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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ChryslerChrysler - Wikipedia

    FCA US, LLC, doing business as Stellantis North America and known historically as Chrysler ( / ˈkraɪslər / KRY-slər ), [2] [3] is one of the "Big Three" automobile manufacturers in the United States, headquartered in Auburn Hills, Michigan. It is the American subsidiary of the multinational automotive company Stellantis.

    • Maxwell Motor Company

      Around the time of Chrysler's takeover, Maxwell was also in...

    • Daimler-Benz

      The Mercedes-Benz Group AG (previously named Daimler-Benz,...

    • SRT

      SRT (Street and Racing Technology) is an American badge of...

    • Plymouth

      Plymouth was a brand of automobiles produced by Chrysler...

    • Ram Trucks

      Ram Trucks, stylized as RAM and formerly known as the Ram...

  2. Website. chrysler .com. Chrysler is an American brand of automobiles and division owned by Stellantis North America. The automaker was founded in 1925 by Walter Chrysler from the remains of the Maxwell Motor Company.

    • Origins
    • Vehicle Marques
    • Other Marques
    • Airflow
    • The Forward Look
    • Government Programs in World War II
    • Postwar Government Programs
    • 1960s
    • Expansion Into Europe
    • The 1970s

    Chrysler was founded by Walter Chrysler on June 6, 1925, when the Maxwell Motor Company(est. 1904) 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 a similar rescu...

    In 1928, Chrysler Corporation began dividing its vehicle offerings by price class and function. The Plymouth brand was introduced at the low priced end of the market (created essentially by once again reworking and rebadging Chrysler's 4-cylinder model). At the same time, the DeSoto marque was introduced in the medium-price field. Shortly thereafte...

    MoPar, Chryco, AutoPar

    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 AutoParbrands, until the Mopar brand was phased into the Canadian market beginning in the late 1970s. Many Chrysler Corporation vehicle parts also bore variants of the DPCD monog...

    Airtemp

    Chrysler's Airtemp marque for stationary and mobile air conditioning, refrigeration, and climate control was launched with the first installation in 1930's Chrysler Building.The Airtemp Corporation was incorporated in 1934 and it utilized a former Maxwell factory. Airtemp invented capacity regulators, sealed radial compressors, and the self-contained air conditioning system, along with a superior high-speed radial compressor, and by 1941 had over 500 dealers selling its air conditioning and h...

    Acustar

    In the 1980s, Chrysler formed a subsidiary business called Acustar to sell parts to other automakers as well as supplying parts for Chrysler-built vehicles, similar to General Motors' creation of Delphi Corporation and Ford's later creation of Visteon.

    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 Depressionye...

    In 1955, things brightened with the introduction of Virgil Exner's successful Forward Look designs, followed in 1956 by Chrysler's pioneering adoption of transistor radios in cars. On April 28, 1955, Chrysler and Philco had announced the development and production of the world's first all-transistor car radio. The Mopar model 914HR was developed an...

    Vehicles and systems

    During World War II, essentially all of Chrysler's facilities were devoted to building military vehicles and systems. Chrysler ranked eighth among United States corporations in the value of wartime production contracts. Chrysler made the converters for the Manhattan Project's K-25gaseous diffusion plant in their Lynch Road plant in Detroit, after Dr Carl Heussner of the Chrysler plating laboratory solved the nickel plating problem.

    Radar antennas

    One of Chrysler's most significant contributions to the war effort was not in the field of vehicles but in design and manufacture of the components of radar systems. The Radiation Laboratory at MIT, established in 1941 to develop microwave radars, developed the SCR-584, the most widely recognized radar system of the war era. This system included a parabolic antenna six feet in diameter that was mechanically aimed in a helicalpattern (round and round as well as up and down). For the final prod...

    After the war, Chrysler continued with special projects for the U.S. government. These were in the aerospace fields of missiles and space boosters.

    On April 28, 1960, Chrysler president Lester Lum Colbert was elevated to the position of chairman and William C. Newberg was promoted to president. Newberg unexpectedly resigned after two months on the job. On July 21, 1960, the board of directors announced that it had reached a settlement agreement with Newberg over $450,000 in profits he had made...

    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 takeover was the launch of the Hillman Avenger in 1970 (briefly sold in the U.S. as the Plymouth Cricket), which sold in Britain al...

    The 1970s were tumultuous for Chrysler since, like all the American car companies of the era, the company was reliant on a marketplace where cheap oil was the norm. Although Chrysler entered the small car market with the 1971 Dodge Colt, a captive import of the Mitsubishi Galant and the first collaboration between Chrysler and Mitsubishi Motors, it...

  3. May 23, 2015 · MAY 23, 2015. Chrysler, founded in 1925, has had a tumultuous history as the third-largest of Detroit’s auto companies. Known in the years after World War II for its well-engineered cars, it has...

  4. www.wikiwand.com › en › ChryslerChrysler - Wikiwand

    FCA US, LLC, doing business as Stellantis North America and known historically as Chrysler ( KRY-slər), is one of the "Big Three" automobile manufacturers in the United States, headquartered in Auburn Hills, Michigan. It is the American subsidiary of the multinational automotive company Stellantis.

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  6. Chrysler, American subsidiary of the automotive company Stellantis NV. It was first incorporated as Chrysler Corporation in 1925. It was reorganized and adopted the name Chrysler Group LLC in 2009, and in 2014 it became a wholly owned subsidiary of Fiat SpA.

  7. Website. chrysler .com. Stellantis North America, (officially FCA US, LLC) and formerly Chrysler Corporation is a car manufacturer based in the United States. They are one of the oldest car manufacturers in the world. They own other car companies such as Dodge, Jeep, and Ram Trucks. 1925.

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