Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. Legacy Archives

Dodge to absorb SRT and become Chrysler’s performance brand

Add as a preferred source on Google

Dodge’s prodigal son may soon return home.

As part of a new five-year plan, Fiat-Chrysler announced that it will integrate the Dodge and SRT brands, meaning the Viper – which has worn an SRT badge since its 2012 relaunch – could become a Dodge again.

Recommended Videos

As part of Chrysler’s post-financial crisis restructuring Dodge was shorn of its profitable Ram trucks, while the scope of SRT was greatly expanded.

The SRT brand, short for Street and Racing Technology started out as an in-house tuner inspired by BMW M and Mercedes-Benz AMG, has been in charge of all Chrysler performance cars for the past two years.

Under the new scheme, though, Dodge will become Chrysler’s performance brand, while Chrysler itself takes over as the company’s mainstream Ford-Chevrolet-Toyota fighter.

The move should make Dodge relevant again.

In recent years, the 100-year-old brand has leaned heavily on the sporty Charger and Challenger while its more mainstream models have been left to wither.

While it did replace the Caliber with the vastly-improved Dart, the only thing the rest of the lineup seems to be good for is threatening the sales of similar Chrysler-badged models.

That means the Dodge Avenger and Grand Caravan will likely be killed off, although Motor Authority reports that the Dart and Journey will stick around, and even get performance versions with turbocharged engines and all-wheel drive.

The fates of the non-Dodge SRT models – the Chrysler 300 SRT and Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT – are unknown, though.

Chrysler and Jeep may lose a couple of hot rods, but Dodge dealers will gain a lot in return. The Viper’s switch to SRT always seemed a bit forced, and lessened the “halo effect” that was one of the most valuable aspects of the car for its maker.

Now, just as Chevrolet dealers can bask in Corvette buzz, Dodge stores will again benefit from some residual sports-car excitement.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
Chinese drivers have figured out a silly way to fool Tesla Autopilot and it involves doll heads
God forbid a Tesla wants to drive itself!
Tesla Autopilot

Tesla's driver-monitoring systems are designed to ensure drivers keep their eyes on the road while using Autopilot and other assisted-driving features. But in China, some Tesla owners have reportedly found an unusual workaround: tiny plastic doll heads.

According to a recent Wired report, a growing niche market has emerged around figurines and gadgets designed to trick Tesla's in-cabin camera into believing an attentive driver is sitting behind the wheel. The most popular version involves miniature celebrity heads, often resembling actors or public figures, mounted near the rearview mirror to block the camera's view of the actual driver.

Read more
Tesla FSD update adds a new dialog that previews your car’s parking plan
Version 14.3.4 surfaces the car's intended parking method on screen before it begins the maneuver, a change that makes supervised autonomy feel more predictable.
Tesla FSD Supervised featured

Tesla has started rolling out Full Self-Driving (Supervised) version 14.3.4, and one of its standout additions makes the end of a trip feel notably more polished. The update introduces a new dialog box that appears as the car approaches its destination, showing the driver exactly how it plans to park before it begins the maneuver.

A robotaxi-style arrival experience

Read more
This tiny sensor could help self-driving cars and robots see better in the dark
Penn State researchers have developed a light-adaptive photomemristor modeled on the human eye that achieves over 95% visual accuracy in shifting light conditions.
Waymo Jaguar I-PACE sensors close up

Penn State researchers have developed a light-adaptive sensor component that could make autonomous vehicle cameras and robots far more reliable in shifting lighting conditions. The work, published Monday in Nature Communications, takes direct cues from how the human eye adjusts between bright and dark environments.

Biology as a blueprint

Read more