New Dodge Hornets reported as selling 33 percent below MSRP- worth consideration??

Which is fine on an Alfa Romeo, I guess, and even that would be a stretch because it's always in the way, but people will rarely use these paddles. And on a dodge, it makes zero sense IMO. If you used it you would most likely agree. It's a horrible design.

Yes, no need for the paddles to be that big, and I wouldn't even miss them if they're gone.
 
One of the trip meters hasn't been reset for 14k miles and it showed 30.6 mpg. I used it mostly in the electric mode as I didn't have to drive far and my hotel had free charging, so i ended up using just a bit over $4 on fuel, which in California is less than a gallon.
I don't think the MPG on this thing is steller, but I cannot personally verify as I didn't put enough miles on it.

I liked the seats, but they will not fit everybody as they are bolstered quite aggressively. The material was also very good and despite being cloth seats, they felt premium. The picture doesn't really do its justice, it looks much nicer in real life.


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30.6 mpg for a rental would be very good no? I don't expect them to be babied?
 
If they made a slightly more basic cheaper, more efficient, and less failure prone naturally aspirated fwd sxt I'd actually think about it. Don't care for the turbo awd. More stuff to go wrong that'll cost you more out the door and during ownership. Of course the hornet loses its hornet if they do that but its a cuv so they already disrespected the name first. Won't hurt to disrespect it more by making it slow.
 
Everyone I know who drives a Ram, Jeep, Dodge, is happy with their vehicle, and the dealership here seems fine to.
Eh, do they trade in every few years? Probably then they are as good as most vehicles.
I'm trying to think how many former Grand Caravan owners I know that just gave up on it at about 120k miles... 5, and they all just couldn't justify/keep up with the important stuff breaking/wearing out, and keeping it all working was not in the cards! Only one bought a RAM, and they rest moved onto honda/toyota at pretty insane prices IMO to not deal with poor parts quality anymore.
I don't know how they think they are ever going to get repeat buyers with vehicles that become a money pit at relatively little, almost all highway miles?
 
Eh, do they trade in every few years? Probably then they are as good as most vehicles.
I'm trying to think how many former Grand Caravan owners I know that just gave up on it at about 120k miles... 5, and they all just couldn't justify/keep up with the important stuff breaking/wearing out, and keeping it all working was not in the cards! Only one bought a RAM, and they rest moved onto honda/toyota at pretty insane prices IMO to not deal with poor parts quality anymore.
I don't know how they think they are ever going to get repeat buyers with vehicles that become a money pit at relatively little, almost all highway miles?
We made it to 130k miles and I will be dumping it next year, as it just keeps on giving the nickel and dime stuff.

1. Sliding doors are now manual only (I know, cry me a river)
2. Rear hatch won't always go all the way up, even after a strut change, so the button to close it won't work until you push it up (annoys my wife, I don't really care)
3. Engine vibration that I cannot figure out.
4. Rear heater blend door is stuck and ticks all the time
5. Sway bar bushings are shot, but that is a major job to change out due to the steering rack being in the way. They are very noisy.
6. Rust in the dogleg, whereas older Toyotas and Hondas have none
7. I recently changed the leaky oil cooler.

Our 250k mile Camry has needed Spark plugs, and that's it in the 5 years I have owned it. We will be getting a Toyota or Honda for our next van. My wife wants a green one, so that limits me to Toyota.

I've had F150's and Silverados that went to 150k with much less issues.

Outside of my insane addiction to Jeeps, I am done with Chrysler. This is my 4th Chrysler minivan. The first was a 1995, and the last is going to be a 2014. It is a nice looking, riding, and driving van, but I am tired of working on it.
 
They really are stupid, especially on a CUV. My favorite was the rental Rogue I had with paddles for the CVT.
My CUV has paddle shifters. They're much smaller and run a 7sp PDK.

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My CUV has paddle shifters. They're much smaller and run a 7sp PDK.
Even on a sporty SUV like your Porsche the paddle shifters make little sense. If there is a traditional PRDL selector, just add the manual shift option to it.
BTW, the Hornet had both 🤣

Paddle shifters really only make sense on cars that are likely to be tracked, otherwise it’s just a gimmick IMO.
 
Even on a sporty SUV like your Porsche the paddle shifters make little sense. If there is a traditional PRDL selector, just add the manual shift option to it.
BTW, the Hornet had both 🤣

Paddle shifters really only make sense on cars that are likely to be tracked, otherwise it’s just a gimmick IMO.
Soft roading, towing, and hooning around on snowy roads, is when I use the paddle shifters in the Outback. Our old 5spd auto CRV used to be quite annoying actually in those situations with not being able to pick a gear yourself, as the programming seemed to be more a transmission shifting durability test, trying to get as many pointless shifts per mile possible....
The paddles on the Outback are thankfully unobtrusive, as you are right, its just D R and P that get used most of the time, but its nice to pick a ratio yourself when I want to.
 
We made it to 130k miles and I will be dumping it next year, as it just keeps on giving the nickel and dime stuff.

1. Sliding doors are now manual only (I know, cry me a river)
2. Rear hatch won't always go all the way up, even after a strut change, so the button to close it won't work until you push it up (annoys my wife, I don't really care)
3. Engine vibration that I cannot figure out.
4. Rear heater blend door is stuck and ticks all the time
5. Sway bar bushings are shot, but that is a major job to change out due to the steering rack being in the way. They are very noisy.
6. Rust in the dogleg, whereas older Toyotas and Hondas have none
7. I recently changed the leaky oil cooler.

Our 250k mile Camry has needed Spark plugs, and that's it in the 5 years I have owned it. We will be getting a Toyota or Honda for our next van. My wife wants a green one, so that limits me to Toyota.

I've had F150's and Silverados that went to 150k with much less issues.

Outside of my insane addiction to Jeeps, I am done with Chrysler. This is my 4th Chrysler minivan. The first was a 1995, and the last is going to be a 2014. It is a nice looking, riding, and driving van, but I am tired of working on it.
Yes, this is why our friends spent nearly twice as much on the replacement Toyota/Honda, than they did on the Caravans... Even $1k more in parts quality into the Caravan might have had it lasting a few more years, and getting some repeat customers!
I guess the stellantis executives wanted to pump profits for a couple years, get their bonus's and leave.... Toyota, Honda, Subaru(post ~2012), Mitsubishi play less of that game IMHO... GM and Ford seem to do better with quality parts for their pickups and full size suv's, but anything fwd with them seems to be not great either, IMO and experience.
 
Thats just Dodge standard pricing technique. Over price it by a large amount so you can give a massive discount. Run screaming. I wouldnt touch one with a ten foot pole.

Paco
 
Just an opinion but Stellantis had one car line that they rode hard until discontinuing: the Challenger and Charger cars. Fun cars to look at and to drive. I wonder who the executive is that said: "Hey, lets discontinue those models and offer a Fiat based CUV. We'll put giant paddle shifter in place so the rubes think its a sports car."
 
one of the managers at work Traded his cherokee (?) trailhawk on a Hornet last fall... no complaints so far...

just looked at the local Dodge Dealer's website, they have exactly 1 hornet listed.
a (Former Rental) used 2024 with 32k mi. for $25k.. and the dealer changed the tires after the trade according to the Carfax.

https://www.tomahl.com/used/Dodge/2...ale-Lima-3acd932aac18065be1f6cb1b98e266b7.htm

Same Local Dealer I bought my First car from, 2000 Hyundai Sonata, in 2001 ( 1 MY old) with 16k mi for $10k ($18k in today's $$) - Find out years later it was a Former Rental that had Been in a Frontal Collision, and what looked to be a Cheap repair... ( Clear Coat all peeled off the front bumper by '07)
 
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