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Japan’s Luxury Cars Top Owner Satisfaction Poll

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From Associated Press

Infiniti, Lexus and Acura--the luxury car lines of Japan’s three biggest auto makers--led this year’s J.D. Power & Associates survey of driver satisfaction.

The survey, released Tuesday, is a closely watched measure of auto maker and dealer performance. It again named Saturn as the top-rated U.S. car brand. But the General Motors Corp. small-car unit fell to fourth place in a tie with Germany’s Mercedes-Benz. It had been ranked third since 1993.

The three Japanese lines have been at or near the top of the list for several years. Lexus, Toyota’s luxury division, was bumped to second place by Nissan’s Infiniti line after five years as the No. 1 car line in the survey.

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Infiniti was last ranked on top in 1991 in a tie with Lexus and had been second-ranked since then. Honda’s Acura division moved up a notch from fourth in 1995.

“Acura, Lexus and Infiniti have made customer satisfaction an integral part of their overall market strategy,” said Bill Wallis, the survey’s author. “These auto makers built customer satisfaction into the fabric and fiber of their entire organizations . . . and it has paid off.”

Among buyers of pickups, minivans and sport-utility vehicles, Honda was rated No. 1, ending Toyota’s five-year domination as the top light-truck line. Toyota was ranked second, followed by Chevrolet’s Geo line and a tie between Chrysler and Pontiac.

Honda’s popular Odyssey minivan received the highest truck score in the 15-year history of the J.D. Power Customer Satisfaction Index: 181 out of a possible 240.

The marketing firm surveyed 32,117 car and light-truck owners who registered new vehicles in February, March and April 1995. The surveys measured how they felt, after a year driving their cars, about the way they were treated by their dealerships and about the repair and reliability records of the vehicles.

The study scores cars and trucks on different scales, giving more weight to repair and reliability questions for trucks because truck owners generally place more emphasis on those issues, Wallis said.

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The industry average score for cars was 137 out of a possible 202, down a point from last year. Infiniti scored 168, Lexus 166, Acura 159 and Mercedes-Benz and Saturn 158.

The light-truck average was 140 out of 240, down two points. Top truck scores were Honda at 166, Toyota 158, Geo 157 and Chrysler and Pontiac tied at 154.

The car average for U.S. makes remained below the industry average at 134, the same as last year. J.D. Power sells details of the study to auto makers and others interested in the industry. Its surveys of initial vehicle quality and customer satisfaction often are used in car and truck advertising.

(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX / INFOGRAPHIC)

Happy Customers

Scores for vehicles lines in the J.D. Power customer satisfaction index, based on a survey that measured owner satisfaction with 1995 cars and trucks after a year of ownership.

Car make: Score (maximum possible: 202)

Infiniti: 168

Lexus: 166

Acura: 159

Mercedes-Benz: 158

Saturn: 158

Honda: 154

Cadillac: 151

Lincoln: 150

Audi: 149

Volvo: 148

BMW: 144

Buick: 144

Jaguar: 143

Asian average: 142

Oldsmobile: 142

Subaru: 141

Toyota: 140

European average: 139

Nissan: 138

Porsche: 138

Industry average: 137

U.S. average: 134

*

Truck make (incl. vans): Score (maximum possible: 240)

Honda: 166

Toyota: 158

Geo: 157

Chrysler: 154

Pontiac: 154

Mercury: 151

Plymouth: 150

Oldsmobile: 148

Import average: 145

Land Rover: 145

Mitsubishi: 144

Jeep: 143

Dodge: 140

Industry average: 140

U.S. average: 139

Source: J.D. Power and Associates

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