Jump to content
Create New...

Newbiewar

Members
  • Posts

    4,677
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Newbiewar

  1. but lets not forget, the top three countries that provide the highest wages in the automotive sector... first being Germany Second being Japan Thrid Being USA... i dont recall the article exactly but Germany was like 50$ per hour, japan was near 43$ i think and USA was in the 30's i beleive for average wages....
  2. Newbiewar

    HHR CONCEPT

    :P haha i see a wad of million dollar bills...
  3. Newbiewar

    HHR CONCEPT

    WOW... do you take those ink blot tests often?
  4. the impala has more saftey features... I would list them, but this is always the part of the "walk around" that i start lossing my attention span. (haha after you get done talking about under the hood and performance, you go to the drivers seat and discuss saftey features... blabla bla... "how much horsepower?")
  5. Newbiewar

    HHR CONCEPT

    thats the mini pickup i was looking for!
  6. now this is my kinda trivia... although its been years since i saw it last, i think one of those answers is a cadillac... but i havent seen it for along time.. this is trivia you cant get off a simple google search... Good topic
  7. i dont know... i know for 2005 N.A. is the only losing sector...
  8. in the same period Toyota made 76 million GM Holden profited 355 million... this was the massive profit i was refering, and i think toyota has a larger market share...
  9. Its the Tucker automaker... They make the most long lasting vehicles... i think last i checked, of the 50 ever made, 46 are still working... They are number one in my book... and they had those lights that adjust as you drive... wow... way to go lexus... 55 years later
  10. what about the Chevy Tahoes and suburbans? Would it be optomistic to hope for 07 models in the showroom by the 4th of January? first day of post red tag? red tag will probably continue as only 06 models?
  11. haha i live in so cal... so i wash my car whenever i want... its 76* outside... and... I'll get her washed and waxed in a few days... wow shes got such a good coat of paint on her... i've had her for 2 months, and she's probably been waxed 10 times already :blink: sooo smooth!
  12. lol look like it took a while, i wouldnt want to eat it though...
  13. but then again the TB SS we had at our store got 15-18... so i dont see the TB getting better fuel ecconomy then the GTO... if i recall the GTO is like 16-21
  14. possibly DOD? I dont think the GTO has it, but i'm pretty sure the TB does...
  15. that would be the atlas 4.2 (Vortec 4200) Inline 6 with 24 valves...
  16. the sad thing is... its cheaper for GM to give the cars away then to produce less, due to the UAW...
  17. customers want more then rebates in their cars... like the article that i just posted GM must wow customers with gadgets and creature comforts...
  18. cant we get the vibe onto a delta platform? cant GM make it... they are closing plants, and using other automanufcatures for their plants... what kind of nonsense is this?
  19. USA must hold on to one of its last leading segments... we cant abandon GM and say "what happens, happens..."
  20. This is a good article, accually i only read the first part, but i need to go to work... MSN's Tech and Gadgets [quote name='http://msn-cnet.com.com/Technology+to+Detroits+rescue/2010-11389_3-5992268.html?part=msn-cnet&subj=ns_5992268&tag=mobile']Technology to Detroit's rescue? December 13, 2005, 4:00 AM PT By Brian Cooley On top of all the arcane business problems they face, General Motors and Ford Motor also suffer from boring cars. Factor out Cadillacs, F-Series trucks, Corvettes and Mustangs, and Detroit is handing us uninteresting vehicles. What could make their cars more interesting? More horsepower? No, almost every car today has an ample amount. Swoopier sheet metal? Nope. Regulations, litigation and fuel efficiency demands have put an end to really gorgeous cars. No, the way to inject excitement and fascination back into American cars is to return them to their leadership in technology innovation, a position they once gripped tightly. It was the American carmakers who brought us waves of new tech over the last century--automatic transmissions, air conditioning, self-dimming high beams, hemispherical combustion chambers, sequential tail lights, the WonderBar radio and, yes, even the hoary old V-8-6-4 engine. (Hey, I at least applaud the attempt.) But mention the phrase "technologically advanced car" today and I believe most consumers will imagine a Japanese or German product. Detroit needs to get back in front of the parade. Their potential customers spend many hours and many dollars shopping for technology products. On weekends they stroll the aisles of Best Buy for sport. They wear a Sam Browne's worth of gadgets around their plump waistlines. They can tell you the specs on their iPod, digital camera, HDTV, broadband connection, smart phone and TiVo. Ask about their American car and they mostly recall the rebate it came with. To realign themselves with our love for innovation, here are some right-now technologies (all home-grown in America, by the way) U.S. carmakers can and should get in front of: HD Radio Developed by U.S. firm Ibiquity (which itself was formed by the merger of two homegrown U.S. predecessors), HD Radio takes our current broadcast radio stations from analog to digital, retaining their existing dial position. It delivers digital clarity that makes FM sound like a CD and AM sound like FM. It also creates a secondary channel for each station to offer a "version B" of itself. The radio industry--a medium with higher penetration than TV or the Internet-–is all over it. Navigation with traffic In-dash nav systems are a dud. But add live traffic information and they become the antidote to America's favorite water cooler bitch session topic: traffic jams. Just a few carmakers currently offer in-dash nav with live traffic; Ford and GM could yet steal the thunder if they move fast and use their considerable weight to encourage improvements in the data sensor infrastructure. Check out Pioneer's new AVIC Z-1 for a glimpse of a live traffic nav unit that also has important learning ability. A great control surface I've driven BMW's iDrive, Audi's MMI and the Infiniti Controller. Let me tell you there is still plenty of fertile ground to capture in the area of the definitive vehicle interface. Just like American companies standardized the PRNDL column-mounted gear lever, we can sort out this new control surface mess. Note to Ford: Your spin-off Visteon has a very interesting control surface in its TACNET line for cop cars. Check it out. A new OnStar Instead of positioning OnStar as the system that helps the feckless when they lock their keys in the car or drive off the road for no apparent reason, GM could reposition it as a source of useful daily information and assistance. Use its network and brand equity to create a really comprehensive drivers' information service that doesn't require a tedious call to a live adviser. Drivers could get restaurant reviews and reservations, store promotions, movie reviews, schedules and ticketing--all powered by audio content and geotargeting-–and without the cumbersome chat with an OnStar operator unless necessary. I'm not versed in the network technology that underlies OnStar, but I suspect it can do things that are sexy, not just prudent. As it is, having OnStar just makes you feel like a dork who needs adult supervision, not a technology adopter. In-car TV I'm going out on a limb with this one, but I think there is a significant market for in-car TV (for rear-seat passengers, of course.) Rear-seat DVD systems are nice, but having to shuttle DVDs back and forth from the car is archaic. There is great traction to be found in live TV on the road. KVH and RaySat currently offer antennas that tune DirecTV and DISH. And both are developing low-profile antennas that don't look like they belong on a bus, perhaps even hiding inside a vehicle's headliner, which then opens the door to becoming factory options. They're probably pounding on doors in Detroit right now; take their meetings. Car entertainment hub I dreamed of a wireless, smart entertainment hub for cars in a previous column, and immediately heard veiled references from several manufacturers that they're working on it. Get in front of the introduction of such a system. It will create a new state of seamless integration between our personal portables and our cars, two classes of products that people are avid about. No one of these is going to reposition Detroit overnight, but a consistent and persistent pursuit of such high-touch, in-car tech will over time restore to American car brands something they offered when I was a kid: the latest and the greatest.[/quote]
  21. wait... Toyota uses Delphi as well?
  22. they wont sustain growth this year or they will have some more major recalls...
  23. the more they try to grow, the more their cars fail to work properly...
  24. I'm going to laugh if GM gets back on their feet and Toyota has capacty problems... but ohh thats right, they arent union... I really dont see Toyota having a 9% gain in 2006... GM is going to have massive gains in their 60% SUV market, while other automanufatures will suffer... assuming Toyota and Ford will be the biggest loosers...
  25. it appears as he did it for tax reasons... if he doesnt pull out, it isnt a loss... so he pulled out and now he has a loss... purchase at 31 and sell at 19... theres ur loss... but the other 85 million shares arent considered a loss, just an asset
×
×
  • Create New...

Hey there, we noticed you're using an ad-blocker. We're a small site that is supported by ads or subscriptions. We rely on these to pay for server costs and vehicle reviews.  Please consider whitelisting us in your ad-blocker, or if you really like what you see, you can pick up one of our subscriptions for just $1.75 a month or $15 a year. It may not seem like a lot, but it goes a long way to help support real, honest content, that isn't generated by an AI bot.

See you out there.

Drew
Editor-in-Chief

Write what you are looking for and press enter or click the search icon to begin your search