Home - Car Reviews - 2006 Dodge Charger SXT Road Test
2006 Dodge Charger SXT Road Test
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The summer of 2005 is turning out to be the summer of the Dodge Charger. DaimlerChryslers timing is nothing but perfect: not only are modern muscle and reincarnated retro design themes in full swing, but the original Charger is back on the silver screen in this years blockbuster hit, the Dukes of Hazzard.
The third of the highly successful LX-chassis rear-wheel drive large cars, Charger is the latest legendary name to be brought back from the past, acting not as a range-topping coupe, as it originally was, but in four-door guise as a full step up from the midsize U.S.-only Stratus sedan. And as Dodge has so eagerly pointed out, the new Charger is family friendly American muscle; a car for the person whose heart wants a Mustang, but whose mind needs comfortable room for five and a decent sized trunk.
What initially attracts most people to the new Charger is its looks, but theres little heritage
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| What initially attracts most people to the new Charger is its looks. (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
And it doesnt take a million plus salary per year to figure this one out. Ford canned the previous-generation T-Bird, keeping it off the product portfolio for the better half of three years
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| DCX officials call it a four-door coupe, but so long as its got four full-sized doors, a car will never be a coupe in the eyes of the public. (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
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| The new Charger doesnt look a whole lot like the original 60s model. (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
As was mentioned earlier, the new Charger doesnt look a whole lot like the original 60s model. Absent is the legendary black-out grille with retractable headlamps, as are the pillarless door frames. In fact, the only styling queues that could pay remote homage are the rear windows that cant slightly inwards and the quad round tail lamps, but even then square red lenses mask them. Nevertheless
My Midnight Blue tester, in SXT-trim, was middle field in the Charger range, blending thrust with a decent standard specification. Its expected to make up the majority of fleet and private sales. Visually, it is also a twin of the V8-powered HEMI R/T, made in part by larger optional 18-inch five-spoke alloy wheels and fog lamps. Only narrow 3.5L High Output fender badges, black-plastic side mirrors and a single chrome exhaust tip reveal its
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| The V6 is good enough to slingshot this full-size sedan to 60 mph in a respectable 7.4 seconds. (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
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