Spirits were marketed in
Mexico. They were badged as Chryslers rather than Dodges, since the Dodge brand at the time was used only on trucks. The Spirit was introduced in the Mexican market for 1990, one year after its début in the U.S. and Canada. The 1990-1991 Mexican versions were equipped with the U.S. market Plymouth Acclaim tail lights. The initial 1990-model Spirits used a version of the 2.5 L engine operating on
leaded gasoline, equipped with a
carburetor, a tubular exhaust
header, and electronic control of ignition timing. This induction and ignition system used technology and components very similar to those employed in Chrysler's U.S.-market
Lean Burn emission control systems of the late-1970s. For the 1991
model year, Mexico enacted new-vehicle
emission regulations similar to those in the U.S. and Canada. The carbureted leaded-fuel engine was too dirty to comply with the new regulations, so a fully integrated engine management system with
fuel injection was added to the Spirit. This was not the
TBI system used in the U.S., Canada, and
Europe. Rather, the Mexican-market Spirits came with a more advanced
MPFI setup. The MPFI 2.5 improved performance and driveability, as well as achieved cleaner emissions than its TBI counterpart, but was not used in the U.S., Canadian, or rest-of-world export markets except on turbocharged and FFV models. The Chrysler Spirit with MPFI 2.5 L engine was sold in Mexico from 1991 through 1995, and was exported to
Argentina and
Brazil from 1993 through 1995. It was employed by the
Argentine police in
Buenos Aires. Chrysler de Mexico also sold two versions of the Spirit R/T. The base R/T, sold from 1991 through 1995, used a Mexico-only intercooled Turbo II version of the 8-valve
SOHC 2.5 L engine and the 3-speed
A413 automatic transmission. These R/Ts were used by Mexican
police departments. The top-line R/T. called "R/T DOHC", available from 1992 through 1993, came with the same 2.2 L 16-valve
DOHC engine that was used in the American-market from 1991 to 1992 R/T with a 5-speed manual transmission. More options and higher equipment levels were available in Mexico, including leather upholstery, sunroof, and 16-inch alloy wheels, none of which was offered on the R/T in America. In addition, Mexican-market R/Ts could be ordered in a variety of different colors, not just the red, white, and silver offered in the U.S. All Mexican-market Spirit R/Ts were badged as Chryslers. A variant of the R/T family, the
Chrysler Phantom R/T, was a special-order Mexico-only premium version of the
LeBaron coupe equipped with the 2.2 L 16-valve DOHC engine and the
Getrag 5-speed manual transmission.
Sales ==References==