One of the great industrial comeback stories
is that of the Swiss watch industry. Remember how, back in the late '70s and
early '80s people (men, primarily) were sporting their brand-new black plastic
digital watches? Suddenly annoying beeps were heard everywhere, particularly in
inappropriate places. While the
About a decade earlier, in 1972, a man named
Johann Tomforde, was the project leader for future transportation systems at
Mercedes-Benz. And he conceived of an urban vehicle that would be 2.5-m long, a
two-seater. Fast-forward to 1981. Mercedes engineers built a concept, the
Nahverkehrsfahzrzeug (NAFA), or "Local Traffic Vehicle." Mercedes
executives were becoming concerned with the urban environment for automobiles,
so this project continued on such that in 1990 two variant concepts went into
development, one the Vision A 93 prototype, which became the "Study
A," and culminated in the production Mercedes A Class, and the other, the
Mercedes City Car, a.k.a., the Micro Compact Car (MCC), an electric car that
was 2.5-m long.
Meanwhile, in 1991, over in
Nicholas Hayek had an idea. He thought that
the cost-effective modular manufacturing processes used to produce Swatches
could be applied to manufacturing cars. What's more, he thought that developing
an electric city car would be ideal. He worked with the Biel School of
Engineering in
There were a smart city coupe and a smart
city cabrio. In 2002 there was the smart crossblade, a vehicle without doors,
roof, or windshield. The following year the smart roadster and roadster-coupe
were added. Then in 2004, there was the smart forfour, which, as implied was a
bigger (3.75-m long) vehicle for four people. By the end of the summer of 2006,
the fortwo, previously the city, was all that remained. And in 2007, the second
generation of that car debuted. While smart models had been available in 36
countries, the
Coming
to
Which leads to Roger Penske, chairman of the
Penske Automotive Group, an organization with 165 dealerships in 19 states and
Puerto Rico and 142 dealerships outside of the
That same day, www.smartusa.com went live
and, says Dave Schembri, president of smart
There are three models being offered. All of
them are dimensionally the same: 106.1-in. long, 73.5-in. wheelbase, 61.38-in.
wide; and 60.71-in. high. All are powered by a one-liter (or 61-in.3,
three-cylinder engine that is rated at 78 hp @ 5,800 rpm and provides 68 lb-ft
of torque @ 4,500 rpm. All have a five-speed automated manual transmission
(which essentially means that it can be operated as an automatic transmission
or manually shifted). All have 15-in. wheels, 11-in. diameter disc brakes at
the front, 8-in. diameter drums at the rear, ABS, electronic brake force
distribution, traction control, electronic brake assist, and electronic
stability program (ESP). There is the fortwo pure, staring at $11,590. The
fortwo passion coupe, starting at $13,590. And the fortwo passion cabriolet
starting at $16,590. It is worth noting that the pure model is one that takes
the definition of "nothing of "nothing extraneous" to the level
wherein not only are the windows manual, but there is no audio system.
According to Penske, at the end of October
2007 the model mix was 3.5% pure, 36.5% passion cabrio, and 60% passion.
Here is potentially the most revolutionary
aspect of this whole thing. Penske, who acknowledges that there are possible
additions to the lineup (e.g., in Europe there are models with turbocharged
gasoline engines, diesel engines, and a "microhybrid'; in the
Smart
In the case of smart in the
What's more, the Hambach Plant is capable of
manufacturing a vehicle in 3.5 hours (Schembri speculates that it might be
possible to establish a European delivery program wherein smart buyers could
actually watch their car being built in real time). The smart plant has a
layout that is shaped like a plus sign, with the vehicle starting at the
bottom, where the frame and cockpit are joined, moving to the left arm, where
the chassis and power train are added, moving to the upper arm for exterior and
interior trim, windows, and seats are added, then to the final arm where the
body panels are attached, and the car undergoes quality control. What makes
this all possible is that much of the production work is done by on-site
partners: Magna Chassis Systems for the frame ("tridion safety
cell"); Siemens VDO Automotive for the cockpit module (including
installation); ThyssenKrupp Automotive for the rear axle and final drive
module; Plastal for the body panels and trim; Magna Uniport for closure panels.
Go back
to the start.
Nicholas Hayek, who revolutionized the watch
industry by making watches a fun, inexpensive fashion statement, looked to do
much the same for automobiles. Although his participation in the program was
comparatively brief, that fundamental approach has been retained. Arguably, the
fortwo is going to be bought by people who are more interested in the fashion
statement that it makes more than any other aspects (e.g., the car isn't
remarkably fuel efficient, with EPA 2008 consumption of 33 mpg city/40 mpg
highway; the car has room for just two passengers; the storage space behind the
seats is 7.8-[ft.sup.3] to the beltline or 12-[ft.sup.3] to the roof; the
stated 0 to 60 mph time is 12.8 seconds; the electronically limited top speed
in 90 mph). In other words, just as people buy Swatches for their
fashionability, the smart program is not about pure mobility.
Source: findarticles.com
Comments
Post new comment