|
|
#71 |
|
Weekend Rockstar
Drives: Depends on the day... Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: West Palm Beach
Posts: 1,442
|
I'll probably piss a lot of people off with this one, but we're all about opinions here at Camaro5, so here it goes...I think the reason GM is so slow with doing things is because of the union contracts. Toyota and Honda get their work done so fast overseas because they can go to anyone to make their products. They can say, "whoever can make this with this quality in this time frame for the least money will get the job". GM cannot. We are so hindered by the rules and regulations that our great grandfathers wrote 100 years ago that it is truly preventing us from moving forward or even keeping up with the times. ie The Camaro should have been out 2 years ago. The Volt should be sitting in my showroom today, the Beat and the other 2 concepts (trax and groove) should be 09 models so that we could whether the storm that is the gas crisis. How is it Mercedes can come out with the Smart car at the same time gas prices top $4/gallon? The answer is they always have a "plan b" that they can start on the drop of a dime to keep up with market trends. GM and really all American Auto makers have really done this to themselves. Instead of trying to own all segments of the market, GM said F*** it, we'll just make quality trucks. Now we have cars like the Aveo that are supposed to compete with cars like the civic...come on. Not that I personally would ever buy a Honda, but to your average consumer, The Aveo is a piece of junk in comparison. Yea, it may be $3500 less than the civic, but that $3500 in consumers eyes is well invested in a car that is as well built as that one is. I blame the big wigs and the Amercian public for being so un-supportive of the largest car company in the world for what's happening right now.
What can we do about it? I think the idea someone wrote earlier about inflating the stock market would be genious, however, it wouldn't happen that easily. Buying stock in GM at under $10 a share seems like a good idea to me because by 2010, the camaro and the Volt will be out, so if you sell at the right time, you should see a reasonable return. But I'm no stock broker so don't quote me on that. All and all, if GM wants to move ahead, they need to get eith the times. The union is prehistoric at this point. The general public sees a union built car a piece of junk because no matter how these workers perform, they will still get paid and they will not be penalized if they miss a bolt here or a screw there. If these people were fighting for their jobs based on performance, our build quality would go up. Not that GM builds a crappy vehicle all the time, but I've definitely noticed a difference in cars and trucks that are supposed to be exactly the same thing. I'll stop now to prevent the amount of hate mail sent my way. ---I wouldn't be afraid for GM until you see Chrysler fall...we're light years ahead of them. Last edited by Chevyrocker; 07-04-2008 at 11:52 AM. Reason: final thought... |
|
|
|
|
|
#72 | |
|
Moderator.ca
|
Quote:
If people were buying hummer's because they are needed, their sales would not have dropped by 50%.
__________________
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 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#73 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Drives: 2010 Camaro 1LT/RS M6 Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Fairhaven, MA
Posts: 5,882
|
The Aveo is a piece of crap compared to the Civic. It's nothing but a re-badged Daewoo that they ship in from China. It's not an American car. The Cobalt is a better comparison to the Civic and is actually produced by Chevrolet.
|
|
|
|
|
|
#74 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Drives: Future 2011 camaro convertible Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 1,256
|
unions are the stupidest thing ever..its a communist socialist idea...if your good at what you do you will get paid...and negotations are always better off being done individually
|
|
|
|
|
|
#75 | |
![]() Drives: 1998 Pontiac Firebird Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Cape Cod, MA
Posts: 64
|
Quote:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#76 | |
|
Future Camaro Driver.
Drives: 2009 Escape/2007 Ridgeline Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Northeastern, PA (Poconos)
Posts: 479
|
Quote:
Last edited by PA FAST; 07-05-2008 at 03:44 PM. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#77 | |
|
LVL 50 Troll Stomper
Drives: 2010 Camaro Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Indianapolis
Posts: 3,463
|
Quote:
__________________
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#78 |
|
Future Camaro Driver.
Drives: 2009 Escape/2007 Ridgeline Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Northeastern, PA (Poconos)
Posts: 479
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#79 |
|
Pushin a rock...
|
In the grand scheme of things here bankruptcy would not be an entirely bad thing for GM. It would not mean that they would shut down their doors, and it would not mean that the Camaro would not make it to the market (in fact in bankruptcy court one of the principle things that a company is encouraged to do is to continue to operate in order to get itself back on stable financial grounds). However, what it would allow it to do is to renegotiate their contracts with the UAW. In 2005 health and welfare plans for employees tacked on over $1,500 to the cost of each automobile sold by GM. 3 years later and I would not be surprised if that is now double that figure since more and more employees are starting to hit the retirement age. Now to aggravate things whether you are willing to own up to it or not we are truly a Walmart society. What I mean by that is that we continually demand more and more from what we purchase but we are willing to pay less and less for it. (I heard it best described once as we demand a Cadillac for the price of a Hyundai). So what happens
as an automotive manufacturer your profit margins start to close up because the next generation of a car model will actually cost you more to manufacturer but you will not be able to sell it for the same amount of increase in price because everybody will scream about how expensive it has become. And on top of that your health and welfare costs are continually on the rise which also chips away at your already slim profit margins. It is a vicious cycle. Bankruptcy gives the General a lot of power to renegotiate those outstanding contracts with the UAW which will result in lower healthcare costs which will result in a higher profit margin for the company. But in reality no one in the financial sector wants GM to declare bankruptcy. Aside from the direct fiscal implications of such an action, the stock market and our economy in general is very much susceptible to perception and fear. If a cornerstone of the Dow (it has been a member of the index since 1925) is forced to declare bankruptcy things will get pretty ugly, not just on the American financial markets, but the international financial markets as well.
I know that there are those out there that look at Toyota, Honda, and so on that now have plants in the US and say well they dont have the same kinds of problems that GM has. They will. Remember that the problem with healthcare at GM is not the cost of current employees, it is the cost of continuing health and welfare for all of its retired employee base. Their employees have been members of the UAW since 1935 so they have quite a few retired employees out there by now. All of these new players opening up manufacturing facilities in the US, while yes they are also signatory to the UAW, they have not been around long enough to have a large base of retired employees that add to the current health and welfare costs they are paying. They will in due time, but it will probably take them 20 years or so to get there. Also, dont forget the reason that the Japanese automakers are starting to open plants in the US is because they are starting to face the same kinds of problems with retired employees back in Japan that GM faces here. So much like GM looked to moving production to other countries to escape those costs, they are moving to the US to escape those costs, the difference is the GM started here. |
|
|
|
|
|
#80 | ||||
|
I used to be Dragoneye...
|
Quote:
You seriously think that we'll be drilling oil forever? That it won't EVER run out being the non-renewable resource that it is? All these "pipe dreams" are called advancement, progress, and technological advancement. Hardly wasted time, imo.Quote:
I don't see any benifit in settling back and letting oil continue to dictate the way we as a planet live. Arguments, and wars started over this crap, and that's what's not going away. Quote:
Quote:
Electric motors can have nearly as much torque on tap as deisel engines do, and are nearly 90% efficient. What research is taking place right now is trying to find a fuel (by maximizing a power source's energy density) that can compare to that of gasoline, or desiel. Then you can put it under big rigs. Plus, there are VERY FEW moving parts, less than a desiel engine: so it has the potential to go even further before needing maintinance. So....no. Internal combustion engines are not the best way to do it. They could even be argued to be one of the worst ways to do it. I can't help but comment on how ridiculous I think your "wasted time and money" comments are. Especially about things in the early development stages as they are right now. Quite honestly, you sound like you're clinging to old technologies because you know for sure they work. You almost sound like you're afraid of advancement. And you're speaking completely against the ideals that people like Henry Ford had, by the way. He revolutionalized the industry when he came out with the assembly line for the model T. When he spent time and money deveoping the idea. Do you think that revolution would have came from trying to reduce build time by hiring faster workers instead? Or maybe finding smaller workers so more of them could be packed around the car as it was built?Actually Unions WERE the smartest thing ever. The provided a shield of protection against abusive employers, when the entire industry was abusive. A time when it was not so simple as "switch jobs if you don't like it". They were the most effective way to kick management right were it hurts when employees were being mistreated. |
||||
|
|
|
|
|
#81 | |
|
Banned
Drives: 2017 Camaro 2SS 6MT Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Cleveland, Ohio
Posts: 4,361
|
Quote:
If we could drill for whatever oil was available wherever and whenever, the supply could last generations, even at the feverish pace we consume it. Yes, it would eventually run out, but long after my great great great grandkids have kicked the bucket. The IC engine is just about as perfect a power supply for cars as it is an imperfect demonstration of efficiency. The sound, performance, ease of maintenance, cost effectiveness, and relative reliability of it far outweigh the fact that it is inefficient and polutenous. Some companies take them to an art form - could you imagine a day when Ferraris no longer have that beautifully crafted intake manifold on the top of a sweet sounding and just about as perfect performing 48 valve 12 cylinder engine? Blasphemy. What are they gonna do? Paint the prancing horse on the top of plain flat battery pack? Look at the anticipation of the engine choices for our Camaro, just on this forum alone. Who sits and dreams about lithium ions and 230 killowatt generators? You kill the IC engine, and the interrest in cars for people like us is lost completely. I mean, I would purposfully go out and find the biggest gas hog I could find - maybe a '72 Cadillac Fleetwood, or a Chevy Suburban 4X4 with the 454. I've said this before, and I'll say it again: I would just love to buy my V8 Camaro 6 speed stick, drive it out to Washington DC, and just wait for Nancy Pellosi to walk out of the Capitol building. Then I would drive around in circles just drifting the hell out of the car to get as much smoke and gas as I could, and then yell out the window "Here's to your CAFE - stick it in your pipe and smoke it!" |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#82 | |
|
I used to be Dragoneye...
|
Quote:
but...apparently I'm an oddity in that when I see 230kw, and I know that's somewhere north of 300hp. Then I think of the massive, instant torque......Geeze, I dunno. I do see where you're coming from, now. But whereas you don't like the idea of electrification of automobiles, I guess I do.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#83 | ||
|
LVL 50 Troll Stomper
Drives: 2010 Camaro Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Indianapolis
Posts: 3,463
|
Quote:
Quote:
Just a tidbit of information dragon- electric engines but any v8- minus top fuel drags to shame in the torque competition and availability. http://www.businessweek.com/autos/co...age_autos+lede http://www.autobloggreen.com/2007/12...-can-be-yours/ __________________________________________________ ____________________________ Some might mention the fact that these cars are expensive. Two notes on that: some are prototypes-just like the $2 million concept Camaro.... And most (if not all of it) is new technology...This stuff will get cheaper over time and likely in the next couple decades, so like everything else it will get cheaper ala- computers
__________________
Last edited by Kyle2k; 07-06-2008 at 11:44 PM. |
||
|
|
|
|
|
#84 | |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Drives: 2006 Cobalt, 2004 Taurus wagon Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: California
Posts: 3,810
|
Quote:
Also to the people who say innovation is good, but we should demand unfairly cheap oil in the meantime, my argument is that we haven't made much energy progress in the past few decades because gas was so artificially cheap. If gas dropped to $1 a gallon tomorrow (heck even $3 a gallon) would anyone care about alternative fuels, efficiency, or any of that? Heck no. The Volt would be scrapped, the genius pioneers working to create new, clean, sustainable energy mediums would be sent to the poor house, and our freeways would be jammed solid with soccer moms and lone commuters driving Hummer H12s the size of extra-wide semis. Then gas would creep back up to market levels again, and all the sheep would be screaming bloody murder and we'll repeat this whole idiotic process all over again. Or we could just deal with a few uncomfortable years, make reasonable adaptations, and then reap the rewards of our new smarter energy projects, sustaining us on a much more long-term basis. |
|
|
|
|
![]() |
|
|