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The Pub For General Automotive Related Talk |
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29-08-2006, 11:47 PM | #151 | |||
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29-08-2006, 11:57 PM | #152 | |||
Only a matter of time.
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I wonder if they had more then 1-2 years would they be confidant enough to build a slightly bigger vectra size car and use the territory for the larger family car??.
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30-08-2006, 12:09 AM | #153 | |||
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Good points slick, I think for them to drop the falcon would be suicide, as the market still wants it. Whilst the territory is nice it is dissimilar in many ways to the falcon, can you imagine an xr8 territory?
Aussies love big sedans and as such we have ford and holden. I should imagine for the next decade atleast that this will remain the case; unless of course these cars are killed by cheap imports from places like asia. Ford will continue to tinker with fuel economy as it is the strategy that is paying huge dividends at the moment. If they can shave another litre or two off the falcon appetite over the next 2 years then they will have a serious competitive advantage over all their rivals, including holden. For this to play out though that would require Holden and toyota to sit still and do nothing - very unlikely. All in all, peoples requirements for cars focussed on specific areas such as safety, performance etc. Now, one of the primary concerns is economy. This has only shifted into the spotlight in the last couple of years, and as such, companies like Holden have unfortunately been locked into a design that doesn't focus on this new trend. Ford now need to make hay whilst the sun shines before Holden do something drastic to improver their fuel economy.
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30-08-2006, 04:46 AM | #154 | |||
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30-08-2006, 07:22 AM | #155 | |||
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30-08-2006, 08:07 AM | #156 | |||
Viper FG XR6 Turbo
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- The commodore is heavier - the falcon has more punch due to having way more torque - the falcon is lighter on petrol - alloy has little weight benifits - there is no such thing as an EF GT now, how is the I6 worse then the alloycrap? |
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30-08-2006, 08:40 AM | #157 | ||
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Should intensify the year long battle with the 300C a bit - that has been a close call thus far with only a handful of units between them up to the end of July.
It's the value equation that stacks up in this case - with a pretty sharp price reduction that puts the car below both rivals you'd be tipping that it will gain some of the local market share it lost back again. Cheers Russ
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30-08-2006, 08:51 AM | #158 | ||
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I've always wondered - what posesses old farts to buy LWB cars (assuming here that besides limo companies who else buys them but old farts.) You would think they don't need the space ect?
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1966 Ford Mustang coupe. 347 stroker, PA reverse manual C4, TCE high stall converter, B&M Pro Ratchet, Edelbrock alum heads, Edelbrock intake manifold, MSD ignition, Holley Street HP 750 CFM carb, gilmer drive, wrapped Hooker Super Comp Headers, dual 3" straight through exhaust, Bilstein shocks, custom springs, full poly suspension, American Racing rims, Open Tracker roller spring saddles and shelby drop. Still to go - Holley Sniper EFI with integrated fuel cell. |
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30-08-2006, 09:25 AM | #159 | |||
The 'Stihl' Man
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The type of people that buy LWB's are probably in the late 40's and 50's, have good jobs and want something flashy that wont cost them heaps to maintain, or intitially buy.
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30-08-2006, 09:48 AM | #160 | ||
DELANY
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wow close battle, ford is better on fuel, more torque, better transmission, i expected the famous ve to win more convincingly, well done ford
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30-08-2006, 10:09 AM | #161 | ||
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I don't see that many really old people driving them. Polyal is right more late 40's-50's.. The really old ones are still driving morris, the younger ones are getting into something economical like corrollas.
My old man got one, it was forced onto him as a company car. Now he owns it (golden handshake). its a oldy and a V6.. Its a limo, and its huge. As a car to take a family from sydney to melbourne in its brillant. With three sons varying from 6'7 to 6'4, we can all squeeze in for the ~7hrs and blast down to vic. Or up to qld.. Farmers bought them for the same reason, they could travel into the big smoke with the whole clan in comfort. It used to be that upper managers got Fairmonts, and directors got fairlanes. I would definately concider buying a Statesman or Fairlane personally if they made them properly. They should be a Aussie 7 series or S class. Not a fatter ugly relative of a falcon/commodore. I think the sexiest of the statesmans was the WH internationals. They are nice. Of the recent fairlanes it was the NL tickfords. The best ever was the LTD with hidden lights. They should have real wood. I mean how bloody hard is it? Small bit of timber and mill it down. Cost $20. Not two colour swirl plastic. They should have all the wizzbang technology, like xenons. They should look classic and classy. They should feel tight and strong. You should feel like your in a private charter business class flight. Should be interesting to see how they go against the 300c. Hopefully it gets Chrysler to bring the LWB versions over here.. A SRT lwb 300C might make it into a list of cars I would concider owning. Hopefully that forces Holden to bring out the chinese LWB Statesman over here. |
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30-08-2006, 10:14 AM | #162 | ||
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.......did they mention it cost $1 billion. ooh yeah i'm gunna get one 'cause they invested a billion. marketing strategy???
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30-08-2006, 10:23 AM | #163 | |||
Only a matter of time.
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XR8 Territory Might sell good i have already seen 4 Turbo Territory's was parked next to one yesterday. Yeah the VE is locked in body for atleast the next 6 years maybe thats why holden is talking torana see if there is interest in that car along side the commodore, And all they have is engine and transmissions to cut back fuel economy the weight will stay around the same. The ve is flexible in engine sizes different transmissions but not making the car lighter and smaller. I was reading that holden was going to grab a decent diesel engine to try out, But on hybrids they will rely on GM. But they have smaller capacity engines to try but weight might counter act anything gained in fuel economy from a smaller engine.
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30-08-2006, 11:07 AM | #164 | |||
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Holden already have their plans to reduce fuel economy in future VE models - direct injection being just one and contributing 8% savings alone. Also the likely hood of that happening before the new Falcon gets to market is relatively high given that is 2 years away? Not sure what you mean they are locked into a design that doesnt focus on economy? Can you elaborate maybe I missed something, cheers |
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30-08-2006, 01:32 PM | #165 | ||
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I reckon a more squared-off C-pillar shape and the car would look real neat.
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30-08-2006, 03:06 PM | #166 | |||
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thats if they live long enough _ |
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30-08-2006, 04:31 PM | #167 | ||
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I wanna get myself a Fairlane long before I am in my 50s-120's.
The 2000 model is still my fave. Did I mention that Bonds make the best underpants? |
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30-08-2006, 05:17 PM | #168 | |||
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if i could afford a new car, it would be LWB......... 300c, fairlane/LTD or stato/caprice... i love them |
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30-08-2006, 05:43 PM | #169 | ||
Only a matter of time.
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Location: Melbourne
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As i said some time back when i spotted the caprice first look it's the SWB it doesn't look big, Then you see it side on it's a monster. Very nimble on it's feet for a big fella.
My brother seen one that came into his work the lady driving it was a holden interior designer, They got to look over it but take no pics. He likes it over the old model more. He said the boot size was massive he reckons he could lay long ways in it.
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30-08-2006, 07:29 PM | #170 | |||
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30-08-2006, 07:32 PM | #171 | |||
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30-08-2006, 07:36 PM | #172 | ||
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2.40 pm this afternoon outside Holden head office in Salmon st Port Melbourne.
One new statesman and one new ss, both similar in colour to "mercury silver". Bonnet up on the statesman and what looked like jumper leads in the engine bay and 3 or 4 anxious looking gents moving around the car. Damn i wish i could of stopped, the photo with the building in the background would of been a classic!!! |
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30-08-2006, 08:21 PM | #173 | ||
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Has anyone read the latest copy of Aus Muscle Car Magazine? They did a write up on the VE and they really do pay out on it and Holden. I can't see them getting an invite to test any more Holden products.
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31-08-2006, 12:09 AM | #174 | ||
Only a matter of time.
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Maybe to many people playing inside the car and needed to jump start it.
I was down at a holden dealers last Saturday in a SV6. Went down to price some brakes yesterday had a wonder over to the same car to have a play with the audio setup and the battery was dead and the fogs wouldn't come on when it had life still. Does anyone know if holden is using there fog lights like ford do and call them cornering lamps now??.
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31-08-2006, 10:04 AM | #175 | ||
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I can sense a bit of negativity around the new Statesman here. WHY? While the new Statesman is not for everyone (me included) Holden have done very well to keep large cars on the radar in Australia and Australians can now consider themselves lucky that they can still dip into this market if they wish. After all this car will actually serve as GMs flagship in the growing and very lucrative Chinese market, not Australia.
Ford Aus need to take note as they cannot just simply build large cars for Australians and remain profitable to continue this trend. Ford Aus has all but killed off their LWB versions and will now probably miss the mark in this new and huge economy. If this market becomes as big as they predict (and demand is growing daily) then the Chinese will probably get some sort of Ugly Crown Victoria version from Canada instead. Ford Aus have them selves to blame for the demise of their Fairlane range after inventing the concept in the 60's from American rear quarters and good old Aussie engineering which truly made Holden stand up and listen at that time. Remember Holden's half arsed effort or should I say extended arsed effort the Brougham? When the HQ was born, Holden released a formidable opponent which allowed Holden to brand the Statesman tag so successfully that not only allowed Holden to “kill it off” and then bring it back when it suited them, but to also be able keep the tag every bit as relevant today as it was during the HQ days. Not even the famous and successful "Kingswood" tag managed to survive this! But the icing on the cake came during the 80's (not a good time in the auto industry and mistakes were made by everyone). After Holden stopped building the ugliest Statesman of all, the WB, Ford again found it had the whole market to itself. They could have delivered the killer blow then, but with no V8 option, this car also became a lame duck and really this heavy car powered by a six could not be to taken too seriously. Long time Ford owners actually left Ford during this period to buy V8 Commodores so that they could perform every day duties like towing boats and caravans.(Today this short fall would probably been taken up by cheaper 4wd's instead). At least this did have the effect of Ford Aus bringing back the V8. I fear that once again the conservative nature at Ford Aus will take over and they will not be in a position to offer a LWB car to compete in China or even India as they also begin to grow, leaving some people here to complain about the success that Holden will have in China and the Middle East. It does not have to be this way. Sorry about the long read. Once I started it just came out. |
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31-08-2006, 11:00 AM | #176 | |||
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31-08-2006, 11:23 AM | #177 | |||
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31-08-2006, 01:25 PM | #178 | |||
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31-08-2006, 01:38 PM | #179 | |||
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You're forgettting The Middle East. The UAE alone is a much much bigger customer than China or India. |
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31-08-2006, 02:49 PM | #180 | |||
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I am talking about the new "world super sized economies" that are emerging from the middle ages of peasantry (Australia will benefit incredibly by this through the resource boom over the next 25 years or so). With a population of about 5 million people that make up the UAE, 20 million people (latest sensus not with standing) in Australia, 25 million in Saudi Arabia, 300 million in America and 1 billion in China and another billion in India, you begin to appreciate the economies of scale here. Holden through GM or should I say GM through Holden will begin to brand their latest offerings right at the beginning of China's growth cycle, and then they will be in the best position to continue to grow the brand as the economy grows with it. |
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