Also called | Chrysler Grand Voyager (LWB Model) Chrysler Voyager (SWB Model) |
---|---|
Production | 1988–1990 |
Body style | 3-door minivan |
Layout | Front-engine, front-wheel drive / Four-wheel drive |
Platform | Chrysler S platform |
Engine | 2.5 L KI4 3.3 L EGA V6 3.0 L Mitsubishi 6G72 V6 |
Transmission | 5-speed manual 3-speed A413 automatic 3-speed A670 automatic 4-speed A604 automatic |
Related | Chrysler Town & Country Plymouth Voyager Dodge Caravan |
1988-1990 models in Europe are rebadged Dodge Caravans, although the Caravan in the USA was sold alongside the Chrysler Voyager in counterparts. For 1988, the Chrysler Voyager in Europe was identical to the Plymouth Voyager in the United States except that the 3.8 L V6 was not available for the Chrysler Voyager. Base models of the Voyager were offered in most states with either a 2.5 L four-cylinder or a 3.0 L Mitsubishi V6 engine, except in California and several northeastern states, where the Mitsubishi V6 didn't meet emissions standards. In those locales, the 3.3 L engine was offered instead. The 1990s Chrysler Voyager grille was related to a Dodge Caravan in the United States.
Read more about this topic: Chrysler Voyager
Famous quotes containing the words generation i and/or generation:
“We need to encourage members of this next generation to become all that they can become, not try to force them to become what we want them to become. . . . You and I cant even begin to dream the dreams this next generation is going to dream, or answer the questions that will be put to them.”
—Barbara Coloroso (20th century)
“Counting is the religion of this generation it is its hope and its salvation.”
—Gertrude Stein (18741946)
“Our chaotic economic situation has convinced so many of our young people that there is no room for them. They become uncertain and restless and morbid; they grab at false promises, embrace false gods and judge things by treacherous values. Their insecurity makes them believe that tomorrow doesnt matter and the ineffectualness of their lives makes them deny the ideals which we of an older generation acknowledged.”
—Hortense Odlum (1892?)
“The mind is a finer body, and resumes its functions of feeding, digesting, absorbing, excluding, and generating, in a new and ethereal element. Here, in the brain, is all the process of alimentation repeated, in the acquiring, comparing, digesting, and assimilating of experience. Here again is the mystery of generation repeated.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)