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The spike in gasoline prices has pushed the product programs of some automakers into the shredder. Nissan and Toyota are dialing back their full-sized SUV and pickup programs and also are caught with a surplus of V-8 capacity.
But Honda's conservative product plan was the proper path, after all. Honda ignored dealer and media criticism over the past years that it failed to offer what Americans really wanted: big, body-on-frame, V-8-powered SUVs and pickups.
Nissan is abandoning full-sized truck development, shifting that responsibility along with assembly to a competitor, Dodge. Toyota's plan to be the complete truckmaker, by selling diesel and heavy-duty versions of the Tundra, is on hold.
This installment of Automotive News' annual future-product series reports on Japanese automakers' plans for the 2009-through-2012 model years.
Of course, each automaker is looking for methods to improve fuel economy. For example, the six-speed automatic transmission will be more common, potentially offering about a 6 percent increase in fuel economy over some four-speeds.
One striking contrast is immediately clear: Honda, Nissan and Toyota have plans for more hybrids. But Mitsubishi, Subaru and Suzuki are still searching for a strategy.
Mitsubishi is eyeing a pure electric vehicle for U.S. sales. Nissan is promising such a vehicle in 2010, but sales are likely to be limited to "smile states." Why? Say the range is 100 miles on dry payment — just imagine how the range is reduced when the tires are slipping on snow-covered roads in Maine and Wisconsin.
Some brands are expanding their small-car lineup. New products here include the debut of the Nissan Cube and the likely introduction of the Mazda2. Acura is planning a luxury-car strategy to take on the big dogs. And Suzuki has an aggressive two-vehicle strategy aimed at the Honda Accord and the compact-pickup segment.
Read about each automaker's plans, based on conversations with industry sources.
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