book
Talking Straight was a fitting reply to Akio Morita's Made in
Japan. Congress reluctantly passed the "Chrysler Corporation
Loan Guarantee Act of 1979" (Public Law 96-185) on December 20, 1979
(signed into law by President Jimmy Carter on January 7, 1980),
prodded by Chrysler workers and dealers in every congressional
district who feared the loss of their livelihoods. The military then
bought thousands of Dodge pickup trucks which entered military
service as the CUCV. With such help and a few innovative cars (such
as the K-car platform), especially the invention of the minivan
concept, Chrysler avoided bankruptcy and slowly recovered.
In February 1982 Chrysler announced the sale of Chrysler Defense
Inc., its profitable defense subsidiary to General Dynamics for
$348.5 million. The sale was completed in March 1982 for the revised
figure of $336.1 million.
By the early 1980s, the loans were being repaid at a brisk pace and
new models based on the K-car platform were selling well. A joint
venture with Mitsubishi called Diamond Star Motors strengthened the
company's hand in the small car market. Chrysler acquired AMC in
1987, primarily for its Jeep brand, although the failing Eagle
Premier would be the basis for the Chrysler LH platform sedans. This
bolstered the firm, although Chrysler was still the weakest of the
Big Three. In the early 1990s, Chrysler made its first steps back
into Europe, setting up car production in Austria, and beginning
right hand drive manufacture of certain Jeep models in a 1993 return
to the UK market. The continuing popularity of Jeep, bold new models
for the domestic market such as the Dodge Ram pickup, Dodge Viper (badged
as "Chrysler Viper" in Europe) sports car, and Plymouth Prowler hot
rod, and new "cab forward" front-wheel drive sedans put the company
in a strong position as the decade waned.
Acquisition
by Daimler-Benz
In 1998 Daimler-Benz purchased Chrysler, forming DaimlerChrysler AG.
Chrysler Corporation then was legally renamed DaimlerChrysler Motors
Company LLC, while its total operations began doing business as
Chrysler Group. This was initially declared to be a merger of
equals, but it quickly became evident that Daimler-Benz was the
dominant partner. Chrysler went into another of its financial
tailspins soon after the merger, greatly depressing the stock price
of the merged firm and causing alarm at headquarters in Germany,
which sent CEO Dieter Zetsche to take charge. The Plymouth brand was
phased out in 2001, and plans for cost cutting by sharing of
platforms and components began. The strongly Mercedes-influenced
Chrysler Crossfire was one of the first results of this program. A
return to rear-wheel drive was announced, and in 2004 a new Chrysler
300 using this technology and a new Hemi V8 appeared and was
successful. Financial performance began to improve, with Chrysler
providing a significant share of DaimlerChrysler profits due to
restructuring efforts at the Mercedes Car Group. The partnership
with Mitsubishi was dissolved as DaimlerChrysler divested its stake
in the firm due to diving Mitsubishi profits and sales worldwide.
Sale
According to the April 2007 issue of Der Spiegel, CEO Dieter Zetsche
expressed a desire to dismantle Chrysler and sell off the majority
stake and at the same time keep Chrysler "dependent" upon
Mercedes-Benz after the sale.
On April 4, 2007 Dieter Zetsche said that the company was
negotiating the sale of Chrysler, which was rumored for weeks before
the announcement. One day after, investor Kirk Kerkorian placed a
4.5 billion dollar bid for Chrysler. On 12 April Magna International
of Canada announced it was searching for partners to place a bid for
Chrysler. Magna's offer was outbid.
DaimlerChrysler to sell Chrysler Group for $7.4 Billion
On May 14, 2007 DaimlerChrysler AG announced that it would sell
80.1% of its stake in the Chrysler Group to Cerberus Capital
Management for $7.4 Billion. After the transaction was to complete,
Chrysler Group (DaimlerChrysler Corporation) would officially become
Chrysler Holding LLC (changed to Chrysler LLC upon
completion of the sale), with two subsidiaries - Chrysler Motors
LLC (new name of DaimlerChrysler Motors Company), which
will produce Chrysler/Dodge/Jeep vehicles, and Chrysler Financial
Services LLC (new name of DaimlerChrysler Financial Services
Americas LLC), which will take over the current operations of
Chrysler Financial. DaimlerChrysler AG plans to change its name to
Daimler AG pending shareholder approval sometime this fall. On
August 7th, 2007 Chrysler named Robert L. Nardelli Chief Executive.
On August 28, 2007, Chrysler hired Deborah Meyer, former
Vice-President of Marketing at Lexus, to become Vice-President and
Chief Marketing Officer for their marketing team. On September 6th,
2007 Chrysler named James Press, formerly Toyota's highest ranking
American executive, as their co-president. A day later, Chrysler
named Phil Murtaugh, formerly the Vice-President of Shanghai
Automotive Industry Corporation, as CEO of their Asian Operations.
On October 10, 2007 the new company experienced its first labor
dispute. A strike deadline of 11 a.m. had been set by the United
Auto Workers (UAW) union leadership pending successful negotiation
of a new contract patterned after the pact with GM. As the talks
progressed past the deadline, most Chrysler unionized workers walked
off their jobs. With media speculation about the impact of a long
strike, an impromptu announcement after 5 p.m. the same day
indicated that a tentative agreement had been reached, thus ending
the walkout after just over six hours.
Logos
Medallion
logo
With its inception in 1925, Chrysler's logo was a round medallion
with a ribbon bearing the name CHRYSLER in uppercase block
letters.
Forward Look
Virgil Exner's radical "Forward Look" redesign of Chrysler
Corporation's vehicles for the 1955 model year was underscored by
the company's adoption of a logo by the same name. The Forward Look
logo consisted of two overlapped boomerang shapes, suggesting space
age rocket-propelled motion.
Pentastar
In September 1962, the company adopted a logo named Pentastar,
made of five triangles arranged so their bases formed the sides of a
pentagon. The Pentastar was extensively used on dealer signage,
advertisements, and promotional brochures. Contrary to popular
belief, the logo was not intended to symbolize the five automotive
brands at the time: Plymouth, Dodge, Chrysler, Imperial and Dodge
Truck. By 1963 there were only two auto divisions in the United
States: Chrysler-Plymouth and Dodge, and there were over a dozen
other divisions in the Chrysler Corporation family. The Pentastar
was commissioned and designed as a logo usable by all divisions, and
which was not tied to any particular automotive styling feature (as
had been the case with Forward Look).
Chrysler President Lynn Townsend was looking for a symbol that could
be used by all divisions on packaging, stationery, signage and
advertising. He wanted something that would be universally
recognizable as "Chrysler" to anyone who saw it, in any culture. The
Pentastar was simple and easily recognizable, even on revolving
signs. The symbol also facilitated Chrysler's expansion in the
international market by removing any text that is commonly used in
logotypes.
Divisional logos such as Dodge's Fratzog were gradually phased out
until by 1981, all Chrysler divisions used only the Pentastar. All
car brands (Valiant, Plymouth, Dodge, Chrysler, Imperial, Hillman,
Humber, Sunbeam, Singer, Simca), truck brands (Fargo, DeSoto, Dodge,
Commer, Karrier), and all the other Chrysler divisions (air
conditioning systems, heating, industrial engines, marine engines,
outboard motors, boats, transmissions, four-wheel drive systems,
powdered metal products, adhesives, chemical products, plastics,
electronics, tanks, missiles) and services (leasing, finance and
Mopar) were identified by the Pentastar.
Chrysler Headquarters at Auburn
Hills
The Pentastar appeared consistently but inconspicuously on the lower
passenger-side fender of all Chrysler products, including foreign
brands, from 1963 into the 1972 model year. It was placed on the
passenger-side fender so it could be viewed by passers-by, a subtle
method of getting the symbol ingrained in the public's mind. A
nameplate has to be read, but a symbol is recognizable even to the
illiterate. Thus North American and European-market cars had the
Pentastar on the right fender, while British and Australian-market
cars had it on the left. The practice was revived in 1993. The
Chrysler brand used a gem-like version of the Pentastar to identify
its more upscale status, and its Imperial models employed a
combination of the Pentastar and winged icon.
Chrysler began phasing out the Pentastar as vehicle badging in 1993,
when the Dodge division adopted the ram logo beginning with the
Dodge Intrepid. The Chrysler brand revived the original gold logo in
1994, eventually adopting the winged logo it had used until the
1950s, in 1998. The winged logo appeared on all cars by 1999,
however the 2000 Chrysler Voyager used the plain one. In 1996,
Plymouth debuted a new sailboat logo, which was a simplified version
of the brand's pre-Pentastar ship logo. The Pentastar's last badging
appearance was on the steering wheel, front fender side rub trim,
and keys of the Chrysler NS minivans produced from 1996 through 2000
as well as on certain vehicles (although the word CHRYSLER appeared
on the steering wheel on some vehicles). The Pentastar continued to
represent Chrysler until the merge with Daimler in 1998, when it was
retired. Among the few remaining traces of this motif was a large,
star-shaped window at DaimlerChrysler's American headquarters in
Auburn Hills, Michigan, and Pentastar Aviation, a former
DaimlerChrysler subsidiary which reverted to its original name after
being purchased, by a member of the Ford family. Many dealerships
still have signage and other traces still visually apparent to the
Pentastar, where a five-Pentastar logo remains in use as the logo of
the "Five Star Dealer" service rank. Despite having been officially
retired, the Pentastar continued to make a few relatively
inconspicuous appearances on Chrysler Group cars and trucks in
markings on window glass and on individual components and
molded-plastic assemblies.
On May 17, 2007, an internal email stated that Chrysler was going to
revive the Pentastar logo, in updated form, after their split from
Daimler. The new three-dimensional Pentastar was formally introduced
when Chrysler LLC began doing business as a private company in
August 2007.
Winged logo
Chrysler "winged" logo, used on
Chrysler division cars 1998-present
The design shown here is an adaptation of the original medallion
logo which Chrysler used on its cars at its inception in 1925. The
logo was revived for the Chrysler division in 1994, and was
surrounded by a pair of silver wings after the Daimler-Benz merger
in 1998. When sold to Cerberus, Chrysler readopted the Pentastar
(see above) as their corporate logo, although the winged logo is
still used on the cars themselves.
Alternative
propulsion
For many years, Chrysler developed gas turbine engines for
automotive use. Turbines were common in many military vehicles, and
Chrysler built many prototypes for passenger cars. In the 1960s,
mass production seemed almost ready. Fifty Chrysler Turbine Cars,
specialty designed Ghia-bodied coupes were built in 1962 and placed
in the hands of regular people for final testing. The turbine
engines never saw production.
Hybrid
vehicles
Chrysler is currently planning at least three hybrid vehicles, the
Chrysler Aspen hybrid, Dodge Durango hybrid, and the Dodge Ram
including HEMI® engines. Chrysler plans to use hybrid technology
developed jointly with General Motors and BMW AG in vehicles beyond
the two hybrid SUVs it had already announced that it would introduce
next year. Chrysler has also been experimenting with a Hybrid Diesel
truck for Military applications.
Established in September, 2007, Chrysler's new ENVI division will
specifically deal with new hybrid vehicles not based on existing
vehicles and will be led by Lou Rhodes. |
|