Tag Archives: Buick Regal

Report: GM Lambda crossovers are the most American Made according to new index

By Jeffrey N. Ross

2013 Chevrolet Traverse

Filed under:

There are plenty of reasons to appreciate the Chevrolet Traverse, Buick Enclave and GMC Acadia, but it seems that these crossovers have what it takes to wear the title of America’s most American vehicle. And who better to determine this than Washington, DC-based American University? Frank DuBois, an associate professor at this university’s Kogod School of Business, has come up with a new model for determining which cars have the highest content of US-sourced labor and parts, and he named the General Motors Lambda-platform triplets as the most “American made.”

Digging a little deeper than Cars.com did in naming the Toyota Camry at the top of its American-Made Index last year, the Kogod list factors in profit margin (where the automaker is headquartered), research and development, and information from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration American Automobile Labeling Act (AALA). Each vehicle was given a percentage score based on seven criteria, and the Traverse, Enclave and Acadia had the top Index Score of 88.5 out of 100.

Unlike the Cars.com top 10 list that had five “import” cars, the university’s top 10 (which actually consists of 34 vehicles) only has one, the tenth-place Toyota Avalon. Oddly enough, the six-way tie for tenth place also included the Buick Regal, which was given a full score for research and development despite being derived from a European-designed Opel. Head on over to the Kogod website to see the full list of vehicles on the American Auto Index, and let us know what you think in the comments below.

GM Lambda crossovers are the most American Made according to new index originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 12 Apr 2013 16:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

From: http://feeds.autoblog.com/~r/weblogsinc/autoblog/~3/lEyDdsnkOdI/

Tenneco Supplies Key Ride Performance, Clean Air Technologies for All-New Chevrolet Malibu

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Tenneco Supplies Key Ride Performance, Clean Air Technologies for All-New Chevrolet Malibu

Company providing global support on GM’s midsize vehicle platform

LAKE FOREST, Ill.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Tenneco Inc. (NYS: TEN) today announced it is supplying ride performance and clean air technologies on the 2013 Chevrolet Malibu and Malibu Eco. Tenneco is a global supplier to General Motors on the new midsize vehicle platform, supporting Chevy Malibu production in North America, China and Korea, as well as the Buick Regal and LaCrosse models in North America and China, and the Opel Insignia model in Europe.

Tenneco supplies both hot- and cold-end emission control systems for the 2.4L Ecotec four-cylinder engine, 2.5L Ecotec four-cylinder engine and the new Ecotec 2.0L turbocharged engine. Tenneco collaborated with GM engineers to provide lightweight solutions in the Malibu’s exhaust system including designs that reduce precious metal content and incorporate single wall muffler shells and hollow rods to lower cost and weight. The company is also supplying front strut modules, rear shock absorbers and exhaust isolators.

“We’re proud of our partnership with GM and the global collaboration we provide to support the company with this important vehicle launch,” said Gregg Sherrill, Tenneco Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. “The Malibu launch requires engineering and manufacturing resources in key regions of the world, and Tenneco has the capabilities in place to accommodate these needs.”

For North America production, Tenneco manufactures the Malibu’s hot-end exhaust systems at its Smithville, Tennessee and Seward, Nebraska facilities, and supplies converters from Litchfield, Michigan. Cold-end exhaust systems are produced at the company’s Cambridge, Ontario and Seward, Nebraska plants. Ride control components are manufactured in Hartwell, Georgia and Kettering, Ohio, and exhaust isolators are supplied from the company’s Suzhou, China facility. Tenneco’s emission control technical centers in Edenkoben, Germany, Grass Lake, Michigan and Shanghai, China provided engineering and system integration support.

About Tenneco

Tenneco is a $7.4 billion global manufacturing company with headquarters in Lake Forest, Illinois and approximately 25,000 employees worldwide. Tenneco is one of the world’s largest designers, manufacturers and marketers of clean air and ride performance products and systems for automotive and commercial vehicle original equipment markets and the aftermarket. Tenneco’s principal brand names are Monroe®, Walker®, XNOx™ and Clevite®Elastomer.

This

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Designing the New Cadillac CTS, Camaro Z/28 and Buick LaCrosse/Regal: Video

By Malcolm Hogan

Our good friends at Automotive Rhythms took some time out at the New York Auto Show last week to interview the man that helps make all new General Motors vehicle designs happen, VP of Global Design, Ed Welburn.

In the video below Ed Welburn shares many details on how the design and inspiration for new automotive design at General Motors led to the emergence of the all-new Cadillac CTS, Chevrolet Camaro Z/28, Buick LaCrosse, Buick Regal, Buick Encore and even the new Corvette Stingray. Enjoy!

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Automotive Addicts

Official: Restyled 2014 Buick Regal adds AWD, Regal GS loses power

By Jeffrey N. Ross

Filed under:

Although the current Buick Regal hasn’t even been on the market for very long, General Motors is using the New York Auto Show to unveil an updated version of the sedan in a similar fashion to what we saw yesterday with the 2014 LaCrosse. Like the LaCrosse, all 2014 Regal models will be getting a new look both for the exterior and interior design, but the big news takes place under the sedan’s skin.

Except for the base Regal eAssist, the Regal Turbo and Regal GS will both be adding the benefit of all-wheel drive, but there is no word as to how much weight this system will add to each car’s curb weight. The Regal Turbo‘s 2.0-liter turbocharged four-cylinder has received a decent bump in output from 220 horsepower and 260 pound-feet of torque to 259 hp and 295 lb-ft; unfortunately, these same figures are carried over to the Regal GS, which means that car drops from 270 hp. Both turbocharged models (Regal Turbo and Regal GS) will now be offered with all-wheel drive and the ability of sending more than 90 percent of the engine’s torque to the rear wheels.

In terms of styling, the 2014 Regal gets similar styling changes found on the updated Enclave and LaCrosse, including reworked fascias, scalloped headlights and a full-width chrome strip spanning between the new LED taillights. Inside, key changes were made to the Regal’s cabin technology, such as the instrument gauge cluster and infotainment system. On the Regal and Regal Turbo, a new 4.2-inch color display is available for drivers to see information for the vehicle, navigation and audio systems, but the Regal GS’ cabin is slightly different with an eight-inch configurable gauge display. One of the best changes may be the overall reduction in buttons on the center stack, creating a cleaner-looking and easier-to-use cabin.

Like the 2014 LaCrosse, the 2014 Regal will also get updated safety and infotainment technology. The next-generation IntelliLink system improves connectivity with better voice recognition and higher levels of customization that include a customizable, five-button top menu and a lower menu that can store up to 60 favorites for the audio, phone and even navigation systems. As for safety, the Regal gets two new optional packages that add forward collision alert, land change alert, rear cross traffic alert and an adaptive cruise control system.

The new 2014 Buick Regal goes on sale this fall, and the official press release is posted below.

Continue reading Restyled 2014 Buick Regal adds AWD, Regal GS loses power

Restyled 2014 Buick Regal adds AWD, Regal GS loses power originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 26 Mar 2013 11:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | <a target=_blank href="http://www.autoblog.com/forward/20513907/" title="Send this entry to a friend via …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

2013 Chevy Malibu 2.0T Tested: Turbo Doesn’t Mean What It Used To

By Jeff Sabatini

2013 Chevrolet Malibu 2LTZ

Let us now officially place “turbocharged” alongside “humdinger,” “nifty,” and “bodacious” in the pile of words that once denoted cool but, today, is just stuff old people say. Yes, enthusiasts, welcome to the modern reality of ubiquitous forced induction, where even the Chevy Malibu is offered with a turbo. In fact, it’s the same basic 2.0-liter turbo fitted to the Cadillac ATS, the Buick Verano, and the Buick Regal. READ MORE ››

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Car & Driver

China's love affair with cars chokes air in cities

Endless lines of slow-moving cars emerge like apparitions and then disappear again into the gloom of the thick smog that has shrouded Beijing and reduced its skyline to blurry gray shapes.

With more than 13 million cars sold in China last year, motor vehicles have emerged as the chief culprit for the throat-choking air pollution in big cities especially Beijing.

As the Chinese middle-class expanded dramatically over the last 20 years, cars became the new symbol of prosperity. With the economy continuing to grow, the love affair with cars will only bloom more, and is already posing a challenge for dealing with the hazardous air pollution in urban China with widespread impact on health, productivity and quality of life.

The attachment for automobiles has turned into a vicious cycle.

“To be honest, the more the air is polluted, the more I prefer to drive, as I don’t like taking a crowded bus or walking outside in such bad air,” said subway train driver Gao Fei.

Twenty years ago, bikes, not cars, owned the streets. Today, “buying a car is like buying a bicycle,” said Gao as he drove his black Buick Regal sedan in west Beijing.

“It hasn’t been long since Chinese people owned their own cars. So for them a car is still something quite fresh and so they prefer to drive after so many years of riding bicycles,” he said. “They still would prefer to enjoy the traffic jam rather than suffer on the crowded bus.”

In the 1990s, the few vehicles on the roads belonged to the government or state companies. Private car ownership took off exponentially only in the last decade.

The government has promoted car buying as a way of keeping the economy growing with banks offering attractive car loans. These policies, and the traditional Chinese habit of saving, have put cars like Gao’s Buick Regal (price tag 180,000 yuan, or $29,000) within the reach of many Chinese even though the average annual salary in Beijing is 56,000 yuan ($8,900).

The result has been increased vehicle emissions.

While burning of coal for power plants is a major source of air pollution across China, vehicle emissions are the single biggest source of PM2.5 — a secondary pollutant that forms in the air and is tiny enough to enter deep into the lungs — in Beijing, according to the capital’s former vice mayor, Hong Feng.

He says vehicles account for 22 percent of PM2.5 in the capital, followed by 17 percent from coal burning and 16 percent from construction site dust. In recent days, air quality went off the index in Beijing as the capital turned into a white landscape with buildings eaten up by murk.

China‘s increasingly informed and vocal citizens have successfully pushed the government to be more transparent about how bad the air is, taking to the country’s lively social media to call for better information and even testing the air themselves. Hourly air quality updates are now available online for more than 70 cities, and two particularly bad bouts of hazardous air this month received unprecedented coverage in the state media.

But as Chinese get richer, their desire for cleaner air conflicts with their growing dependence on cars.

When Beijing resident Wang Hui leaves her home she usually gets in her Toyota Camry, bought seven months ago mainly for her husband to meet clients for the business the couple run designing science labs. Now she couldn’t imagine life without it.

Wang said it would be tough to take care of her 5-year-old son “by myself while holding several shopping bags at the same time.”

“My husband really needs a car for the business, it is just more convenient. So we wouldn’t give up the car even if pollution is getting worse, one car can’t make a difference, and we really need it for our life.”

China is the biggest car market in the world by number of vehicles sold. But it still lags far behind developed markets in terms of the ratio of cars to people. In 2010 in China, only 31 per 1,000 people owned a car, compared with 424 per 1,000 people in the United States, said IHS analyst Namrita Chow.

More than 13 million passenger cards were sold in China in 2012, an annual increase of 7.6 percent, according to data from IHS Automotive, and it expects an annual growth rate of 11 percent in 2013. The majority of new car sales are in the interior — poorer — regions of China, where the government is aiming to push growth by raising salaries, and therefore providing higher disposable incomes.

In Beijing alone, the number of vehicles has increased to 5.18 million from 3.13 million in early 2008, Xinhua reported Monday.

In a bid to limit the number of cars, the city has adopted a license plate lottery system and stopped a fifth of cars from driving into the city on each weekday under threat of fines. To get around this car owners sometimes remove their license plates to avoid monitoring cameras or buy second cars.

Vehicle emissions are compounded by a lack of effective public transportation, low emission standards and the slow development of energy-saving and clean automobile technologies, the Asian Development Bank says in its environmental analysis of China.

Beijing‘s wide avenues and underpasses that stretch across eight lanes of traffic don’t allow pedestrians to get anywhere in a hurry. The city’s subway system is overwhelmed with passengers, there are long walks between lines and its stations don’t always link up with bus stops.

“Public transport should really have been prioritized but we need to understand that if you want to build up a new public transport system then you have to plan and design the city the right way,” said Ma Jun, director of the Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs.

China should learn from cities like New York and Hong Kong, he said.

Gao, the subway driver, can’t think of anyone he knows who doesn’t have a car. He and his wife, who sells subway tickets, worry about the health of their 1-year-old in the worsening pollution.

“My dream is simple,” he says. “To live in a warm apartment, drive a car I like and have a healthy child.”

___

AP researchers Fu Ting in Shanghai and Yu Bing in Beijing contributed to this report.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News