Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Shudder To Think: New Transmissions, Bad Friends and the DaimlerChrysler Merger

Dodge Challenger chromed T-shifter automatic transmission knob

I never would've known about the WA850/NAG1 transmission if it weren't for that dead-beat roommate I had in Miami. It was desperate times for Chrysler and myself —we both just needed a friend.

16 years ago today, the Chrysler Group found an abusively negligent partner in Daimler AG. The "merger of equals" proved to be anything but, as the German camp rapidly oscillated between ignoring the American's input and engaging in full-blown Teutonic pedantry. Rumor has it they even insulted the American's taste in typeface by forcing them to get new business cards.

My friendship wasn't nearly as toxic. I had been living in Miami for a few months, but had failed to adapt to the social scene. He was also a transplant from the North Atlantic so he understood my pain. He had friends that I admired, so I stuck by him. Despite his professed love for the BMX bike and only the BMX bike, he was in possession of a hand-me-down 2003 Mercedes-Benz E500. This example was a former Enron fleet-car his mother had purchased at auction in late 2006, just months before Daimler offloaded their American bedfellow. He didn't keep up with the maintenance; it was in poor shape but I loved it. It was everything my Miata wasn't: heavy, powerful and smooth.

It was equipped with the WA850 transmission, or as it is more commonly known, the 5G-Tronic. A five-speed automatic of Mercedes design, one of Daimler's first acts after the merger was to force this part on Chrysler. It was clearly a superior gearbox than Chrysler's ubiquitous 545RFE, but it was the principle of the matter. Chrysler was saddled with what they perceived to be needless logistical complications. The official Chrysler designation for the part was "New Automatic Gearbox Version 1" or NAG1. Very funny Chrysler.

In theory it was an excellent transmission, but there were serious qualms about its reliability on American roads. It wasn't about road quality; rather it was its needy maintenance schedule and complex service that was out of line with American ownership habits. Anything less than perfectly precise handling by a tech and the thing would shudder and shake for the rest of its days.

Like Chrysler, My friend had forced something on me as well: the pointless pursuit of fun at a time in my life when I should have been saving money, exercising, and improving my craft. An apt comparison because like the WA580, a life of partying works on paper, but without the discipline to perform proper maintenance you are end up shuddering and leaking fluid in public.

The Daimler-Chrysler merger was a clear failure, and so was my friendship. Both partnerships could've been successful, but they required more compromise and hard work than either party was prepared for. That's not to say the respective mergers were complete failures. Chrysler walked away with an excellent transmission that's still in use today, and I learned how to have fun and not take myself so seriously. What we both learned was that in business like life, you can only rely on yourself for meaningful improvement.

 



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