The 2014 Corvette Stingray Forum
News / Blog Register Community Calendar Today's Posts Search

Go Back   Chevrolet Corvette Stingray C7 Forum > Members Area > General Automotive + Other Cars Discussion

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 10-09-2024, 10:11 PM   #2647
Iron Lung Jimmy

 
Drives: Iron Lung, Jimmy
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Louisiana
Posts: 1,577
The battery plants I see being built south of Louisville and Columbus Ohio look like they will add a lot of jobs
Iron Lung Jimmy is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-10-2024, 09:31 AM   #2648
olrocker

 
olrocker's Avatar
 
Drives: People crazy with my sexiness
Join Date: Jun 2023
Location: Northeast Ohio
Posts: 981
Good! Because when I see LG and Samsung I think Korea.
__________________
Purchase order submitted on 6/23/23
Received and purchased 9/8/2023
2024 2SS 6MT coupe
Sharkskin/Light gray
Moonroof/Navi/NPP/Mag Ride/Red Brake Calipers
Gray painted split spoke wheels
Illuminated footwells/illuminated bowtie
olrocker is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-10-2024, 10:18 AM   #2649
90503


 
90503's Avatar
 
Drives: 2011 2SS/RS LS3
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Torrance
Posts: 14,564
Something else, perhaps relevant, is the distance and shipping of EV batteries for assembly. I sort of recall that ideally the batteries would not have to travel far to be assembled...Shipping, packaging, transporting numerous heavy, large ev batteries, perhaps becomes quite an expense.

An EV battery plant near assembly plants seems like a good idea...

Maybe not an issue...dunno...

https://www.sdcexec.com/sustainabili...rt-regulations
90503 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-10-2024, 10:31 AM   #2650
Capricio
 
Drives: 2000 WS6
Join Date: Dec 2014
Location: AZ
Posts: 638
Quote:
Originally Posted by Martinjlm View Post
Anyway, he was unclear on whether they will still refer to the batteries from the Ohio and Tennessee plants as Ultium. He did say that the plants are still referred to as Ultium plants.
I suppose the "LT1" designation could be cleared for re-use. Would only be like the 4th time.
Capricio is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-10-2024, 12:47 PM   #2651
silversleeper
Big Crow
 
silversleeper's Avatar
 
Drives: '13 ZL1
Join Date: Mar 2017
Location: California
Posts: 1,551
I'll just drop this here for the people who wrongly think people are actually putting their money where their mouth is. The damn gubmen won't let us buy what we all want.

Jeep Grand Cherokee L Loses Its V8 Because Less Than 4 Percent Of Customers Wanted It

https://autos.yahoo.com/jeep-grand-c...143009066.html
silversleeper is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-10-2024, 02:40 PM   #2652
Martinjlm
Retired fr GM + SP Global
 
Martinjlm's Avatar
 
Drives: 2017 Camaro Fifty SS Convertible
Join Date: Mar 2017
Location: Detroit
Posts: 5,937
Quote:
Originally Posted by 90503 View Post
Something else, perhaps relevant, is the distance and shipping of EV batteries for assembly. I sort of recall that ideally the batteries would not have to travel far to be assembled...Shipping, packaging, transporting numerous heavy, large ev batteries, perhaps becomes quite an expense.

An EV battery plant near assembly plants seems like a good idea...

Maybe not an issue...dunno...

https://www.sdcexec.com/sustainabili...rt-regulations
Most definitely an issue. Here’s an EXTREME example. Hummer EV is built in Hamtramck (Detroit) plant. The battery cells are manufactured in Warren, Ohio. The battery pack is assembled somewhere in between (too busy / lazy…take yer pick… to look up the exact location). The 200kWh battery pack weighs roughly as much as a Civic Si. How far do you really wanna ship that thing?

This again gets at the heart of the IRA Incentive. For a vehicle to qualify for the incentive, which goes to the buyer not the car company, the vehicle has to be built in North America (jobs) using batteries that are made and assembled in North America (more jobs) and using minerals that are mined and processed in friendly nations (not China, Russia, or N. Korea). So the idea is IF you decide you want to buy an EV, we’ll provide some incentive for you to buy one that supports jobs in the US. I can live with that.
__________________
2017 CAMARO FIFTY SS CONVERTIBLE
A8 | MRC | NPP | Nav | HUD | GM Performance CAI | Tony Mamo LT1 V2 Ported TB | Kooks 1-7/8” LT Headers | FlexFuel Tune | Thinkware Q800 Pro front and rear dash cam | Charcoal Tint for Taillights and 3rd Brakelight | Orange and Carbon Fiber Bowties | 1LE Wheels in Gunmetal Gray | Carbon Fiber Interior Overlays | Novistretch bra and mirror covers | Tow hitch for bicycle rack |



Last edited by Martinjlm; 10-10-2024 at 03:15 PM.
Martinjlm is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-10-2024, 08:24 PM   #2653
FarmerFran


 
FarmerFran's Avatar
 
Drives: 2023 ZL1 Vert M6 "Sharky"
Join Date: Mar 2020
Location: Earth
Posts: 4,530
Looked at a Grand Cherokee 4xe today. Actually not bad, really not bad with the incentives

Not an EV and the EV portion is somewhat lacking but for some 25 miles is all they need
__________________
<Insert Cars You Own Here>
FarmerFran is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-10-2024, 08:31 PM   #2654
FarmerFran


 
FarmerFran's Avatar
 
Drives: 2023 ZL1 Vert M6 "Sharky"
Join Date: Mar 2020
Location: Earth
Posts: 4,530
Quote:
Originally Posted by silversleeper View Post
I'll just drop this here for the people who wrongly think people are actually putting their money where their mouth is. The damn gubmen won't let us buy what we all want.

Jeep Grand Cherokee L Loses Its V8 Because Less Than 4 Percent Of Customers Wanted It

https://autos.yahoo.com/jeep-grand-c...143009066.html
Yeah, but they had it for those 4%, and it wasn't like it was just in that vehicle. It was in all their vehicles. You look at the JGC crowd and you see they want luxury over speed, and that thing is super luxurious, especially at the price point. Now what was the Durango %? Probably not much more but that crowd would buy all of them in the V8 if they were not priced out.

So it wasn't like they made this special V8 for a V8 vehicle, it was a cookie cutter V8 that they put in everything, but the buyer of that particular vehicle did not care or did not want to spend the extra $ on it. But goes back to win a race on Sunday and sell a car on Monday mentality. And damn it worked.

Would the CT5-V exist with out the CT5? Would the CT4-V exist without the CT4? ZL1 without a V6 LT1?

This game has been played for decades and the electrification is making it harder. Is what it is
__________________
<Insert Cars You Own Here>
FarmerFran is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-11-2024, 02:29 AM   #2655
genxer
 
Drives: multiple cars
Join Date: Oct 2017
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 564
Stellantis is a terrifically run business. Managing CAFE and carbon credits is helping them greatly. They're not struggling at all.

The drop of Ultium seems linked to having expected batteries to get cheaper than they did with low electric prices, for comparatively heavy mainstream EVs. Rigging the vehicle market toward the foibles of early adopters is spending good money after bad - protective tariffs beat incentives.

gm announced 6.5C LFP cells. LFPs would work out better in small vehicles, and larger plug-in hybrids. Spitball numbers, an LFP Bolt could dc charge for 6-7 minutes, then do a 1.5-2 hour highway stint.
genxer is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-11-2024, 09:13 AM   #2656
Martinjlm
Retired fr GM + SP Global
 
Martinjlm's Avatar
 
Drives: 2017 Camaro Fifty SS Convertible
Join Date: Mar 2017
Location: Detroit
Posts: 5,937
Quote:
Originally Posted by genxer View Post
Stellantis is a terrifically run business. Managing CAFE and carbon credits is helping them greatly. They're not struggling at all.
I’m seriously trying to understand if this is sarcasm. Or maybe a remark considering the European Stellantis entities and not the US entities. Stellantis US is BY FAR in the worst compliance position of any automaker doing business in the US. They have a credit surplus because they are still living off the credits they buy from Tesla. The 4Xe portfolio is helping them get healthy, but they are way behind the rest of the North American auto industry in terms of CAFE compliance.

Quote:
Originally Posted by genxer View Post
The drop of Ultium seems linked to having expected batteries to get cheaper than they did with low electric prices, for comparatively heavy mainstream EVs. Rigging the vehicle market toward the foibles of early adopters is spending good money after bad - protective tariffs beat incentives.

gm announced 6.5C LFP cells. LFPs would work out better in small vehicles, and larger plug-in hybrids. Spitball numbers, an LFP Bolt could dc charge for 6-7 minutes, then do a 1.5-2 hour highway stint.
GM is NOT dropping the Ultium product. They are ceasing using the Ultium name to refer to their EV platform vehicles. It is still unclear whether they will continue to refer to the batteries produced at their Warren, Ohio and Spring Hill, Tennessee plants as Ultium batteries.

The change in use of the name is not due to any issue with the product. It is specifically because Ultium can only apply to products using the batteries produced from the joint venture with LG Chem to build batteries at Warren and Spring Hill plants. Now that GM has entered into an additional joint venture with LG Chem’s competitor, Samsung SDI to produce LFP batteries they are making it clear that the Ultium name will not attach to any of the products using those batteries. LFP batteries are NOT REPLACING Ultium batteries. They are IN ADDITION TO Ultium batteries. They have different operating characteristics. NMC, NMA, and NMCA Lithium Ion batteries have faster discharge and release more energy when they discharge. LFP batteries are lower cost and less susceptible to thermal runaway than NMC, NMA, NMCA. Putting it in a relatable engine framework, LFP is the V6 of electric vehicles. NMC, NMA, and NMCA are the V8 of electric vehicles. GM will be using both. Tesla, BYD and other EV manufacturers already use both.
__________________
2017 CAMARO FIFTY SS CONVERTIBLE
A8 | MRC | NPP | Nav | HUD | GM Performance CAI | Tony Mamo LT1 V2 Ported TB | Kooks 1-7/8” LT Headers | FlexFuel Tune | Thinkware Q800 Pro front and rear dash cam | Charcoal Tint for Taillights and 3rd Brakelight | Orange and Carbon Fiber Bowties | 1LE Wheels in Gunmetal Gray | Carbon Fiber Interior Overlays | Novistretch bra and mirror covers | Tow hitch for bicycle rack |


Martinjlm is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-11-2024, 12:18 PM   #2657
Capricio
 
Drives: 2000 WS6
Join Date: Dec 2014
Location: AZ
Posts: 638
Quote:
Originally Posted by silversleeper View Post
I'll just drop this here for the people who wrongly think people are actually putting their money where their mouth is. The damn gubmen won't let us buy what we all want.

Jeep Grand Cherokee L Loses Its V8 Because Less Than 4 Percent Of Customers Wanted It

https://autos.yahoo.com/jeep-grand-c...143009066.html
How much was the upcharge to get the V8? And how much of that amount had to go to buy carbon offsets/credits? If we're in the cost manipulation game, what would be the take rate on the V8 if it cost the same as the V6 option? Yes, surprise, the regulatory state is affecting/limiting consumer choices. Hooray.
Capricio is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-11-2024, 01:19 PM   #2658
genxer
 
Drives: multiple cars
Join Date: Oct 2017
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 564
The first part was sarcasm definitely. Saw Tavares is out.
I do hope they choose a graceful cancellation for Silverado/Sierra EV and the sub-SS Blazer EV. The current others have a better shot.
genxer is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-11-2024, 01:27 PM   #2659
Martinjlm
Retired fr GM + SP Global
 
Martinjlm's Avatar
 
Drives: 2017 Camaro Fifty SS Convertible
Join Date: Mar 2017
Location: Detroit
Posts: 5,937
Quote:
Originally Posted by silversleeper View Post
I'll just drop this here for the people who wrongly think people are actually putting their money where their mouth is. The damn gubmen won't let us buy what we all want.

Jeep Grand Cherokee L Loses Its V8 Because Less Than 4 Percent Of Customers Wanted It

https://autos.yahoo.com/jeep-grand-c...143009066.html
Quote:
Originally Posted by FarmerFran View Post
Yeah, but they had it for those 4%, and it wasn't like it was just in that vehicle. It was in all their vehicles. You look at the JGC crowd and you see they want luxury over speed, and that thing is super luxurious, especially at the price point. Now what was the Durango %? Probably not much more but that crowd would buy all of them in the V8 if they were not priced out.

So it wasn't like they made this special V8 for a V8 vehicle, it was a cookie cutter V8 that they put in everything, but the buyer of that particular vehicle did not care or did not want to spend the extra $ on it. But goes back to win a race on Sunday and sell a car on Monday mentality. And damn it worked.

Would the CT5-V exist with out the CT5? Would the CT4-V exist without the CT4? ZL1 without a V6 LT1?

This game has been played for decades and the electrification is making it harder. Is what it is
Quote:
Originally Posted by Capricio View Post
How much was the upcharge to get the V8? And how much of that amount had to go to buy carbon offsets/credits? If we're in the cost manipulation game, what would be the take rate on the V8 if it cost the same as the V6 option? Yes, surprise, the regulatory state is affecting/limiting consumer choices. Hooray.
All of this is hypothetical and moot. Basically it’s bad reporting in the original article. Dodge /Ram / Stellantis announced over a year ago that they were shutting down Hemi and replacing it with the 3.0L Inline 6. This article is from May 2023. https://www.carexpert.com.au/car-new...ane-six-report

The 5.7L and the 6.4L were the first to go. They kept a few Hellcat applications around (TRX, the Last Call cars) but eventually that shuts down too. So it has nothing to do with take rates or option pricing. It has totally to do with they’ve decided to go a different way with their engine power technology. Instead of a big displacement OHV they’ve moved on to a consolidated 0.5L per cylinder DOHC design with and without boosting.
__________________
2017 CAMARO FIFTY SS CONVERTIBLE
A8 | MRC | NPP | Nav | HUD | GM Performance CAI | Tony Mamo LT1 V2 Ported TB | Kooks 1-7/8” LT Headers | FlexFuel Tune | Thinkware Q800 Pro front and rear dash cam | Charcoal Tint for Taillights and 3rd Brakelight | Orange and Carbon Fiber Bowties | 1LE Wheels in Gunmetal Gray | Carbon Fiber Interior Overlays | Novistretch bra and mirror covers | Tow hitch for bicycle rack |


Martinjlm is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-11-2024, 03:54 PM   #2660
Capricio
 
Drives: 2000 WS6
Join Date: Dec 2014
Location: AZ
Posts: 638
Quote:
Originally Posted by Martinjlm View Post
GM is NOT dropping the Ultium product. They are ceasing using the Ultium name to refer to their EV platform vehicles. It is still unclear whether they will continue to refer to the batteries produced at their Warren, Ohio and Spring Hill, Tennessee plants as Ultium batteries.
Still the same universal skateboard "ultium" chassis for everything, from subcompacts to full size trucks, though, right? Just different cells inside?
Capricio is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:34 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.9 Beta 4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.