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DaimlerChrysler to Bring Teeny Two-Seater to U.S.

The company's Smart car, available in Europe since 1998, is to go on sale here in early 2008.

June 29, 2006|John O'Dell, Times Staff Writer

The tiny Smart car is only two-thirds the size of a Mini Cooper, but DaimlerChrysler has big plans for it.

The German automaker, which has been selling the two-seater in Europe since 1998, said Wednesday it planned to introduce the Smart in the U.S. early in 2008.


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With a fuel-sipping three-cylinder engine that gets about 60 miles per gallon on European highways, the Smart could be a big hit here. But first Americans will have to be convinced that something so small can hold its own against pickup trucks and sport utility vehicles that could carry the 1,600-pound Smart in back.

Dieter Zetsche, DaimlerChrysler's chief executive and former head of its U.S.-based Chrysler Group unit, is betting that $3-a-gallon gasoline and crowded streets and highways will help overcome concerns about size.

At just 8-feet, 2-inches in length, the Smart ForTwo, as the model is called, can be parked in half the space occupied by a full-size pickup.

DaimlerChrysler's Mercedes-Benz unit, which builds the Smart at a plant in France, designed it to stand up to much larger vehicles, Zetsche said. The passenger cabin is framed in high-strength steel that is designed to work like the safety cage of a modern race car, isolating passengers from the shock of a collision.

"We are very confident about the safety features and structural integrity" of the Smart, Zetsche said in a telephone interview Wednesday.

The Smart has never made a profit. Zetsche is betting that a redesign and stepped up marketing in Europe next year will turn things around and that U.S. sales in 2008 will provide even bigger profits.

The next-generation Smart ForTwo will be sold in the U.S. through a dealership chain to be established by United Auto Group Inc., the brand's U.S. distributor and marketer and the second-largest operator of new-car dealerships in the U.S.

Zetsche said United Auto, led by former auto racer Roger Penske, expects to have 30 to 50 dealerships ready when the Smart is launched and will continue expanding until the U.S. market is covered. He said the Smart would be promoted as a commuter car in urban areas and as convenient transportation in leisure communities.

One of the risks the Smart brand faces is pricing. There are several small cars in the U.S. market, such as the Honda Fit and Kia Rio, that have room for four or five passengers and are priced in the same range as the Smart.

Zetsche said the car would be priced under $15,000.

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