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Dodge Says Truck Market Is Alive and Well

SANTA BARBARA, CA – The redesigned 2009 Dodge Ram is now on its way to dealers in a market that’s not as robust as it was even a year ago.

by Staff
October 14, 2008
3 min to read


SANTA BARBARA, CA – The redesigned 2009 Dodge Ram is now on its way to dealers in a market that’s not as robust as it was even a year ago, thanks to the recent record-high gasoline prices. However, even with the drop-off in pickup sales this year, the numbers show that there still is a lucrative truck market, Chrysler LLC officials said. Trucks account for 11 percent of new-vehicle sales, according to www.star-telegram.com.

Mostly gone from the market, though, are the “casual truckers,” Dodge Brand Manager Mike Accavitti said during a recent media ride-and-drive event for the new Ram. “Those are the buyers who are the greatest risk in troubled times because they have no need for a pickup,” he said in the Star Telegram.

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However, there are four other groups of consumers who still need and buy pickups, and it’s primarily to those people that Dodge will market the new Ram. They include “new-fabric families” who can afford only one new vehicle and find a pickup to be the best choice for their everyday needs; “recreational riders,” who use their trucks to pull horse or boat trailers, or to haul recreational equipment (a big market in Texas); “traditional truckers,” the people who have always owned pickups for personal use, “the Marlboro men of trucks”; and the “work first” buyers, who use their pickups almost exclusively to earn their incomes.

To keep Dodge competitive, the new Ram is “the most well-crafted vehicle we’ve ever produced. This truck is a game-changer,” Accavitti said. “We’ve reinvented the pickup truck segment again.”

The new Ram features a single-cab ST work truck, which has a starting price of $22,170. Other trim levels include the SLT, the Laramie, the Sport, the TRX, and the performance-oriented R/T regular cab, which goes from zero to 60 mpg in 6.1 seconds. For 2009, the Ram also comes in its first true Crew-Cab model, which expands the space of the Quad Cab version (which carries over to the new lineup as well).

Three engines are available in the new Ram, including a 3.7L V-6. Standard on the two-wheel-drive regular and Quad Cab models, this engine is rated at 210 hp and 235 ft.-lbs. of torque.

With the standard six-speed manual gearbox, the V-6 has EPA ratings of 15 miles per gallon in the city and 20 on the highway; with the optional four-speed automatic, the mileage is 14 city/20 highway.

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Next is a 4.7L V-8, with 310 hp and 330 ft-lbs. of torque. With a five-speed automatic, this engine is EPA rated at 13 city/19 highway with two-wheel drive, and 13/18 with four-wheel drive.

The top engine is the 5.7L Hemi V-8, with 380 hp and 404 ft-lbs. of torque. Also connected to the five-speed automatic, this engine has the same EPA ratings as the 4.7L.

The new Ram has a maximum payload of 1,850 pounds, and a 9,100-pound towing capacity.

The new Ram has an optional center console between the driver and front passenger that has a side slot that can hold file folders. Its center storage area is large enough to keep a laptop computer out of sight. Another new feature is the optional Ram Box, built into each side of the cargo bed.

Available amenities include automatic climate control, GPS navigation, rear-seat DVD/satellite TV entertainment center, leather seats, a surround-sound audio system with rear-seat subwoofer, and automatic headlights. Other options include a rearview camera mounted in the top of the tailgate that looks down upon the trailer hitch so the driver can back the truck up to a trailer without having to be guided from outside. A rear parking-assist option also is offered.

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While only the three gasoline engines will be offered initially, the Ram will be available with a gasoline-electric hybrid drive system and a Cummins clean-diesel engine next year.


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