According to the news, GM will only keep Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC. They will attempt to get rid of Saturn, Saab and Hummer. They will also try to keep Pontiac to only a niche brand.
I used to have a Saturn. It was sort of nice to look at, but it royally SUCKED as a winter driving car. Can't say I miss it much.
And Pontiac? People still have those?![]()
I do. And it's more than a safe bet it's seen more ass than your ride.
A big part of what got GM into this mess to begin with was making its brands compete against each other. And nothing is a better example of that then a rebadged Silverado.
My wife and I have been dedicated Saturn owners for many years. We both drive Vues currently. We've owned five total.
The cars have always been great, as has the service. They're easy to maintain, easy to drive, and have (had) great support from our local dealer (who went out of business about six months ago).
Bummer.
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I used to have a Saturn. It was sort of nice to look at, but it royally SUCKED as a winter driving car. Can't say I miss it much.
And Pontiac? People still have those?![]()
I do. And it's more than a safe bet it's seen more ass than your ride.
Same here. LOVE my Pontiac. Would love to buy another one.
A big part of what got GM into this mess to begin with was making its brands compete against each other. And nothing is a better example of that then a rebadged Silverado.
There is a better example.
The Chevy Trailblazer.
That same truck was/is still available as a Buick, Oldsmobile, GMC, and Isuzu.
I used to have a Saturn. It was sort of nice to look at, but it royally SUCKED as a winter driving car. Can't say I miss it much.
Good Riddance. I don't trust plastic cars that smoke like a steam engine, and Pontiac hasn't made a decent product since the mid 1970's!
FWD, snow tires and a standard transmission and it sticks to the road as well as any other car I've driven.
The idiots that ran these companies in the ground should be held responsible.
Ford saw the writing on the wall about 5 years ago and started enacting changes. Heavy criticism was launched at Ford for shuttering plants and cutting a few models by people who thought Ford was cutting its own throat. It turns out that Ford was the smartest of the Big Three as it is "keeping in mind" the possibility of using government loans, but plans not to do so.The idiots that ran these companies in the ground should be held responsible.
Most of the upper management responsible for running them into the ground don't even work for them anymore, whatcha gonna do? They've been run by hundreds of different executives over the years, it's as much a culture thing at a certain point as anything else, coupled with the way your predecessors have tied your hands. I can put the best driver in the world behind the wheel, but if the car is already on its way over the cliff....
GM has been the poster child of over-production, financial mismanagement and detrimental dealer-coddling for decades and while they are now building some very nice vehicles they obviously have a ways to go and deserve to be in the post they are. I'm not going to sit here and blame Rick Wagoner for their current problems when (if anything) he's done little but improve the company in the past couple of years.
I'd point out that Chrysler got money from the government in the 1980s, paid it back early, was profitable through the launch of the ground breaking LH-cars and right up their the "merger" with Daimler. You want to blame someone for turning Chrysler into a clusterfuck? Buy yourself a plane ticket to Deutschland.
Ford's a different story. They've gone through ups and downs of building mediocre to great vehicles but rarely truly "bad" ones. Much of their current predicament comes from the perception (mostly deserved) of poor quality caused by the massive amount of cost and feature cutting they did to their vehicles in the 1990s. Most people blame that on the decisions of a French asshole named Jacques Nassar. Too much cost cutting ended up costing them money. I'd say they are the least likely of the three to declare a bankruptcy.
I hate how they did all the badge whoring . . .
Chrysler Cirrus, Plymouth Breeze, Dodge Stratus
Chevy Blazer, GMC Jimmy, Oldsmobile Bravada, Buick Rainier
Dodge Neon, Plymouth Neon
Dodge Caravan, Chrysler Town and Country, Volkswagen Routan
Ford Contour, Mercury Mystique
Ford Taurus, Mercury Sable
the whole Eagle brand
of course I haven't kept up with the different brands lately so I have no idea how bad it is now, but the late 90s were really bad for badge engineered designs . . .
well look what we have here!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_badge_engineered_vehicles
Ack.
We have had a Saturn in the family since the early 90's...
I do. And it's more than a safe bet it's seen more ass than your ride.
Same here. LOVE my Pontiac. Would love to buy another one.
A big part of what got GM into this mess to begin with was making its brands compete against each other. And nothing is a better example of that then a rebadged Silverado.
There is a better example.
The Chevy Trailblazer.
That same truck was/is still available as a Buick, Oldsmobile, GMC, and Isuzu.
Don't forget the Saab 9-7x, which is a Trailblazer with the ignition key in the floor.
I understand GMC is popular but there's nothing in their division that can't be offered by Chevy trucks.
For people that don't know Buick, it is the best selling American car brand in China, which is the number two car market in the world.
Saturn is no longer tv crap plastic cars from 90s. They're all Opels now. But they still aren't competitive. The Aura got good reviews but was a bomb and the Chevy Malibu stole it's thunder with better styling and refinement. The Vue is too heavy and gets awful economy, compared to the Ford Escape and Honda CRV. Plus the next Chevy Equinox will steal sales from it with great styling and a more powerful and more efficient engine. The Sky convertible looks nice but is no match for the Miata and Pontiac Solstice. The Astra is lost among the VW Golfs and Mazda3s that dominate the 5 door market. And the Outlook crossover is named after an email program and can be had as for better value as the Chevy Traverse or GMC Acadia. Saturn is a unique division but theirbesr wasn't good enough.
FWIW, my Dodge Ram was built in Mexico and it turns out that Mexican built Dodge pickups are better in quality than the one built in the US.![]()
FWIW, my Dodge Ram was built in Mexico and it turns out that Mexican built Dodge pickups are better in quality than the one built in the US.![]()
That's because they don't have a union.
Say you are running a robotic welder. You notice the parts are being aligned "slightly off center" by the upstream robot cell. Being a Good Union Person you follow the chain of command and by the time the message gets sent to the upstream assembly cell several dozen units have gone by. You can't reject the parts, you can't shut down the line, you can't even walk 20 feet upstream and tell the other operator that the parts are incorrect. That would mean you are doing the job of the "quality inspector," the "quality assurance manager" and the "line mechanic" who adjusts the machines. All you can do is sit there and continue to make less than quality cars until someone decides to fix the problem.
Now provided its not a glaring structural defect, safety issue or cosmetic problem 99% of problems get passed in order to ensure that everyone gets their quota bonus, the managers get their "scrap prevention" bonus and so on so forth.
Meanwhile down in Mexico, Pedro spots the defect on the line, stops the line, walks over to his buddy Javier who gets a wrench and adjusts the machine.
Now if you REALLY want to get into it... you the Union Worker... are getting paid $40 an hour to sit in a booth watching the machine and notify someone when something goes wrong. Pedro and Javier are getting far far less than that AND they have the authority to fix the issues that crop up.
Which is a better value overall?
I feel sorry for the impending cuts at these automakers... alot of good people are going to get axed and aren't going to find good paying jobs... but this is the reality of the situation.
All for worker protections but the way the Unions have jacked up wages and demanded lifetime benefits and stuff like that... that's what's killing us.
Is there a better way? Maybe. I honestly don't have an answer though.
My dad was an automotive engineer and retired in 1983. He LOVED IT when unions went on strike, because that meant he worked overtime. Why? To design machines that would automate what was being done by union labor. To this day he laughs and chuckles knowing he put a lot of union workers out of workFWIW, my Dodge Ram was built in Mexico and it turns out that Mexican built Dodge pickups are better in quality than the one built in the US.![]()
That's because they don't have a union.
Say you are running a robotic welder. You notice the parts are being aligned "slightly off center" by the upstream robot cell. Being a Good Union Person you follow the chain of command and by the time the message gets sent to the upstream assembly cell several dozen units have gone by. You can't reject the parts, you can't shut down the line, you can't even walk 20 feet upstream and tell the other operator that the parts are incorrect. That would mean you are doing the job of the "quality inspector," the "quality assurance manager" and the "line mechanic" who adjusts the machines. All you can do is sit there and continue to make less than quality cars until someone decides to fix the problem.
Now provided its not a glaring structural defect, safety issue or cosmetic problem 99% of problems get passed in order to ensure that everyone gets their quota bonus, the managers get their "scrap prevention" bonus and so on so forth.
Meanwhile down in Mexico, Pedro spots the defect on the line, stops the line, walks over to his buddy Javier who gets a wrench and adjusts the machine.
Now if you REALLY want to get into it... you the Union Worker... are getting paid $40 an hour to sit in a booth watching the machine and notify someone when something goes wrong. Pedro and Javier are getting far far less than that AND they have the authority to fix the issues that crop up.
Which is a better value overall?
I feel sorry for the impending cuts at these automakers... alot of good people are going to get axed and aren't going to find good paying jobs... but this is the reality of the situation.
All for worker protections but the way the Unions have jacked up wages and demanded lifetime benefits and stuff like that... that's what's killing us.
Is there a better way? Maybe. I honestly don't have an answer though.
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