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Opel 1.4 liter EcoTec engine
Opel 1.4 liter EcoTec engine

Chevrolet Announce Restructuring Plan Along with New Compact Car

Volt on schedule, Hummer may get axed
  
June 3, 2008 7:00 PM by Frank de Leeuw van Weenen
Filed Under: Chevrolet Hummer

Today Rick Wagoner, CEO of GM, announced a range of strategic moves for several GM brands. Most notably, Chevrolet will see a new compact car in its ranks besides the Cobalt and Aveo powered by a new 1.4 liter turbo engine producing between 120 and 140 hp.

In a desperate move to please US consumers, this new engine will find its way into the new and yet unnamed Chevrolet compact car which will be built at GM's Lordstown, Ohio plant starting mid-2010.

The new 1.4 liter turbocharged engine will be built at GM's Flint plant and boasts a 9 mpg improvement over GM's current offerings in the segment, the Cobalt for instance. Whether this new compact car will replace the Cobalt is unclear at the moment, and they may just co-exist side-by-side. Both cars will be based on the same Delta platform, just like the global Aveo.

Rick Wagoner also approved the next generation Chevrolet Aveo and the Chevrolet Volt has made some huge strides to making its official debut on schedule. "We intend to show a production version of the Chevy Volt publicly in the very near future, and we remain focused on our target of getting the Volt into Chevrolet showrooms by the end of 2010," Wagoner said.

"Since the first of this year, however, U.S. economic and market conditions have become significantly more difficult," he said. "Higher gasoline prices are changing consumer behavior, and they are significantly affecting the U.S. auto industry sales mix." In light of the current events and shifting demand for cars, GM is seriously considering to either revamp the Hummer brand or selling it entirely. How GM could possibly revamp one of their largest and most gluttonous cars to be more appealing to an increasingly MPG minded consumer seems like a huge, if not impossible, task.

Source: GM
Press Release
(click to expand)
joelynn
June 3, 2008 7:58:14 PM

Lightweight aluminium diesel hybrid Hummers are possible... they'd cost a lot to develop but they make a lot of profit dont they?

Bremen_Koenigsegg
June 3, 2008 9:06:29 PM

Methinks that would make for an -incredibly- expensive Hummer.

joelynn
June 3, 2008 10:42:57 PM

Perhaps, but Hummer H1s are fairly expensive 'exclusive' cars, so an expensive H1 would work. And think of the street cred the cost would endow upon it with the likes of Mr Cent, Ross, Dogg and co.

bristol411s3
June 3, 2008 9:04:50 PM

I think the market for those sorts of vehicles is unsafe at best!

wolff
June 3, 2008 9:18:11 PM

does the Hummer really sell?? it aint all that great an off roader n is probably one amongst the worst soft roaders.. n its ugly!! :(

Benzian
June 3, 2008 10:26:51 PM

The Hummer is as Iconic as Jeep or Range Rovers. Unibody construction, lighter weight, smaller twin-turbo engines/GM dual mode hybrid tech/diesel-hybrids/7 speed or better transmissions... Also I think several of the automakers who produce these types of vehicles should share platforms/engineering to lower production cost and boost efficiency. GM worked with BMW & Daimler to refine the hybrid technology being rolled out now. I know its a long shot but what if Jeep, Range Rover, MB & GM work together as they all produce brawny, heavy, premium sport utes...a lighter unitized body modular platform with sophisticated hybrid tech and advanced transmissions. Jeep needs this...so does Tata Motors which just acquired Land Rover and Daimler presently owns a 7 percent stake in Tata Motors...not to mention the benefits for MB SUVs and the G-wagon and GM would benefit through the Cadillac Escalade/Chevy Suburban/Hummer brands.

joelynn
June 3, 2008 11:47:59 PM

I agree Benzian, some industry co-operation would really help. for the SUV makers its work together and produce something really good or gradually die lonely deaths.

eddie
June 3, 2008 11:06:24 PM

GM is trying to work out some engine deals with BMW to avoid all the cost of new engine R&D, especially for all the DOHC and turbos. I still can not see why GM does not make any money on the small cars when it is still using pushrod engine that have been around since the 50's.(most Chevy high performance crate motors are $6,000 vs German high performance crate motors that are around $50,000) Why does not someone gear a smaller engine with a top speed of only 100mph vs many cars with a top speed of 155 so you could have great mpg and acceleration.

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