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Chrysler Town Country and Dodge Challenger Earn Segment.

Chrysler Town & Country and Dodge Challenger Earn Segment Awards for Initial Quality From J.D. Power and Associates

2011 Chrysler Town & Country ranks highest in initial quality for minivan segment

2011 Dodge Challenger earns top spot in mid-size sporty car segment Five Chrysler Group vehicles rank third or better in their segments for initial quality.


Auburn Hills, Mich. , Jun 23, 2011 - The 2011 Chrysler Town & Country and the 2011 Dodge Challenger ranked highest in their segments in the J.D. Power and Associates 2011 U.S. Initial Quality Study (IQS).

The Chrysler Town & Country ranked highest in initial quality in the minivan segment and the Dodge Challenger ranked highest in the mid-size sporty car segment.

Three other Chrysler Group vehicles were highlighted by J.D. Power and Associates for ranking among the top three vehicles of their competitive class: Dodge Durango in the mid-size crossover/SUV category, Dodge Grand Caravan in the minivan category and Ram Dakota in the mid-size pickup segment.

"Having five vehicles rank at or near the top of their segments is the result of a lot of hard work and long hours dedicated to updating our product line," said Doug Betts, Senior Vice President Quality, Chrysler Group. "Most automakers, including Chrysler Group, find it challenging to maintain quality levels when launching vehicles with a significant amount of new content. It's a big accomplishment for our employees and supplier partners to achieve these initial quality results when so many of our 2011 model year launches coincided with the IQS survey period."

J.D. Power and Associates surveyed owners of new 2011 model year vehicles that were registered between the months of November 2010 through February 2011. IQS measures new vehicle quality at 90 days of ownership.
In the past year, Chrysler Group has launched 16 new or significantly improved vehicles.

"We've made steady gains, improving reliability by 58 percent in the past four years, according to our internal warranty data," Betts said. "We still have more work to do as we continue to improve the quality of all our products."