C7 News Fom Bowling Green
#3
Team Owner
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St. Jude Donor '15
"In honor of jpee"
news to me!
#4
Burning Brakes
Good article, Dosent say alot about the C7 except that they have Spent 131 million dollars in preparing for its grand arrival in 2014.
My question is , Would it cost that kind of money to produce an evolutionary car or a revolutionary car , or would it make no difference.
The Article said they installed 90 new robots. Would an evolutionary c6 to c7 need all that ? These are the kinds of things I think about during the day.
My question is , Would it cost that kind of money to produce an evolutionary car or a revolutionary car , or would it make no difference.
The Article said they installed 90 new robots. Would an evolutionary c6 to c7 need all that ? These are the kinds of things I think about during the day.
#5
The Consigliere
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Not much new.
Previous reports hinted that part of the new investment is driven by BG bringing in-house the formerly outsourced aluminum frame capability.
Tough to tell if those numbers suggest such is actually happening or not.
Previous reports hinted that part of the new investment is driven by BG bringing in-house the formerly outsourced aluminum frame capability.
Tough to tell if those numbers suggest such is actually happening or not.
#6
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But the buzz – most likely because of the secrecy surrounding it – is still the yet-to-be named next generation Corvette
#7
Le Mans Master
Good article, Dosent say alot about the C7 except that they have Spent 131 million dollars in preparing for its grand arrival in 2014.
My question is , Would it cost that kind of money to produce an evolutionary car or a revolutionary car , or would it make no difference.
The Article said they installed 90 new robots. Would an evolutionary c6 to c7 need all that ? These are the kinds of things I think about during the day.
My question is , Would it cost that kind of money to produce an evolutionary car or a revolutionary car , or would it make no difference.
The Article said they installed 90 new robots. Would an evolutionary c6 to c7 need all that ? These are the kinds of things I think about during the day.
#8
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Good article, Dosent say alot about the C7 except that they have Spent 131 million dollars in preparing for its grand arrival in 2014.
My question is , Would it cost that kind of money to produce an evolutionary car or a revolutionary car , or would it make no difference.
The Article said they installed 90 new robots. Would an evolutionary c6 to c7 need all that ? These are the kinds of things I think about during the day.
My question is , Would it cost that kind of money to produce an evolutionary car or a revolutionary car , or would it make no difference.
The Article said they installed 90 new robots. Would an evolutionary c6 to c7 need all that ? These are the kinds of things I think about during the day.
#10
Team Owner
Good article, Dosent say alot about the C7 except that they have Spent 131 million dollars in preparing for its grand arrival in 2014.
My question is , Would it cost that kind of money to produce an evolutionary car or a revolutionary car , or would it make no difference.
The Article said they installed 90 new robots. Would an evolutionary c6 to c7 need all that ? These are the kinds of things I think about during the day.
My question is , Would it cost that kind of money to produce an evolutionary car or a revolutionary car , or would it make no difference.
The Article said they installed 90 new robots. Would an evolutionary c6 to c7 need all that ? These are the kinds of things I think about during the day.
Last edited by JoesC5; 06-13-2012 at 08:23 PM.
#11
The Consigliere
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In 1992, GM approved 250 million to design the C5 and tool up. What's that equal to now in 2012 dollars....409 Million????. Anyway, 131 million isn't that much, about a third of what they spent bringing the C5 to market. Ford spent over 1 billion when they did the second generation Taurus back in the early 90's
Well then, it sounds like a minor re-skin with a Camaro butt.
j/k
#12
Team Owner
looks like the new car will be built in the new part of the plant and they wont be using the old part that now builds the present car,what will become of the old part?,could we see an other vehicle built ,to help cut costs of the c7?,some kind of a mid-engine supercar?
#13
Le Mans Master
In 1992, GM approved 250 million to design the C5 and tool up. What's that equal to now in 2012 dollars....409 Million????. Anyway, 131 million isn't that much, about a third of what they spent bringing the C5 to market. Ford spent over 1 billion when they did the second generation Taurus back in the early 90's
The $131 million is investment in the assembly plant, not the total cost of the C7 program.
What the article reveals that I find interesting, if I'm reading it right -- the C7 assembly line is separate from the C6 line. It's being put together in a different part of the building, and the space where the C6 line is today will go dark unless GM decides to build another vehicle there.
IIRC they did that from C4 to C5 but not C5 to C6.
That suggests more than a nip & tuck refresh to me. At the very least it's a significant change in the way the car is built. Perhaps the engine doesn't fit up through the frame rails anymore. Perhaps the frame is more exotic and of more heterogeneous materials than we expect. Or perhaps they've just redesigned the assembly process to build them faster / cheaper / more precisely.
.Jinx
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b8m9-PgWreE
#14
That suggests more than a nip & tuck refresh to me. At the very least it's a significant change in the way the car is built. Perhaps the engine doesn't fit up through the frame rails anymore. Perhaps the frame is more exotic and of more heterogeneous materials than we expect. Or perhaps they've just redesigned the assembly process to build them faster / cheaper / more precisely.
OR, it could just be that there were a lot of older parts of the plant that needed replacing. Robots are pricey, maybe there is a new paint area, could also be improved HVAC. Who knows? There is nothing to base anything on so speculation is meaningless at this point beyond that they are updating an old plant.
#16
What the article reveals that I find interesting, if I'm reading it right -- the C7 assembly line is separate from the C6 line. It's being put together in a different part of the building, and the space where the C6 line is today will go dark unless GM decides to build another vehicle there.
The plant will shut down in July for intensive construction work, during which time the plant also will be closed for tours. Tours will resume in August but will again be suspended Sept. 14 until sometime after production of the next generation begins. The plant will be shut down for a week in October to begin tying in the old part of the plant to the newly retooled section.
#17
Great read, thanks for the post.
I still remember the GM production engineer that spoke at our local Corvette club meeting in January saying it's more of a C4 to C5 change than a C5 to C6.
A few more months and we'll know.
I still remember the GM production engineer that spoke at our local Corvette club meeting in January saying it's more of a C4 to C5 change than a C5 to C6.
A few more months and we'll know.
#18
Team Owner
It's just that adding that AWD assembly section to the plant is darn expensive!
OR, it could just be that there were a lot of older parts of the plant that needed replacing. Robots are pricey, maybe there is a new paint area, could also be improved HVAC. Who knows? There is nothing to base anything on so speculation is meaningless at this point beyond that they are updating an old plant.
OR, it could just be that there were a lot of older parts of the plant that needed replacing. Robots are pricey, maybe there is a new paint area, could also be improved HVAC. Who knows? There is nothing to base anything on so speculation is meaningless at this point beyond that they are updating an old plant.
#19
Safety Car
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Unmodified C8 of the Year 2021 Finalist
2018 C7 of Year Finalist
"I will say that the last year for the C6 model is 2013,” Plant Manager Dave Tatman said.
“The new vehicle is incredibly exciting,” he said. “But that’s all I can say about it.”
#20
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St. Jude Donor '15
"In honor of jpee"
In 1992, GM approved 250 million to design the C5 and tool up. What's that equal to now in 2012 dollars....409 Million????. Anyway, 131 million isn't that much, about a third of what they spent bringing the C5 to market. Ford spent over 1 billion when they did the second generation Taurus back in the early 90's
I agree that 131 million seems to be small by comparison to other models and generation changes. if that number's correct, I hope it's a lot of car!