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  #21  
Old 05-20-2009, 06:28 PM
Kim_Howie Kim_Howie is offline
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Default Re: Bye Bye To The American V-8...

The cars built in the US are great cars. My wife drives a Mercury Marinar All wheel drive it gets 32mph it also has a 100,000 mile warranty. It also was made in Kansas City. There is only one over sea owned company that has a 100,000 warranty all the rest are 36,000. The new president said NO new TAXES!!! HUH !!! Cigarettes have gone up 1.62 per pack thats 800.00 a year for me!! Thanks HUSSEIN.
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  #22  
Old 05-20-2009, 06:32 PM
442w30 442w30 is offline
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Default Re: Bye Bye To The American V-8...

Rob, I agree, and I apologize for implying it was just GM's fault - certainly the 1970s were a dark period for every manufacturer, and it took everyone a long time to get their junk together. Even with the advent of the 225hp 5.0 Mustang, it was a long time till it was improved upon. Even Ferraris were dogs!

However, today's times are different. We have Corvettes getting high-20s on the highway (with apologies to skip-shift!). Bland sedans like a V6 Accord regularly have acceleration that will rival the bulk of cars from the musclecar era. I think we're currently faced with an evolution of the automobile as personal transportation, but we're experiencing this at a point where we won't experience any dark age in regards to performance.

Plus, remember, CAFE is an aggregate regulation, so halo cars will continue to exist. The demise of the CTS-V, for example, has to do with GM's focus on getting back to health rather than the advent of the dark ages.

I really don't like what's going on between Detroit and Washington - I'm waiting with baited breath - but I'm merely acting as a hedge against those who think it's the end of the world. What would be the end of the world is if Detroit suffers more than it has.
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  #23  
Old 05-20-2009, 06:33 PM
442w30 442w30 is offline
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Default Re: Bye Bye To The American V-8...

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The new president said NO new TAXES!!! HUH !!! Cigarettes have gone up 1.62 per pack thats 800.00 a year for me!! Thanks HUSSEIN.

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Aside of your rhetoric, cig taxes have nothing to do with the president.
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  #24  
Old 05-20-2009, 06:35 PM
GRB GRB is offline
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Default Re: Bye Bye To The American V-8...

I wonder when highway deaths will reach 100,000 a year again? I guess saving lives doesn't really matter in this case.
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  #25  
Old 05-20-2009, 07:05 PM
Kim_Howie Kim_Howie is offline
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Default Re: Bye Bye To The American V-8...

The pres passed the tax increase.
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  #26  
Old 05-20-2009, 07:47 PM
70 copo 70 copo is offline
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Default Re: Bye Bye To The American V-8...

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We have been there. same policies that gave us the 55MPH Speed limit and 165 HP V8's. Not a future I want.

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A speed limit? Petty . . . speed limits are still low in my area.

165 hp? Blame GM for that.


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IMO... People who buy GM want what GM does best-an American V-8. HP and torque for towing and power for performance.


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No, you're speaking of the hobbyist who drives V8s as a hobby.

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GM has tried to gain back market segment in cars from the imports for years by trying to be "like an import", while abandoning its core market for car buyers. Discontinuation of the F-body platform in 2002 is a prime example where the cobalt was to compete against the imports and the SSR was a bone thrown to the Camaro buyer.

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You're mistaken about Detroit's marketing. Discontinuing the F-body was arguable. The Cobalt was replacement for the unlamented Cavalier, and merely was Chevy's submission to competing in a class of vehicles. SSR? A niche vehicle.

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Wrong on the Cobalt wrong on the SSR. More people left GM and went to other market segments.

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What's wrong with the Cobalt? Lackluster in comparison to the competition? So whose fault was that?

Ditto with the SSR - lack of hp? Whose fault was that?

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Along the way GM finally became self aware and tried to reverse course. Difference is that now GM will be forced to build cars that are aligned with a market segment that they lost a decade ago to Honda and Toyota and I seriously doubt those buyers will be back abesent a rock bottom price.

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This may come as a surprise to you, but GM is not self-aware. GM's current situation most certainly has something to do with the economy but, even more so, GM's current situation has a hell of a lot to do with GM. Blaming the government is a convenient way to ignore the problems GM has had . . . but that's par for the course as GM has ignored its problems for years. Ironic, considering they have a portfolio of stellar cars.

Now, against the wall, GM is faced with making compromises in its future. The capitalist in me says to let GM die, but the American in me says we need to help Detroit as much as we can. . . so we have the government to do that.

You can't get back to health until you figure out what's causing the symptoms. I hope that GM has figured it out for once.

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Speaking of speed limits why not speed governed vehicles that are adjusted by GPS... They are looking into this now for future applications...

On the cobalt.. you can disagree but its sales are what they are.. do a comparison with the imports.

On the SSR - it currently makes multiple lists of the worst vehicles ever built. Check it out. If you need help I will post links for you.


The Imports are what they are. Typically they are small displacement and are far less than exciting to drive and lack the butt busting torque that most American's prefer when towing or driving a muscle car.

Remember a little thing called Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness?? Constraints like this placed upon the the folks by the government is exactly what ended the first round of performance cars in the early 1970's and will no doubt end it now.

Question for you.... Tell us all how we will be able to meet fleet 2016 MPG requirements, Mass produce a vehicle that a defined market segment still clearly wants to buy (Camaro, Corvette, Challenger, Mustang check the sales they are significant) and still make over 400 HP with an "all American V8" and keep it fun to drive?

That was (and is) the topic of this thread...lest we go too far into the weeds

IMO.... The Government has NO business telling the market and a significant buying segment what it can or cannot drive.

Make no mistake I am not talking about Hobbyists but new vehicles.
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  #27  
Old 05-20-2009, 08:03 PM
442w30 442w30 is offline
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Default Re: Bye Bye To The American V-8...

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Speaking of speed limits why not speed governed vehicles that are adjusted by GPS... They are looking into this now for future applications...

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You're offering more fire and brimstone. Why not offer substance?


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On the cobalt.. you can disagree but its sales are what they are.. do a comparison with the imports.

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Um, I'm a little confused what you're talking about.

There's a market segment where Chevrolet has an interest in offering their submission for the public's demand. Chevrolet offers a value-laden car that doesn't compete well with better offerings from Japan, Korea, or even across town.

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On the SSR - it currently makes multiple lists of the worst vehicles ever built. Check it out. If you need help I will post links for you.

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I've seen those articles. They are lame and only end up feeding more BS to the general population that Detroit's problem was product and quality when that isn't necessarily the problem.

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The Imports are what they are. Typically they are small displacement and are far less than exciting to drive and lack the butt busting torque that most American's prefer when towing or driving a muscle car.


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So you're comparing a daily driver with a musclecar?

What's wrong with this picture?

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Remember a little thing called Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness?? Constraints like this placed upon the the folks by the government is exactly what ended the first round of performance cars in the early 1970's and will no doubt end it now.


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What ended the first round of performance cars was insurance. The energy crisis merely followed.

Besides, your right to go fast is not a right at all. In fact, to tie liberty to a car is kinda funny - there are people in the world who can't say what they feel because of a totalitarian regime, and you think your freedom is being undermined? You have plenty of resources at your disposal to go fast despite your doom-and-gloom prognosis (which, by the way, hasn't been qualified yet).

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Question for you.... Tell us all how we will be able to meet fleet 2016 MPG requirements, Mass produce a vehicle that a defined market segment still clearly wants to buy (Camaro, Corvette, Challenger, Mustang check the sales they are significant) and still make over 400 HP with an "all American V8" and keep it fun to drive?

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I don't like CAFE and I don't like the new proposal. However, I try to call a spade a spade rather than get all bent out of shape over uncertainty. I try to look at the big picture and, when it comes down to Detroit, they have an antiquated business model with horrendous legacy costs and a poor product portfolio. The poor economy has reduced their liquidity although Ford had the luck of selling off its assets before things got bad. Now, they are in PR mode trying to tell us they're better because they didn't receive a loan, but I know Ford is as bad as any other company in Detroit.



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  #28  
Old 05-20-2009, 08:45 PM
Late BrakeU2 Late BrakeU2 is offline
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Default Re: Bye Bye To The American V-8...

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Ford had the luck of selling off its assets before things got bad. Now, they are in PR mode trying to tell us they're better because they didn't receive a loan, but I know Ford is as bad as any other company in Detroit.


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Luck, or foresight? When the dust settles they will be the only domestic left that didn't file BK and crawl to this admin with a cup in their hand. Maybe they had less arrogance than the other two,and actually released new products on time?

And now the UAW is pissed GM is planning to import cars from China- go figure
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  #29  
Old 05-20-2009, 08:54 PM
70 copo 70 copo is offline
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Default Re: Bye Bye To The American V-8...

Not so fast...



"What ended the first round of performance cars was insurance. The energy crisis merely followed".
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What about the governmental requirement to switch to unleded low octane fuel. Did you forget about that?? Way more to do with the death of performance than insurance.

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"Besides, your right to go fast is not a right at all. In fact, to tie liberty to a car is kinda funny - there are people in the world who can't say what they feel because of a totalitarian regime, and you think your freedom is being undermined? You have plenty of resources at your disposal to go fast despite your doom-and-gloom prognosis (which, by the way, hasn't been qualified yet)".

Perhaps in your world view -I have no right to go fast. Thanks for making your positions clear for all to see publicly right here! With this view (your view), the car collector could soon be a target of future "progressive legislation" without a doubt targeting muscle cars- (and needless to say, but I will anyway)... I disagree with you 100% on this opinion and most here would do the same

"I don't like CAFE and I don't like the new proposal. However, I try to call a spade a spade rather than get all bent out of shape over uncertainty. I try to look at the big picture and, when it comes down to Detroit, they have an antiquated business model with horrendous legacy costs and a poor product portfolio. The poor economy has reduced their liquidity although Ford had the luck of selling off its assets before things got bad. Now, they are in PR mode trying to tell us they're better because they didn't receive a loan, but I know Ford is as bad as any other company in Detroit"

But I asked you a simple question about the future of the V-8 where you could have been so proactive...
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  #30  
Old 05-20-2009, 10:18 PM
70 copo 70 copo is offline
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Default Re: Bye Bye To The American V-8...

Here is the far Green digest of all things automotive, and guess what they hate V8's and are signaling a dislike for the new Camaro... Imagine that.

Here: http://www.autobloggreen.com/2009/05...aro-success-w/
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