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#29 | |
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love. my. car.
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#30 | |
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Location: New Jersey
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#31 | |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Drives: 2016 Mazda6, 2011 Mustang 5.0 Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Portage, Wisconsin
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Try not to forget that much of the recent "demand" has been inflated by investors keeping oil in storage offshore. Yes, it is being bought up, but it is not being burned. Once the price hits a point where the investors deem it to have topped, or we hit market conditions that force them to sell (like an increase in interest rates making margin buying unprofitable), all that oil we think isn't there, which is making the markets appear to be tight will suddenly and "magically" reappear. Similar events have happened with other commodity bubbles, as wll as with the housing bubble. Oil fell from $147 to $33 in 6 months in 2008. There is no reason such a fall cannot happen again. Longer term, shale oil, and obtaining oil through "fracking" as we are with natural gas (which, by the way has sinlge handedly caused nat gas to drop from $15 per MBTU a few years ago to around $4 today) will result in more supply 10-20 years down the road than anyone is anticipating. These unconventional production means are quite profitable at today's, and even at somewhat less than today's prices, and will be quickly coming on line in the coming decade. Natural gas will displace some of the oil demand, as will other alternatives to a lesser extent. Long term, I don't think all the pessimism out there is warranted. People have been freaking out about running out of resources since history began. This is about the 6th or 7th time we were supposed to have "run out of oil." I just don't see a reason why millenium long norms in resource availability will suddenly change to a new chronic shortage paradigm now.
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2022 1SS 1LE (Arrived 4/29/22)
"The car is the closest thing we will ever create to something that is alive." |
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#32 |
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Moderator
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This is not the end of the Camaro. Let's take a look at how CAFE works.
CAFE takes the average fuel economy of a manufacturer with a weight on production. For example, if a manufacturer makes 3 cars with 20 mpg and 10 cars with 40 mpg, the fuel economy average for CAFE is approximately 35 mpg because there are so many more cars with 40 mpg than 20 mpg. That is very important to GM because GM's heritage of making high-performance vehicles and trucks. There is also a loophole for certain special vehicles, which include hybrids and other fuel efficient vehicles that bump the average. By producing these vehicles, a company can surpass the standards even if the math doesn't work out. GM has several high-tech, fuel efficient platforms that will give these aforementioned bonus credits in addition to raising the average with their numbers. Moreover, the high-performance vehicles we worry about losing are not produced in the same numbers as compacts, like the Cruze, that raise the average. We are looking at a lot of changes in our future. Manufacturers will increasingly emphasize new technology to reach these targets, including direct injection, smaller engines, diesel, forced induction, aerodynamics, and lightweight materials. As a result, we can expect cars to get more expensive. GM has a lot of things going its way. As a leader in fuel efficiency technology, GM has a head start when it comes to developing products that satisfy federal requirements. As a result, GM may not have to give up on performance. That being said, we may see lower horsepower numbers counterbalanced by lighter vehicles. We can't expect to see a new, high-horsepower motor every couple of years, but we can expect engines with potential. Think back to those detuned 350s that still had good power and could be more aggressively tuned to kick some behind at the track. The good news here is that GM is continuing to engineer great performance while maintaining federal standards. With all the costs affecting GM, I'm sure GM will do everything it can to avoid fines. More R&D cost contributes to future engineering, while doing nothing could result in those same costs going to the government without any new technology as a result. Basically, GM has no choice but to continue investing heavily in advanced technology and make a few gambles that American buyers will purchase fuel efficient alternatives to what we drive today, including diesel cars and force-fed performance vehicles.
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RDP Motorsport//GEN5DIY//Cultrag Performance//JPSS//Rodgets Chevrolet//
Operation Demon//Buy at Invoice//RACECARWEAR RESPECT ALL CARS. LOVE YOUR OWN. warn 145:159 ban |
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#33 |
![]() Drives: 2011 Camaro 2SS/RS Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Kenmore, Washington
Posts: 191
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As you all state that it is on the average of production cars built. So if you build a bunch of 70 mpg cars that leaves way for a smaller amount of cars that do 30 mpg. Rapidly increasing population in the world with other markets increasing in production such as China, India and 3rd world countries the demand for oil will increase past the production of drill, drill. There will be an end to the oil at one point. GM also has a world wide promotional face to put on and performance isn't there future face. Economy and preservation will be. The Camaro has always been the secondary child behind the Corvette. They will use the Corvette to show off new technology and performance. They don't need to have a poor secondary choice to show off. I will be paying $20 for gas in the future and be happy about it as people look at me with a sneer on their face as I gobble up the gas. I will look back and flip them off as I have one of the last big V 8's.
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#34 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Drives: Truck Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Home
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I have a novel idea.
Let manufactures build what people want to buy and get the government out of the picture.
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#35 | |
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I'd rather be shooting...
Drives: 2010 2SS/RS Black/Black Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Alpharetta, GA
Posts: 1,116
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Follow Us on
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#36 | |
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SST...
Drives: SST Camaro 2010 Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: East Coast of Florida
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Absolutely. |
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#37 | |
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Account Suspended
Drives: 2012 2SS CAMARO 45th Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: St. Charles, IL
Posts: 18,648
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+1 Also, I'd like to add that they test vehicles on a dyno under easier condititions then you would think. So usually the cars they test record higher numbers then the claimed highway numbers. So they aren't as far off as you would think. The new 6th gen Camaro should be lighter and sporting the new direct injection gen V small block! I'm sure it will be pushing close to 30MPG of the showroom floor. I'd hate to see the muscle car die again but I think we have enough technology to fight it this time around! |
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#38 |
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Switchin' n Twitchin'
Drives: 2011 Camaro Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Chula Vista, CA (Eastlake)
Posts: 3,145
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This thread =
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I am not childish, you're just being a poopy head!
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#39 | |
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Moderator
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Reason 1—hippies like efficient cars. Without getting political, at least one major US political party supports this; therefore, it must be. Since we do not allow political discussion, I'm stopping here. Reason 2—it forces American companies to invest in research and development that otherwise would not have happened without the original CAFE legislation. This is the reason that counts because it allows Detroit to keep making cars. Let's explore for a moment a world without CAFE. In the 1980s, car quality improves instead of diminishing, but the engineering is no different than it was in the 1960s. American cars are really fast and stylish, and classic nameplates like the Chevelle and Roadrunner continue to make their way into garages. At the same time, vehicles built with half the cylinders and more than double the fuel economy begin hitting the shores by ship, and people love that they can go twice as far in a Honda than they could go in a Chevrolet. As a consequence, buyers motivated by the fuel economy numbers, not the performance, buy imports. A half-hearted attempt to make similar cars by GM, Ford, and Chrysler fails, but they have trucks and muscle cars, and that's all they think they need. As time progresses, domestic manufacturers have to move more upscale to justify the cost of their product lines when compared to cheaper, more efficient cars with similar build quality. Chevrolet goes back to its roots of being considered upscale. Cadillac goes way upscale. Pontiac builds performance cars, and the Aztek never comes into existence. This all sounds good, but let's talk sticker price for a moment. GM, with its more expensive labor and incredible build quality that includes premium materials, averages a price similar to that of an imported luxury car. Without a lower nameplate, GM simply can't produce the volume to compete with these economy brands. GM then decides to initiate the Saturn or Geo brand. Either way you name it, the quality doesn't fit GM, and pressure from above forces GM to make this brand compete more with imported Asian luxury than what it was designed to fight. Let's take our fantasy future of muscle cars without CAFE to circa 1990. Around this time, GM—comprised of Chevrolet, Cadillac, Pontiac, GMC, Buick, Oldsmobile, Daewoo, Opel, Hummer, Vauxhall, Saturn or Geo, and other investments—is struggling under incredible financial stress. The UAW has strongly demanded job security in contracts after almost constant plant closures and flatlining wages. Since GM has limited production in most of its brands aside from Chevrolet, Saturn or Geo, and GMC, a strike would shut down the entire, not-so-big company. GM is also no longer the world's largest automaker and cannot afford to expand into overseas markets or even invest in R&D to compete with more efficient vehicles. Ultimately, the EV1 is built by Toyota instead of GM and called a Prius. It sells without worthwhile competition until the Leaf hits production. GM is forced to either sell individual brands or go into bankruptcy. It tries selling, but the deals are bad. GM goes into a bad bankruptcy. It never emerges. Today, things are different. GM prides itself on being a global leader. I am not happy about the new CAFE laws. They suck; however, I recognize that a reluctant GM of the 1970s would not have made good competition with Asian rivals without said regulations. In a sense, I'm grateful that left wing politicians of the era had either the genius foresight or stubborn ideology to force automakers to modernize. It may have put down a great line of cars, but it ultimately made sure that American innovation stayed among the best by pushing that Yankee ingenuity. Flame away.
__________________
RDP Motorsport//GEN5DIY//Cultrag Performance//JPSS//Rodgets Chevrolet//
Operation Demon//Buy at Invoice//RACECARWEAR RESPECT ALL CARS. LOVE YOUR OWN. warn 145:159 ban |
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#40 |
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ready...
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oh man this topic has been beat into the dirt like 3 times today already. lol
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#41 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Drives: 2011 Camaro SS/RS - 2004 Silverado Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Las Vegas, NV
Posts: 2,989
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I've always believed the 5th gen will be the last V8 powered Camaro. I really think the big engine in the 6th gen will be a twin turbo V6.....with better gas mileage and similar or more horsepower than the LS3. A V8 will only be available in the Corvette and trucks. I fear this might be reality in all the V8 powered cars today, including the Mustang and Challenger. Enjoy these last years of V8 powered cars.....
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2011 Summit White Camaro 1SS/RS
-6.2 LS3, TR6060, 3.45, G80 2004 Black Silverado 1500 2WD Regular Cab, Short Bed -5.3 LM7, 4L60E, 3.42, G80 2014 White Caprice PPV -6.0 L77, 6L80E, 2.92, G80 |
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#42 | |
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Moderator.ca
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That said, the real problem with this new standard isn't performance cars, they'll account for something like 5% of GMs sales. Their overall impact will be fairly small. A lot of performance cars aren't that much less efficient than V6 sedans, except for the big dogs like the CTS-V or ZR1 whose numbers barely register. The problem is trucks. Pickups account for something like 25% of GM sales volume, they're not going to be able to afford to have them too far below their CAFE target. Similar story at Ford & Chrysler.
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Note, if I've gotten any facts wrong in the above, just ignore any points I made with them
__________________ Originally Posted by FbodFather My sister's dentist's brother's cousin's housekeeper's dog-breeder's nephew sells coffee filters to the company that provides coffee to General Motors...... ........and HE WOULD KNOW!!!!__________________ Camaro Fest sub-forum |
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