Auto Recalls for Consumers

Car Recalls, Auto Recalls, Motorcycle Recalls, RVs, Commercial Vehicles & more

 
Auto Recalls For Consumers

1996 CHRYSLER SEBRING Review - Base Price $16,441

Lots of image, lots of room.

Introduction

Buying a sporty coupe is almost always an exercise in left-brain/right-brain conflict. Sure, you want snazzy good looks and lots of mile-eating performance, but you'd also appreciate some comfort, fuel economy and civility as well. Including room in the back for adult-size passengers. Is that too much to ask from one car?

Chrysler thinks not, and offers up its Sebring--and the near-identical Dodge Avenger--sport coupes as proof. On the surface, they seem like the ideal have-your-cake-and-eat-it-too cars; all gain, no pain. Sebring and Avenger suggest that you can enjoy driving pleasure and distinctive styling without having to endure a harsh ride or contort rear-seat passengers into pretzels.

Seen from this perspective, Sebring and Avenger seem to have no direct competition. The Mazda MX-6 and Mitsubishi Eclipse (for example) are smaller, the Ford Thunderbird and Chevy Monte Carlo are bigger. Others are faster but not as comfort-oriented.

This is a serious effort on Chrysler's part, but it's no bet-the-farm major gamble. What you see on the outside is new, but Sebring and Avenger are based on familiar hardware, mostly from Mitsubishi, and are built in the Normal, Illinois facility that turns out Mitsubishi Galants and Eclipses, as well as Eagle Talons.

The Mitsubishi connection pays dividends in the area of quality. Simply stated, Sebring and Avenger are the best-built Chrysler products we've encountered in recent experience, displaying high levels of finish and material quality.

There are two models of Chrysler's cloned coupes--the Sebring LX and LXi, the base and ES Avenger. As you'd expect, the more expensive Sebring lineup includes more standard comfort and convenience features. The basic Avenger ($14,040) is a little less hedonistic, though far from bare bones.

Our test car was a Sebring LXi.

Interior

If you've seen the interior of a Mitsubishi Eclipse or Eagle Talon, you've seen much of the Sebring's cabin hardware. The dashboard is carried over virtually intact, complete with eye-catching shape and legible instrumentation. Not to mention dual airbags.

Base model gauges include speedometer, tachometer, fuel level and coolant temperature; V6 versions get an oil pressure gauge as well.

The key element missing in most small sport coupes is roominess, and the Sebring has that in abundance. The cabin can hold four adults easily for short and medium-length trips, or two adults plus two kids for any distance. None of the smaller sport coupes can make this claim.

The seats are comfortable and adjust to fit almost all occupants. The front passenger's seat has a one-touch slide-forward feature that substantially improves access to the rear. On paper, the rear seat holds three people, but two is a more realistic proposition.

Sebring is quiet inside, too. A combination of good aerodynamic design and plenty of sound insulation keeps outside noises at bay, allowing occupants to enjoy the standard AM/FM/cassette stereo sound system (with four speakers in LX, eight in LXi) without interference.

Air conditioning is also standard on all models, whether entry-level (Sebring LX or Avenger) or fancy (LXi or ES). Many of the upgrade model's standard features, including power windows/mirrors/door locks, cruise control, cast-aluminum wheels, remote keyless entry and a HomeLink 3-channel transmitter that can be programmed to operate garage-door openers and two additional remote-control home features, can be ordered for base versions. Leather interior trim is optional on LXi and EX models only.

Options common to all Sebrings and Avengers are a power tilt/slide sunroof, power driver's seat, and a smoker's kit that adds a lighter and ashtray to the center console.

Walk-Around

Few current Chrysler products are lacking in visual drama. There's certainly plenty to look at in this case, from the cab-forward basic form--a company trademark these days--to the aggressive nose treatment.

Sebring differs from its Avenger stablemate in many details, but basic elements are the same for both. The large sloping grill, with a larger air intake flanked by fog lights below, is distinctive, and may be to more viewers' liking than the intake slats on the Avenger.

In profile, the duo look very much alike, though the Sebring has full lower side cladding (in body color except on white cars, where the plastic panels are in light gray) covering the convex shapes found on the Avenger's all-steel flanks.

The proportions are unusual for the class, eschewing the traditional long hood-short rear deck form for a compact minimal-overhang nose and long tail. Another element that may take some getting used to is the sudden upsweep of the body that begins in the middle of the doors and is carried all the way to the tail.

Rear views differ in detail; both are dominated by large taillights. The rump-rearward design does have a practical side as it creates an unusually large cargo area for a two-door coupe.

Individual reactions may vary, but there's no denying that Sebring and Avenger are attention-getters. In our experience, most onlookers' reactions have been positive, and that's one of the reasons folks buy sport coupes.

Impressions

For the majority of drivers, those who spend a great deal of travel time on city streets and interstate highways, the Sebring will do the job very well. It rides smoothly, is quiet, and has enough power for passing or hill-climbing. If, that is, the Sebring--or Avenger--in question has the Mitsubishi-built V6 engine. The smaller Neon-derived inline-4 is less powerful and substantially louder. Although the Neon 4-cyl. is one of the most spirited engines in the world of compact cars, in Sebring-Avenger applications it's pulling a car that's substantially heavier.

If the 4-cyl. powerplant holds any appeal, it is in the availability of a 5-speed manual transmission; the V6 comes with 4-speed automatic only.

The Sebring's chassis is largely carried over from the Mitsubishi Galant sedan. It's stiff, and has all the right pieces, including double-wishbone suspension front and rear and ABS (V6 models have disc brakes all around, base versions use drums in back), but suspension tuning has compromised handling in favor of a sedan-like ride. While that's just fine for daily use, we'd have preferred a slightly stiffer setup that would deliver more driving pleasure as well.

To its driver, the Sebring feels far heavier than the curb weight indicates. It is reluctant to get into the spirit of back-road driving, leans more than we'd like, and in general lacks the kind of precise behavior expected in a sporting car. The Honda Prelude and Ford Probe, to name just two, are much stronger performers in this regard. So are the Mitsubishi Eclipse and Eagle Talon.

One major drawback is the power steering which, like similar units that vary boost based on engine speed, sometimes picks inopportune moments to reduce effort.

Summary

As practical, comfortable and stylish coupes, the Sebring and Avenger have few peers. They are well-equipped, competitively priced and easy to live with. For many buyers they might be a fine substitute for a compact sedan.

The emotions that drive sport coupe purchases are harder to quantify, but the Sebring seems to fall short here, at least in our view. It's more a passenger's car than a driving machine, regardless of which engine's under the hood. A manual transmission for the V6 engine would modify this impression substantially, but that's an investment Chrysler is unwilling, at this point, to make.


Find more reviews at New Car Test Drive. The wolrd's leading provider of Automotive Reviews.

Home  •  Car Recalls  •  Tires  •  Motorcycles  •  RVs  •  Commercial Vehicles  •  Car Seats  •  Complaints  •  Sitemap  •  Privacy Policy

Edmunds  •  Kelley Blue Book  •  SaferCar.gov  •  Consumer Recalls  •  Government Recalls
Follow arfc_recalls on TwitterRSS Feeds