IPB

Welcome Guest ( Log In | Register )

UMI PerformanceSolo PerformanceBlaine Fabrication.comHotpart.comUnbalanced Engineering
Profile
Personal Photo
Options
Options
Personal Statement
lateapex doesn't have a personal statement currently.
Personal Info
lateapex
Advanced Member
119 years old
Gender Not Set
Kathmandu, Nepal
Born Jan-24-1905
Interests
Studying the Bible.
Other Information
Your car (Camaro, Firebird, Trans Am, etc): No Information
Use (autocross, track days/HPDE, road racing, street, etc): No Information
Statistics
Joined: 23-December 03
Profile Views: 7,283*
Last Seen: 24th January 2020 - 12:00 AM
Local Time: Mar 28 2024, 04:27 PM
382 posts (0 per day)
Contact Information
AIM No Information
Yahoo No Information
ICQ No Information
MSN No Information
* Profile views updated each hour

lateapex

Advanced Members

**


Topics
Posts
Comments
Friends
My Content
24 Jan 2006
Hi all. I will not be around for a while because I will not have internet access starting tomorrow, since Charter was not able to help me on their new rate increase. I have no TV, and just for internet access their new rate will be $61.24 / month before taxes (they must charge more in Nepal than they do in America). That is over a 53% increase from my current rate. Bell South was supposed to be my new internet provider, but they have not gotten me their software yet, even though I ordered it 3 months ago and again 3 weeks ago. I may get spoiled by all of the extra time and just take an extended brake from the internet.

I will drop by the library now and then to see what is going on at FRRAX. If I get serious withdrawals, I may try Earthlink or something. When I got rid of my TV a few years ago, I missed it for less than a week. I define “progress” differently than most people.

My only regret is that I never got to 3 rocker arms.
11 Nov 2005
Some of you may be familiar with this article, but it appears that it is best to switch gasoline brands at certain intervals to minimize deposit buildups.

The author says he works for the largest gas retailer in the world, has 28 patents, and his specialty is gasoline additives. He has invented some for his employer.

http://vettenet.org/octane.html
24 Aug 2005
The Camaro will go back into limited production at a very high price.

http://www.autoweek.com/article.cms?articleId=103007
4 Aug 2005
This is from today's Automotive News:

Mustang success motivates GM’s engineers, Mark Reuss says
By Richard Truett
Automotive News / August 04, 2005
TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. -- The continued success of Ford’s red-hot Mustang is being noticed at General Motors. There has been talk reviving the Chevrolet Camaro as a competitor to Ford’s pony car.

Mark Reuss, GM’s executive director of vehicle architecture and Performance Division, says his engineers are looking to develop a low-cost rear-wheel drive platform that makes good business sense. Reuss spoke to staff reporter Richard Truett at the Management Briefing Seminars.

In light of the success of Ford’s new Mustang, has there been any rethinking of plans to bring back the Camaro or some other competitive car?
Yeah, absolutely. It’s not going unnoticed for sure. I think Ford did a great job with the Mustang, and you really have to look at it as a portfolio of cars. They have everything (in price) from the mid 20s up to 40s on that. They’ve done a nice job. And you have to pay attention to that. For many, many years it was SUVs and four doors. I think the market goes back and forth on a lot of this stuff. I think a coupe with a really great package is a great thing to have. The Pontiac GTO right now is filling our niche in the upper end of the Mustang portfolio. But as we go through time, we look at how do we participate?

The rear-wheel-drive program GM was working on, is it killed, frozen or just not on the front burner?
We would like to have a low-cost, rear-wheel platform in our portfolio, but business is very tough right now. You have to look at that and ask how do we do this on a very profitable basis? We have more brands than just the Ford brand. We are trying to make intelligent decisions on how you do a rear-wheel-drive platform for a couple more brands than a one-branded Ford deal. I think Ford has said the Mustang is the main brand but we are going to do Cobras and all these sub-brands that get us into the higher end. We are probably going to do things that have more brand exposure potentially on a low-cost, rear-drive architecture. Sometimes it gets a little dangerous, quite frankly, about who talks about what and what that person in the media writes about it. Like there is some sort of revelation that we are canceling something or starting something. Quite frankly this is a journey we are on all the time.

Does “low cost” rule out using the Cadillac CTS platform?
Well, I don’t know. If you look at the CTS, you have to look at the good things, such as the straight frame barrels on the front that are very efficient for crush and very stiff for vehicle dynamics. We have an short- and long-arm front suspension and a multi-link rear and those … inherently perform very, very well. There are some cost issues compared to a strut suspension. But the geometry and components that you have in a short- and long-arm architecture could change to make a low-cost rear-wheel-drive architecture. We also have aluminum components. We have some pretty expensive materials in there. There are a lot of different ways to get costs down. Right now we are trying to look at what the portfolio looks like for the next 20 years. What are the things we want to do with it? I don’t think the know-how is lacking. It’s specifically, what do we want to do with it over the next 10 years and then making an efficient business decision to address those needs.

Is the CTS a good size to launch other vehicles off?
We have two different widths, one for rear-wheel drive, one for all-wheel drive. We’ve got a long wheelbase version for China. So there’s a lot of wheelbase flexibility there.

Since the Holden Monaro is going out of production, is there pressure to come up with the next rear-wheel-drive architecture?
It’s not really an initiative as much as it is part of doing the business. We are looking at this stuff all the time. When we are ready to make decisions around what we are going to do there it is going to be a lot of where we want to put the car performance-wise, price-wise and brand-wise. Then we will go from there. That’s kind of how we are approaching it. This is an ongoing thing.

What makes the Pontiac Solstice so special that buyers are lining up for it?
The soul of this car is four-cylinder, 20,000 bucks and low-volume.

How would a GXP version of the Solstice be configured, with a supercharger?
Probably not. If wanted to do something we probably would look more globally on how we want to charge the engine. We could use a turbocharger.

What else is the Performance Division working on?
We are actually doing some things for mainline vehicles, such as uplevel engines and with packaging and execution, things we have not been asked to do in the past. I’m launching the Cadillac XLR-V and STS-V, and Chevrolet Trailblazer SS right now. We are spending a lot of time on those launches making sure those cars are right.

Beyond the engines in the XLR-V and STS-V, will the performance division get any engines out of the new Performance Build Center, where engines are made by hand?
Oh yeah, I think so.

You may e-mail Richard Truett at rtruett@crain.com
Last Visitors


4 Jul 2013 - 18:00


29 Dec 2008 - 10:24


30 Jul 2008 - 6:16


19 Apr 2008 - 18:07


29 Oct 2007 - 1:42

Comments
Other users have left no comments for lateapex.

Friends
There are no friends to display.
Lo-Fi Version Time is now: 28th March 2024 - 09:27 PM