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Chrysler Opens Tipton County, Indiana, Nine-Speed Transmission Manufacturing Plant

05/13/2014
Chrysler Group dedicated its new transmission plant in Tipton County, Indiana, and launched production of the automaker’s fuel-efficient nine-speed transmission.

Chairman/CEO Sergio Marchionne said the Tipton site, which had been sitting idle for years at the corner of US 31 and State Road 28, will play a vital role in creating prosperity for the Company and for the surrounding communities. In Feb. 2013, Marchionne announced the Company would acquire the nearly 782,000 square-foot facility and invest $162 million to establish an additional assembly site for the nine-speed transmission. He also announced that up to 850 new jobs would be created by the end of 2015, subject to market conditions. Current employment at the plant is 204.

"My confidence is rooted firmly in the knowledge that those of you who work in this area have shown a consistent dedication to delivering products with outstanding quality," said Marchionne. "You have embraced the principles of World Class Manufacturing, which is enabling us to compete with the best manufacturers in the world. You are the authors of a major success story, creating a great turnaround and making it possible to create the need for this new plant in Tipton."

Tipton will become one of the global hubs for nine-speed production. When it reaches full capacity, it will ship about 800,000 finished transmissions to Toledo, Ohio, for use in the Jeep Cherokee, and Sterling Heights, Michigan, for the Chrysler 200, as well as to FIAT plants in Melfi, Italy; Tofus, Turkey; Pernambuco, Brazil; and China. The potential exists to expand production to other international facilities as needed.

Production of the first nine-speed transmissions began in May 2013 at Chrysler Group's Indiana Transmission Plant I. The opening of the Tipton facility represents phase two, which means additional work for three of the Company's facilities in Kokomo, Indiana. Castings for the new transmission will come from Kokomo Casting; machining of the prismatic parts – housings, blocks and heads – will be done at Kokomo Transmission; and the rotating parts – gears and crank shafts – will come from ITPI. All will be shipped to Tipton for final assembly.

"With the startup of TTP, we are enhancing the status of this region as the largest transmission installation in the world," said Marchionne. "Just recently, we reached the landmark numbers of 17 million four-speed transmissions and three million six-speed transmissions built in Kokomo."

Both the four-speed and six-speed transmissions are built at the Kokomo Transmission Plant. Since 1974, KTP has built more than 67 million transmissions. The 17-million four-speed milestone was achieved over a 25-year period from 1988 to December 2013. The plant began building the six-speed in 2006 and reached the three million mark in April.

Since June 2009, the Company has invested more than $1.6 billion and hired more than 2,600 people in north central Indiana to produce the next generation transmissions, the company said. In total, Chrysler Group employs more than 7,000 people in the five plants in the region.

"The UAW is pleased that Chrysler Group recognized the value of this highly skilled, represented workforce when it decided to establish an additional transmission manufacturing facility in the region," UAW Local 685 President Rich Boruff said. "Their commitment and dedication to building high quality products has led to the creation of more good paying manufacturing jobs and extraordinary growth in the industry. The UAW looks forward to working with our Chrysler Group partners to continue this momentum."

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