That is a LOT of money to spend to not buy something!
http://money.cnn.com/2005/02/13/news/international/gm_fiat.reut/index.htm?cnn=yes
Jeff DeWitt
"Jeffrey DeWitt" wrote..
Jeff DeWitt
Jeff DeWitt
Who else remembers the Strada, the last boxy Fiat to be brought into the
states? As I recall, it also suffered from severe rust problems. But it
wasn't banned from the streets.
Fiat and Mitsubishi (Auto Divisions) are both on the edge of financial
collapse and they are continuing to fall into a swirling, pulling vortex.
Just like the recent decision by Daimler not to invest any further in
Mitsubishi (Chrysler had just about completely divorced themselves from
Mitsubishi before the German takeover), this is a wise decision on the part
of GM not to pour more money into a financial black hole.
This is a decision by the new management at GM not to follow through on a
bad decision by their predecessors. GM needs Fiat right now like a hole in
their head. Whatever they have to pay to get out of Fiat is money well
spent.
"Jeff DeWitt" <JeffD...@nc.rr.com> wrote in message
news:wJSPd.3440$VI1.9...@twister.southeast.rr.com...
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Jeff DeWitt
> Fiat and Mitsubishi (Auto Divisions) are both on the edge of financial
> collapse and they are continuing to fall into a swirling, pulling vortex.
> Just like the recent decision by Daimler not to invest any further in
> Mitsubishi (Chrysler had just about completely divorced themselves from
> Mitsubishi before the German takeover), this is a wise decision on the
> part of GM not to pour more money into a financial black hole.
More than a few automakes learned from BMW's mistake of buying Rover Group
from British Aerospace, and the financial albatross it was for them, despite
sinking billions of Pounds into new product.
Craig.
Karl
> I know the Yugo used a Fiat derivitive engine.
> Had an aquaintence buy a Yugo just to get the head for his Spyder.
> Seems the whole Yugo was cheaper than just a head from the boneyard <lol>..
> Jeff
>
The whole Yugo was a copy built under license of an older FIAT model.
nate
--
replace "fly" with "com" to reply.
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i drove a fiat in the allright parking lot in boston in 1973 it was
faster than a 911 it was a 2 door great wood and leather inside it had
nice stanless around the windows did not expect much it was better
than i though
A foreign car mechanic once told me that FIAT stood for "Fix it again Tony".
Paul Johnson
The same could be said of a Lada and it components made under licence in the
former USSR. I know a Maserati Mistral owner who needed the pushbutton
lock assembly for the rear hatch. A 'genuine' Maserati part was $200 and 3
months to get. A Lada one is identical, and was at the local autowreckers
for $1.95 and it fit perfectly. He was even able to change out his
tumblers from the old pushbutton and keep his original key.
Craig.
Yes, Nissan had a small van that looked very similar to the Toyota van. I
was working at a Nissan dealership shortly after that recall/buyback
happened. They were inherent to engine fires. Nissan had recalled them
several times and tried to fix the problem but could not. They figured the
only safe thing to do to resolve the problem was to recall them all and buy
them back. They were crushed. I remember going to a salvage yard in
Houston years before this and saw row upon row of these vans crushed. I
asked the guy up front what the heck was up with that and he told me it was
a massive recall. We had one of them on the back lot of the dealership for
a long time that we had bought back. We later moved the dealership and I
was helping move file boxes and found some of the buy back documents. they
paid those people pretty well for the most part most of them were pretty
worn out or trashed by that time. They even recalled all the parts for
them.
Another big recall we had there was all the older 300ZX and Maximas were
recalled and Nissan paid to replace the entire fuel injector/rail setups as
the newer fuel was causing the rubber to fail. What a PITA that recall was.
I had more than one car come in burned and the service manager would ask me
to do a "P & A" (parts quote and availability) on the entire under the hood.
Oye was that a pain. One never realizes how many parts are under there!!!!
I had to give him a printout with every part number and price. They were
many pages long.
John
Could be a hell of a lot cheaper than trying to bail out a
company or divest yourself of deadwood iin the
corporate makeup.
Plus if Jeff is correct about Fiat still having ties to
companies from the war, there is a chance that seests could
be yanked to pay off lawsuits, etc.
BG
http://www.carsfromitaly.com/fiat/index.html
The were REALLY cool looking little things though.
Jeff DeWitt
"Bill Glass" <bondo...@aol.com> wrote in message
news:42111DDF...@aol.com...
Hmm, Why does Chrysler suddenly come to mind?
Karl
> BMW shareholders got rid of the team who did the dirty deed and sold
> Rover off to a bunch of dreamers.
And just how far have these 'dreamers' gone with it?? The Chinese have
since got an 80% share of Rover amid sinking sales, a product line that's
starting to get stale, etc. The 'new' V8 that is now powering some of the
Rovers is the familiar Ford 4.6, since they have no money left develop their
own. At least when Rover owned it, they made a serious attempt to make
something of the line, and if things went as they should have, we would have
seen a revival of the Riley and Woseley brands as well. Angry British
apathy obviously didn't do the company any good at all, and Rover is no
farther ahead than before.
>
> Hmm, Why does Chrysler suddenly come to mind?
There's a different issue at stake with that one. Rover was a 100% takeover
while Chrysler is supposed to be a 50-50 merger. I'm sitting back and
watching now with the new line of rwd Chryslers, Dodges, and the Hemi
powered trucks now on the market. Looks like the pendulum has swung back to
U.S. side for the time being, and is no longer getting the short end of the
stick like they did in the past few years.
Craig.
>
> Karl
>
Chrysler's market share under German control has fallen from 17-18% in 1997
to about 11% currently.
The "Hot" 300 barely outsold all the 2004 carlines it replaced which were in
their fifth year of production.. The Canadian plant where the 300 and
Magnum are made produced about 150,000 cars last year. In 1997, the year
the second generation LH cars were changed over, the plant produced over
250,000 cars. Hemi installation rates exceed 50%, making you wonder what
would have happened without that engine.
The Pacifica and Crossfire, the first "Daimlerized Chryslers", have never
come close to sales estimates, and have been heavily discounted from a few
weeks after introduction. Only about 39,000 Magnum Wagons were sold last
year. The 300 has stayed above 10,000 units per month, but they are not in
short supply and I could drive home my choice, Hemi or otherwise, today if I
wanted. Meanwhile, Impala, Camry and Accord sell somewhere around 60-80,000
units per month each. In other words, the 300 probably isn't even on the
competition's radar screen. The LH cars, when they were fully supported by
the company, sold upwards of 25,000 units per month.
Daimler has a lot of money and they know how to throw it around to gain the
support of a sympathetic press. Maybe that's why no one's talking about
Mercedes-Benz placing 14th out of 16 makes in reliability studies last year.
At least they did beat out Volkswagen and Kia!
"Craig Parslow" <stude...@shaw.ca> wrote in message
news:m1iQd.396566$6l.125295@pd7tw2no...
I can't see the "Chrysler Group's" Chief Executive Officer Dr. Dieter
Zetsche doing a series of commercials like Lee Iaccoca pleading with the
public to buy American playing out either! (Especially with his heavy
Turkish / German accent!)
Make no mistake who controls what's left of Chrysler now. Heck, they've
even been removed from most domestic automotive stock indexes (replaced by
Harley Davidson and Monaco Coach in Business Week) DCX stock is owned in
majority by the German Government, Deutsch Bank, and Middle Eastern Sheiks.
The Emirate of Dubai very recently became one of the largest DCX
shareholders. DCX does not depend on Wall Street for investment monies.
Americans have little say in what happens at DCX.
"Kevin Wolford" <kwol...@NOSPAMkconline.com> wrote in message
news:S_CdnRB7n8r...@kconline.com...
Jeff DeWitt