Joe Smith started the day early having set his alarm clock (MADE IN JAPAN ) for 6am. While his coffeepot (MADE IN CHINA ) was perking, he shaved with his electric razor (MADE IN HONG KONG ). He put on a dress shirt (MADE IN SRI LANKA ), designer jeans (MADE IN SINGAPORE ) and tennis shoes (MADE IN KOREA ) After cooking his breakfast in his new electric skillet (MADE IN INDIA ) he sat down with his calculator (MADE IN MEXICO ) to see how much he could spend today. After setting his watch (MADE IN TAIWAN ) to the radio (MADE IN INDIA ) he got in his car (MADE IN GERMANY ) filled it with GAS (from Saudi Arabia ) and continued his search for a good paying CANADIAN JOB. At the end of yet another discouraging and fruitless day checking his Computer (Made In Malaysia ), Joe decided to relax for a while. He put on his sandals (MADE IN BRAZIL ) poured himself a glass of wine (MADE IN FRANCE ) and turned on his TV (MADE IN INDONESIA ), and then wondered why he can't find a good paying job in CANADA ...
2drpost said
Feb 2, 2008
really frustrating when you want to buy a north america made product, but can no longer find one. i for one will spend a little more to buy n.a. for the quality and job support. dave.
427carl said
Feb 2, 2008
My neighbor, my Mother! ,my sister-in-law, my wifes, best friend, all drive Toyota. they dont care where the profits go I Buy NA and alway will. The guys working at NA car plants forget ,about where all their money goes, when they leave the plant.. Good Post! Acadian Beaumont SD
Numbers_guy said
Feb 2, 2008
True Story,
In '95 I toured both the car and truck assembly plants in Oshawa, Ontario. Cut me and I bleed Royal GM blue. Anyways, I was very impressed after both tours. A three hour (boy what a walk) through the truck assembly plant was unbelievable. Love to do it again, I was right on the production line, watching things happen.
Again two more great side stories.... Hope someone's keeping track of these side stories. I get to involved on this site and forget about them.
So when I flew back to Victoria, I stopped by my local Chevrolet dealer to order a new truck. Full size C class. So we do alll the option ordering, paint and trim choices didn't ask about the cost till the end.
My last statement hit the salesman like when his partent told him ("santa didn't really exist").
Oh, can we make sure my truck's in built in the Oshawa plant. I've been there and I want to make sure my money stays in Canada, their quality is really soemthing to see.
The guy sat there, mouth open for a minute in shock. When he came out of it his reply was "Sir, we can't have you telling us where your truck is going to be built". Well, I said, If I'm willing to drop what I consider to be a decent down payment on a house to order a truck. I think I get to have as much say as I want. Hadn't even dickered on the price.
Besides, I've been to the plant, I've talked to the workers and I've seen the quality they produce. In my books I'll be getting my money's worth. So the salesman gets out of his chair looking for the sales manager.
Sale manger comes in trying to tell me how the automotive market place works. I explained back to him the following rules that govern the market place. Supply and demand.
I was asking them to supply me with a truck, built to my specifications (limited only by what was available) by the manufacturer. My demand was that the truck be built in Oshawa Ontario. Wasn't asking for some weird paint colour or anything else. The Sales manager then tells me there's six plants producing trucks. My order goes into the system and the system then determines which plant can build the truck.
Well, I said. if you order this truck and when it arrives the first digit isn't a two then you now have one more truck you'll need to sell because I won't accept it. At which point I grabbed the sales contract which wasn't signed but had all my particulars on it and ripped it to shreds.
The salesman almost passed out, as he watched his sale go up in smoke. The last words I heard out of the sales managers mouth were "just because we can't quarantee your truck comes from the Oshawa plant you're going to cancel the deal?. My reply as I turned around at the door was "What deal, a deal is when to parties come to an agreement." We don't have an agreement so we have no deal!
I was also very impressed with the '95 Monte Carlo. Went to the other Chevrolet dealer with the same results. This time it was that I wanted the Monte Carlo LS without air conditioning and I wanted the cloth instead of the leather/vinyl interior.
Told sorry the LS model comes standard with leather/vinyl interior. My retort was doesn't the cloth interior fit in the Monte Carlo LS. Well of course it will sir, its just not part of the package. So, I said, I may have to wait a bit for the car because its a special order then.
No sir, you can't get the Monte Carlo LS with a cloth interior. If you want the cloth interior then order the Monte Carlo, it comes standard with the cloth interior. Well, if I wanted just the Monte Carlo then that's what I would of ordered, I want the Monte Carlo LS with the cloth interior, as I like the LS model package I just don't want leather/vinyl seats.
You don't even want to know what happens when you ask to have a vehicle without A/C. You'd think I asked them to build me a Ferrari but I wanted to pay the price of a Monte Carlo.
But sir, everyone wants A/C now, that's why its standard equipment. Well, I don't want A/C. I don't want the luxury tax added onto the price of my car because of A/C. Also I don't to tote around one hundred to hundred and some odd pounds of equipment that I don't really need. All I want is a heater, nothing else, plus it will help my gas milage as I won't have that extra one hundred odd pounds to lug around.
The guy wouldn't even pick up the phone and call back to Ontario to see if they'd do it. So I managed to piss off two sales managers and almost cause heart attacks in two salesmen.
When I was at the car assembly plant I asked about switching interiors, do you think the folks putting the cars together cared. As long as the parts fit the car they'd install them end of story.
Just couldn't be bothered to push the point in either case. When I walked away I was wondering, guess they have a lot of sales going on and don't need my money. I ended up saving myself $30,000 in the case of the Monte Carlo and over $50,000 on the truck.
That's why I drive the car I do, and I'm retoring the other one. Both Canadian made, I buy my parts from GM when I can. Its a real 'pain in the ass" finding things made in North America. But like Carl says I'm willing to pay a bit more for something knowing that it was made over here.
Canadian Poncho said
Feb 2, 2008
It's a shame isn't it. Even though I'm a service dept employee at a GM dealer, I know how the system works and that sales manager would likely only need to call his District Sales Manager to make the request for the truck to be built in Oshawa. As for the option "packages" it's stupid in this day and age that you can't get individual options. It had to have been much harder back in the day to do this but with todays technology it has to be possible. Here's how you should be able to do it with todays technology:
STEP 1: Go online and "build your car". Pick only the options you want. Your price is displayed when you are finished.
Step 2: How are you going to pay? Cash? No problem-please submit your checking account information via a secure server. Financing, heck, GMAC will approve you in seconds
Step 3: GM tells you what plant your car will be built in and based on current orders, when the build date will be. If you wanted Oshawa, the computer would then reply with the estimated build date at that plant and have you click "OK" to accept the delay
Step 4: You get an email the moment the build starts on your car
Step 5: You get an email the moment your vehicle passes the final inspection line. What's the attachment to your email? Why it's the photo taken by the automated WebCam the moment your car crossed the final line! What a great momento!
Step 6: You get an email when your car is in transit
Step 7: You get an email when your vehicle is ready at the dealer YOU specified for pick up
Step 8: Go get your vehicle!
See, I should be the CEO of GM!
Todd
macsleuth said
Mar 2, 2008
Todd, you should be CEO.
I have a company lease right now, waiting for the lease to run out so i can get a Black Impala SS, before they drop the HP rating I hope.
LOL
67BBSD said
Mar 3, 2008
just as it was 20-30 years ago with clothes if we don't start buying domestic there will be no domestic to buy. I worked in a stainless steel factory-one of only two stainless steel hollow drill (mining steel) producers in the world and its closed now due to imports, getting really worn on this myth that foriegn cars are better-their junk-dump all them Kias off the back of the ship before they arrive like they should have with their sister Hyudai-and all those Jap junk from the 70's if they were so good where are they now ? I live in the Niagara penn the fruit belt of this country but everyone buys fruit off shore.
Does anyone remember when our auto industry cars were the envy of the world ? know why we built ****tier cars today-to compete.
I'll push a GM before I drive that import crap
macsleuth said
Mar 3, 2008
We've gotten lazy and demand the good life, but don't want to pay for North American quality, so we all buy imported crap. Me too.
Where are we going to be 20-30 years from now?
CDN2PLS2 said
Mar 3, 2008
I have FOUR Vehicles in the Driveway Built In Oshawa!
cdnpont said
Mar 3, 2008
Don't get me wrong, I love the 60-70 GM's, but these days I actually prefer that North American built imported "crap", thank you very much.
427carl said
Mar 3, 2008
I was going to express my opinion about the imports, but I will pass. maybe some day, we will be all lusting after a 240 z or a 1200 Datsun..
67BBSD said
Mar 3, 2008
Still have a job ?
67BBSD said
Mar 3, 2008
No chance
427carl said
Mar 3, 2008
I am a veteran. My relatives fought the Germans and the Japs... Now we buy their products, and send the profits to Germany,and Japan Who won?
Canadian Poncho said
Mar 3, 2008
The Chinese!
cdnpont said
Mar 3, 2008
Actually, speaking of Germans. Have you seen the new Audi A4? Absolutely stunning. Still not huge power, but very balanced overall with the refined Quattro all wheel drive. Efficiant in that ever present Tutonic sort of way. Unfortunately it won't be here till Sept. Better get your name in soon though, at the new "Canadian pricing" $57k, it's said they'll quickly sell out.
But they'll always be loads of new Cadillac all wheel drive CTS's to choose from, and that's a very good car these days. Exceptional even! Big power. It's even the same price as the new Audi.
Great thing this freedom of choice is eh? The products now available to us are top notch. We can simply choose as we see fit how we spend our hard earned dollar. We'll buy what we determine to be the best engineering, safety, resale, performance and styling that is available in our market. How could that a bad thing? We get to drive cars today who's performance and quality was only a dream even 15 years ago! Tell me how that's bad? How is getting value for my dollar bad? How could quality competition even be bad for the big 3? If anything it's awakened them into building what is today a pretty decent product. The problems they face today are very complex no doubt, but imop this is just more or less a "hangover" from their poor quality products from 75-95. Sorry to say that, blame what you will for the woe's, but they failed to produce a consistant quality product more or less in those years, and now bear the weight of that. That cannot be denied...
2009 Audi A4
68post said
Mar 3, 2008
I know this in another forum, but my daily drivers are:
'97 Sunfire for back and forth to work
'01 Olds Intrigue for highway treks.
'97 Dodge diesel 5 spd for grunt work.
67BBSD said
Mar 3, 2008
Are you suggesting the import crap was better from 1975 to 1995 ? I don't even see any of that stuff still on the road !
The Germand have beat their breat quite a lot about "the best product in the world" Benz sure isn't what they claim, all them beetles are no better than Chevy's Corvair etc...
67BBSD said
Mar 3, 2008
And your daily drivers are all close to ten years old-any serious complaints-are they any better or worse than an import might have been ?
Glad to hear the line up of North American product
427carl said
Mar 3, 2008
69Laurentian wrote:
The Chinese!
Thank you I forgot them.. the owners of Walmart have thier headquarters in China, but they will be in US waving a flag, when things go wrong..
427carl said
Mar 3, 2008
Driving Audi's and Honda's
cdnpont said
Mar 4, 2008
67BBSD wrote:
Are you suggesting the import crap was better from 1975 to 1995 ? I don't even see any of that stuff still on the road !
I'm not.
Most of their stuff was of suspect quality as well, but the one thing they could do, even then, was build a very good small motor.
I think you don't see any of that stuff, because they had no real market share then. It was miniscule. It was really all a big three show. The big three imports really have not begun to gain any real market share but for the last 10 years.
Why is it that the so called imports seem to be doing so well lately?
Are they pulling a fast one on the us? Do they enjoy some sort of unfair marketing advantage? Are their market leaders cheaper than the big three's comparable offerings?
What is the one major thing that allows them the phenomenal growth they're seeing today?
Canadian Poncho said
Mar 4, 2008
I think a lot of it comes down to maintenance. I worked at a Toyota store before coming back to GM. HUGE difference in maintenance mentality. The Toyota owner seemed to maintain the hell out of his car. $300 each visit was the norm- power steering flushes, brake fluid flushes etc were done without the owner batting an eye. I honestly dont remember seeing a leaky wheel cylinder while I was there. The tow truck visits were EXTREMELY rare. Guys would roll in with Camry's with over a half million k's on them. Try selling a power steering flush to a domestic guy and he'll tell you where to go.
Todd
67BBSD said
Mar 4, 2008
first I agree with Todd-over maintained-helps longivity a lot
second yes, the magazine editors often lean toward an import for no apparent reason other than possibly they spend more money advertising in the magazine.
third yuppees
fourth the next generation wants something different-not Dad's buick or a Camaro or whatever
imports are better lately ? does that mean your owning up to the hyundai's of the 1980's etc...
I see plently of undermaintained North American "lemons" going 300-400 kms-Tempos, sunfires, cavaliers etc.. these are all low end $ cars that people just drive and kick the hell out of without maintaining anything.
If imports are "better lately" I still do not see that they are better than what our manufacturers now build do to what they imported in the past.
If your neighbour spends the big bucks to buy a Benz he doesn't whine to you about the troubles not to mention the ratio of caddies to Benz would mean even if the problems were the same you would hear about the caddy 50 times more often.
Japs build good small engines too bad the bodies that their bolted too rot out faster than to find out how long the engine might last.
A guy bought my Corvair the other day driving a Volvo bragging about the "19yrs average life" of a volvo-I don't even see 19 year old volvos let alone 38 year old ones to bring that kind of average. He laughed at the poor quality ancient design of my wife's 1994 buick roadmaster-well its 14 years old with 145,000 kms, orig paint, no rust, no problems (starter, brakes, tires) never even a tune up-it gets 25mpg highway-20 mpg city and feels like your sitting on the living room couch the whole ride not to mention it'll burn rubber for a block !
I sold the same car to a friend last year with 355,000 kms on it-had a new waterpump.
yesterday I looked at a 95 sunfire with 425,000 kms ! no rust-orig paint
it is no doubt that mechanicals are far better on all cars these days than they were in the hay day-the reason for this is the demand for commuting-often someone drives a car 100km a day without checking the oil between changes-that was unheard of in the past
short end-if we buy everything foreign there will be no domestic product just like shoes, now fruit, clothes, or whatever. When North Americans bought what they built we were further ahead
drive domestic and be proud
427carl said
Mar 4, 2008
I agree with you! I have a 98 Dodge Caravan with 344,00 km and its my wifes main vehicle. I have 98 Jimmy with 454,000 km and a 2000 S10 4 CY auto with 205,000 MILES. i WOULD GET IN, AND GO ANYWHERE in them..We as a country,walked away from the big 3, and embraced the imports..The big 3 are responding and have you driven a Impala lately or the new MALIBU??? My mother has a nephew,working at Cami and she bought a Camry.. My sister-in-law,has a daughter working for Chrysler at Ajax and bought a 07 Camry, and my neighbor has a son in law working at Cami and bought a new Camry..My best friend,has a son selling all his sons Jr dragster equipmnet (dragster,trailer,Truck) because he works at Westcast in Wingham,and is afraid of his job going next year... If we encourage the promotion of the big 3, how can we get the employees to stop buying Chinese stuff Wish I had a better plan
alarm clock
(MADE IN JAPAN ) for 6am.
While his coffeepot
(MADE IN CHINA )
was perking, he shaved with his
electric razor
(MADE IN HONG KONG ).
He put on a
dress shirt
(MADE IN SRI LANKA ),
designer jeans
(MADE IN SINGAPORE )
and
tennis shoes
(MADE IN KOREA )
After cooking his breakfast in his new
electric skillet
(MADE IN INDIA )
he sat down with his
calculator
(MADE IN MEXICO )
to see how much he could spend today. After setting his
watch
(MADE IN TAIWAN )
to the radio
(MADE IN INDIA )
he got in his car
(MADE IN GERMANY )
filled it with GAS
(from Saudi Arabia )
and continued his search
for a good paying CANADIAN JOB.
At the end
of yet another discouraging
and fruitless day
checking his
Computer
(Made In Malaysia ),
Joe decided to relax for a while.
He put on his sandals
(MADE IN BRAZIL )
poured himself a glass of
wine
(MADE IN FRANCE )
and turned on his
TV
(MADE IN INDONESIA ),
and then wondered
why he can't find
a good paying job
in CANADA ...
I live in the Niagara penn the fruit belt of this country but everyone buys fruit off shore.
Does anyone remember when our auto industry cars were the envy of the world ? know why we built ****tier cars today-to compete.
I'll push a GM before I drive that import crap
I am a veteran. My relatives fought the Germans and the Japs... Now we buy their products, and send the profits to Germany,and Japan Who won?
Absolutely stunning. Still not huge power, but very balanced overall with the refined Quattro all wheel drive. Efficiant in that ever present Tutonic sort of way.
Unfortunately it won't be here till Sept. Better get your name in soon though, at the new "Canadian pricing" $57k, it's said they'll quickly sell out.
But they'll always be loads of new Cadillac all wheel drive CTS's to choose from, and that's a very good car these days. Exceptional even! Big power. It's even the same price as the new Audi.
Great thing this freedom of choice is eh? The products now available to us are top notch. We can simply choose as we see fit how we spend our hard earned dollar. We'll buy what we determine to be the best engineering, safety, resale, performance and styling that is available in our market. How could that a bad thing? We get to drive cars today who's performance and quality was only a dream even 15 years ago! Tell me how that's bad? How is getting value for my dollar bad? How could quality competition even be bad for the big 3? If anything it's awakened them into building what is today a pretty decent product.
The problems they face today are very complex no doubt, but imop this is just more or less a "hangover" from their poor quality products from 75-95.
Sorry to say that, blame what you will for the woe's, but they failed to produce a consistant quality product more or less in those years, and now bear the weight of that. That cannot be denied...
2009 Audi A4
The Germand have beat their breat quite a lot about "the best product in the world" Benz sure isn't what they claim, all them beetles are no better than Chevy's Corvair etc...
Glad to hear the line up of North American product
second yes, the magazine editors often lean toward an import for no apparent reason other than possibly they spend more money advertising in the magazine.
third yuppees
fourth the next generation wants something different-not Dad's buick or a Camaro or whatever
imports are better lately ? does that mean your owning up to the hyundai's of the 1980's etc...
I see plently of undermaintained North American "lemons" going 300-400 kms-Tempos, sunfires, cavaliers etc.. these are all low end $ cars that people just drive and kick the hell out of without maintaining anything.
If imports are "better lately" I still do not see that they are better than what our manufacturers now build do to what they imported in the past.
If your neighbour spends the big bucks to buy a Benz he doesn't whine to you about the troubles not to mention the ratio of caddies to Benz would mean even if the problems were the same you would hear about the caddy 50 times more often.
Japs build good small engines too bad the bodies that their bolted too rot out faster than to find out how long the engine might last.
A guy bought my Corvair the other day driving a Volvo bragging about the "19yrs average life" of a volvo-I don't even see 19 year old volvos let alone 38 year old ones to bring that kind of average. He laughed at the poor quality ancient design of my wife's 1994 buick roadmaster-well its 14 years old with 145,000 kms, orig paint, no rust, no problems (starter, brakes, tires) never even a tune up-it gets 25mpg highway-20 mpg city and feels like your sitting on the living room couch the whole ride not to mention it'll burn rubber for a block !
I sold the same car to a friend last year with 355,000 kms on it-had a new waterpump.
yesterday I looked at a 95 sunfire with 425,000 kms ! no rust-orig paint
it is no doubt that mechanicals are far better on all cars these days than they were in the hay day-the reason for this is the demand for commuting-often someone drives a car 100km a day without checking the oil between changes-that was unheard of in the past
short end-if we buy everything foreign there will be no domestic product just like shoes, now fruit, clothes, or whatever. When North Americans bought what they built we were further ahead
drive domestic and be proud