Nissian TITAN selling out to Dodge!
#1
Nissian TITAN selling out to Dodge!
1 less full size on the market!
It looks like the next generation TITAN might just be a rebadged Ram! Just thought i would share the link.
I think its kind of a bummer, i kinda liked the TITANS. oh well.
http://www.thecarconnection.com/blog/?p=1182
It looks like the next generation TITAN might just be a rebadged Ram! Just thought i would share the link.
I think its kind of a bummer, i kinda liked the TITANS. oh well.
http://www.thecarconnection.com/blog/?p=1182
#2
The Mexico part is a bummer....
1 less full size on the market!
It looks like the next generation TITAN might just be a rebadged Ram! Just thought i would share the link.
I think its kind of a bummer, i kinda liked the TITANS. oh well.
http://www.thecarconnection.com/blog/?p=1182
It looks like the next generation TITAN might just be a rebadged Ram! Just thought i would share the link.
I think its kind of a bummer, i kinda liked the TITANS. oh well.
http://www.thecarconnection.com/blog/?p=1182
Consumer Reports rates the Titan as very problematic through all years of production and the 4WD Titan and Armada make the CR "worst of the worst" list... There are no Fords on this list, nor are there any of the Dodge trucks. Bunch of stuff like the GM midsize pickups, GM minivans, Land Rovers....
I suspect the full-size truck market is necessarily shrinking as people move to smaller cars, and although the Titan had a lot of promise, it was a piece of junk in practice.
One disappointment for me is that I'm in the Detroit area, and it would really help us out if the rebadged Dodge trucks could be built at the Dodge truck plant in Warren, MI (about 15 miles from here) instead of Mexico...
George
#5
One of my son's friends had a Titan, first year model I think, and had a LOT of problems with it--axles, transfer case, brakes, etc. I felt kind of bad because I recommended it to his family (after they had some terrible luck with an F150).
Consumer Reports rates the Titan as very problematic through all years of production and the 4WD Titan and Armada make the CR "worst of the worst" list... There are no Fords on this list, nor are there any of the Dodge trucks. Bunch of stuff like the GM midsize pickups, GM minivans, Land Rovers....
I suspect the full-size truck market is necessarily shrinking as people move to smaller cars, and although the Titan had a lot of promise, it was a piece of junk in practice.
One disappointment for me is that I'm in the Detroit area, and it would really help us out if the rebadged Dodge trucks could be built at the Dodge truck plant in Warren, MI (about 15 miles from here) instead of Mexico...
George
Consumer Reports rates the Titan as very problematic through all years of production and the 4WD Titan and Armada make the CR "worst of the worst" list... There are no Fords on this list, nor are there any of the Dodge trucks. Bunch of stuff like the GM midsize pickups, GM minivans, Land Rovers....
I suspect the full-size truck market is necessarily shrinking as people move to smaller cars, and although the Titan had a lot of promise, it was a piece of junk in practice.
One disappointment for me is that I'm in the Detroit area, and it would really help us out if the rebadged Dodge trucks could be built at the Dodge truck plant in Warren, MI (about 15 miles from here) instead of Mexico...
George
I really liked the 5.6 engine though, not the most HP or fastest, but it really picked up and seemed to have more power than it actually had.
oh well, another one bites the dust.
#7
I do know that a friend of mine bought a Dodge Ram back in '03. When he showed it to me it was dark and I said "I kind of like the three tone interior." He looked at me and said it was only one color. Well, the next time I saw it was in the daytime. It looked mostly one color during the day but at night none of the different materials matched. To me, when you spend that much money on a truck, the materials should at least work together.
Oh well, I don't see Chrylser letting Nissan use the Hemi so maybe the 5.6 will stay?
Trending Topics
#8
Who knows though, personally, besides getting horrible mileage ( I guess that's a moot point when no half ton V8 really shines in this category )I thought the 5.6 to be a pretty good motor.
#9
I heard the opposite. I think is was posted here some time back that Dodge was possibly canning the Hemi and going with the 5.6 instead.
Who knows though, personally, besides getting horrible mileage ( I guess that's a moot point when no half ton V8 really shines in this category )I thought the 5.6 to be a pretty good motor.
Who knows though, personally, besides getting horrible mileage ( I guess that's a moot point when no half ton V8 really shines in this category )I thought the 5.6 to be a pretty good motor.
I thought dodge was going to be bumping up the numbers of the 5.7 HEMI to match or beat the 5.7 Tundra (380HP & 404 TQ )for their new 2009 Ram?
It wouldnt make since to release a new motor for only a few years? But who knows, time will tell.
The new Dodge Hemi V8 engine
2009 Dodge Ram Preview Car Reviews - The Car Connection
#10
I thought dodge was going to be bumping up the numbers of the 5.7 HEMI to match or beat the 5.7 Tundra (380HP & 404 TQ )for their new 2009 Ram?
It wouldnt make since to release a new motor for only a few years? But who knows, time will tell.
The new Dodge Hemi V8 engine
2009 Dodge Ram Preview Car Reviews - The Car Connection
It wouldnt make since to release a new motor for only a few years? But who knows, time will tell.
The new Dodge Hemi V8 engine
2009 Dodge Ram Preview Car Reviews - The Car Connection
PickupTruck.com - Update 4: Chrysler to Build Full Size Truck for Nissan
It's confusing. But I'm thinking seeing the the first link I posted was announced before all of this, maybe it's still a go?
#11
Well, after reading both of those articles two things are obvious. One, the V6 engines discussed by Chrysler are more likely intended to replace the Hemi in passenger cars than their trucks. I'm sure they will offer a V8 but could drop the Hemi name altogether. Two, there is no way of knowing what will happen for the new Titan since neither company has been willing to provide any concrete details on powertrain.
#12
Chrysler's future does not come with a Hemi powertrain - Autoblog
PickupTruck.com - Update 4: Chrysler to Build Full Size Truck for Nissan
It's confusing. But I'm thinking seeing the the first link I posted was announced before all of this, maybe it's still a go?
PickupTruck.com - Update 4: Chrysler to Build Full Size Truck for Nissan
It's confusing. But I'm thinking seeing the the first link I posted was announced before all of this, maybe it's still a go?
#13
Consumer Reports only tested one Titan, a 2004 model.
All their subsequent year reviews, including 2008 have read exactly the same: Loud exhaust, poor brakes, yadda yadda yadda.
What was wrong with the brakes, had to do with "brake judder," nothing else.
All the brake issues were resolved by midyear 2005, Nissan replaced the front rotors and pads with a new design, and extended the brake warranty to 5/60,000 for all 2004/2005's whether they were affected or not.
There was never a recall, in fact the only recall I'm aware of that Titan's had, was for a wiring clip that needed to be replaced for the 2006 CC's left rear door power window motor wiring harness.
Why didn't the Titan sell? Lack of advertising on Renault's part is the answer.
For every Titan ad, GM had 100!
Several months ago, Carlos Ghosn, CEO of Renault-Nissan, in an interview he gave to Automotive News, announced that Titans, Armada's and Infiniti QX56's were to be discontinued after 2008.
When I read that, I knew that once the word got around, the trio's resale value would drop to nothing, because...no one wants to get stuck with an orphan.
Renault owns 33% of Nissan, which by Japanese standards, gives Renault a controlling interest.
It's a fact. The frogs have never been successful selling trucks (and all of their made in France cars) in the US market, they don't understand the US market, and never have.
There have been no French vehicles sold in the US since Peugeot left the US market in the early 1990's.
My dad was the Citroen-Maserati Distributor for the western half of the US for over 25 years. When Citroen was absorbed by Peugeot, he told them to FO after one year.
He said he never, ever met a more pig-headed, stupid group of individuals, who when they knew they had a problem (electrical fires on Peugeots 505's, which destroyed the cars), refused to change one part of its Mickey Mouse electrical system.
It's no wonder former owners of Peugeots call 'em Puked's!
A TERD of a car foisted on the un-suspecting US car buyer, who finally caught on by the late 1980's.
All their subsequent year reviews, including 2008 have read exactly the same: Loud exhaust, poor brakes, yadda yadda yadda.
What was wrong with the brakes, had to do with "brake judder," nothing else.
All the brake issues were resolved by midyear 2005, Nissan replaced the front rotors and pads with a new design, and extended the brake warranty to 5/60,000 for all 2004/2005's whether they were affected or not.
There was never a recall, in fact the only recall I'm aware of that Titan's had, was for a wiring clip that needed to be replaced for the 2006 CC's left rear door power window motor wiring harness.
Why didn't the Titan sell? Lack of advertising on Renault's part is the answer.
For every Titan ad, GM had 100!
Several months ago, Carlos Ghosn, CEO of Renault-Nissan, in an interview he gave to Automotive News, announced that Titans, Armada's and Infiniti QX56's were to be discontinued after 2008.
When I read that, I knew that once the word got around, the trio's resale value would drop to nothing, because...no one wants to get stuck with an orphan.
Renault owns 33% of Nissan, which by Japanese standards, gives Renault a controlling interest.
It's a fact. The frogs have never been successful selling trucks (and all of their made in France cars) in the US market, they don't understand the US market, and never have.
There have been no French vehicles sold in the US since Peugeot left the US market in the early 1990's.
My dad was the Citroen-Maserati Distributor for the western half of the US for over 25 years. When Citroen was absorbed by Peugeot, he told them to FO after one year.
He said he never, ever met a more pig-headed, stupid group of individuals, who when they knew they had a problem (electrical fires on Peugeots 505's, which destroyed the cars), refused to change one part of its Mickey Mouse electrical system.
It's no wonder former owners of Peugeots call 'em Puked's!
A TERD of a car foisted on the un-suspecting US car buyer, who finally caught on by the late 1980's.
#14
Consumer Reports only tested one Titan, a 2004 model.
All their subsequent year reviews, including 2008 have read exactly the same: Loud exhaust, poor brakes, yadda yadda yadda.
What was wrong with the brakes, had to do with "brake judder," nothing else.
All the brake issues were resolved by midyear 2005, Nissan replaced the front rotors and pads with a new design, and extended the brake warranty to 5/60,000 for all 2004/2005's whether they were affected or not.
There was never a recall, in fact the only recall I'm aware of that Titan's had, was for a wiring clip that needed to be replaced for the 2006 CC's left rear door power window motor wiring harness.
Why didn't the Titan sell? Lack of advertising on Renault's part is the answer.
For every Titan ad, GM had 100!
Several months ago, Carlos Ghosn, CEO of Renault-Nissan, in an interview he gave to Automotive News, announced that Titans, Armada's and Infiniti QX56's were to be discontinued after 2008.
When I read that, I knew that once the word got around, the trio's resale value would drop to nothing, because...no one wants to get stuck with an orphan.
Renault owns 33% of Nissan, which by Japanese standards, gives Renault a controlling interest.
It's a fact. The frogs have never been successful selling trucks (and all of their made in France cars) in the US market, they don't understand the US market, and never have.
There have been no French vehicles sold in the US since Peugeot left the US market in the early 1990's.
My dad was the Citroen-Maserati Distributor for the western half of the US for over 25 years. When Citroen was absorbed by Peugeot, he told them to FO after one year.
He said he never, ever met a more pig-headed, stupid group of individuals, who when they knew they had a problem (electrical fires on Peugeots 505's, which destroyed the cars), refused to change one part of its Mickey Mouse electrical system.
It's no wonder former owners of Peugeots call 'em Puked's!
A TERD of a car foisted on the un-suspecting US car buyer, who finally caught on by the late 1980's.
All their subsequent year reviews, including 2008 have read exactly the same: Loud exhaust, poor brakes, yadda yadda yadda.
What was wrong with the brakes, had to do with "brake judder," nothing else.
All the brake issues were resolved by midyear 2005, Nissan replaced the front rotors and pads with a new design, and extended the brake warranty to 5/60,000 for all 2004/2005's whether they were affected or not.
There was never a recall, in fact the only recall I'm aware of that Titan's had, was for a wiring clip that needed to be replaced for the 2006 CC's left rear door power window motor wiring harness.
Why didn't the Titan sell? Lack of advertising on Renault's part is the answer.
For every Titan ad, GM had 100!
Several months ago, Carlos Ghosn, CEO of Renault-Nissan, in an interview he gave to Automotive News, announced that Titans, Armada's and Infiniti QX56's were to be discontinued after 2008.
When I read that, I knew that once the word got around, the trio's resale value would drop to nothing, because...no one wants to get stuck with an orphan.
Renault owns 33% of Nissan, which by Japanese standards, gives Renault a controlling interest.
It's a fact. The frogs have never been successful selling trucks (and all of their made in France cars) in the US market, they don't understand the US market, and never have.
There have been no French vehicles sold in the US since Peugeot left the US market in the early 1990's.
My dad was the Citroen-Maserati Distributor for the western half of the US for over 25 years. When Citroen was absorbed by Peugeot, he told them to FO after one year.
He said he never, ever met a more pig-headed, stupid group of individuals, who when they knew they had a problem (electrical fires on Peugeots 505's, which destroyed the cars), refused to change one part of its Mickey Mouse electrical system.
It's no wonder former owners of Peugeots call 'em Puked's!
A TERD of a car foisted on the un-suspecting US car buyer, who finally caught on by the late 1980's.
#15