The Dodge 400 was a mid-size car built by Dodge. It was similar to the Chrysler LeBaron of the same era. The 400 was introduced for the 1982 model year but renamed and merged into the Dodge 600 lineup just two years later. An improved version of Chrysler's K-cars, it was called the Super K platform.
Design
While heavily dependent on the K-car, the suspension geometry was revised with computer-aided design (CAD), one of Chrysler's first forays into this area.
Model years
1982
alt=|left|thumb|1982 Dodge 400 Coupe
The 400 was intended to be a more upmarket version of the Aries and a corporate twin of the downsized LeBaron. It was originally only available as a two-door coupé.
!
!Coupe
!Sedan
!Convertible
!Yearly Total
|-
|1982
|19,443
|6,465
|5,541
|31,449
|-
|1983
|11,504
|9,560
|4,888
|25,952
|-
!Total
!30,947
!16,025
!10,429
!<u>57,401</u>
|}
