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philip347
Restructuring the auto industry for new types of autos

The probability of why there is the current economic slump within the auto manufactures industries, may have to do with the presidentially ordered direction of making a new type of auto.

This might be expressed as either a reluctance or an inability to be able to manufacture a new type of auto or truck.

For the business consolidation aspect of this to be chosen new direction, what may occur are re-segments of needed sub-systems which could constitute the autos of tomorrow.

This might be, lighter weight auto bodies that can accommodate the power plants of battery storage, solar cells and electric motors, over materials that are used now.

This might be expressed and being currently expressed now, as solar cell cladding, which is embossed directly into the exterior surfaces of the car or truck?

A second investation might be electric motors, which would balance their potentials via a special mixing computer as fed from both battery storage and solar cell combinations.
philip347
Japan auto-makers race ahead with green cars

TOYOTA CITY, Japan (AFP) – The world economy may still be in deep crisis, and the global auto sector in the doldrums, but Toyota Motor's vice president Takeshi Uchiyamada has some good news.

After months of cutting output, closing plants and laying off staff as its car exports crashed, the world's biggest automaker has resumed overtime work to ramp up production of its new Prius hybrid.

Last month, an industrial survey said the low-emission car for the first time topped Japan's monthly domestic car sales -- knocking its main rival, Honda Motor's Insight hybrid, from first spot.

While US carmakers like General Motors are on life support, struggling under the dead weight of their fuel-guzzling sports utility vehicles, the plant here is humming to the tune of next-generation car technology.

Japan's auto giants hope that, amid the global recession, brisk domestic sales and a worldwide trend towards tougher regulations on carbon dioxide emissions will keep them in international pole position.

Toyota's Tsutsumi plant -- where the machinery is partly powered by giant solar panels on the roof -- manufactures about two-thirds of the Prius cars now produced in Japan, or about 50,000 units this month.

In total four production lines for Prius hybrids are now in full operation which, Uchiyamada told journalists on a media visit with careful understatement, "is a hope for us."

Hybrids were off to a slow start more than a decade ago, but since Toyota pioneered their mass production with its first generation Prius in 1997, annual sales have reached some 1.8 million vehicles worldwide.

Hybrids run on electric motors but switch to petrol when batteries run low. They also save energy by converting kinetic energy during braking into power and by shutting down the engine when the car is stationary.

Other carmakers are joining the race to build the green car of the future.

Mitsubishi Motors on Friday announced it would start selling its iMiEV electric minicars next month to Japanese corporate and government customers, spearheading the commercialisation of zero-emission cars.

Mitsubishi's president Osamu Masuko said "in the long run, the electric vehicle is the ultimate form of environmentally friendly car that can answer the question of air pollution and oil shortage."

The downside of the electric car is its short range per charge, about 160 kilometres (100 miles) for the iMiEV. The key will be developing better batteries, a challenge Honda and Nissan are now heavily investing in.



http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/japanautoenvir...ntcompanytoyota
j1704826
QUOTE (<BxF>+Jun 8 2009, 05:58 AM)
ps. would rather ride a bike than drive a Toyota.

You're forgetting the Supra.


Oh holy mother of all that is automotive.
7ltr_v8
Sad times ahead. Just prior to this global recession, muscle car prices were going thru the roof.
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