I guess it's better than being bought out by Walmart.
Idk, hopefully they don't eff Aston Martin up.
I guess it's better than being bought out by Walmart.
Idk, hopefully they don't eff Aston Martin up.
Rockefella says:
pat's sister is hawt
David Fiset says:
so is mine
David Fiset says:
do want
LV isn't tacky, just the tacky bags with LV stamped all over, the one's people get to show they have a LV...Originally Posted by my porsche
"Racing improves the breed" ~Sochiro Honda
The British car industry is dying,
Bentley/Rolls Royce was shipped off to the Germans,
MG was sold to the Chinese
TVR...that's basically dead, it's about to move to Russia.
Let's hope Aston Martin stays in the UK.
I'm dropping out to create a company that starts with motorcycles, then cars, and forty years later signs a legendary Brazilian driver who has a public and expensive feud with his French teammate.
At least they got Lotus and NobleOriginally Posted by kingofthering
Aston Martin will stay in Britain unless they want to run the brand into the ground.
You think so?Originally Posted by kingofthering
Bentleys are built in Crewe.Originally Posted by kingofthering
Rolls Royce are built in Goodwood.
Who have just announced they will be resuming assembly of the TF (why?) at Longbridge immanently.Originally Posted by kingofthering
Reportedly the bodies will be built at Noble's South African facility, the engines will be supplied by Ricardo, in Britain, and the cars will be assembled by Bertone in Russ... err Italy.Originally Posted by kingofthering
Yes, I'm sure they'll announce their plan to move out of their hugely expensive, only-just-finished, high-tech flagship HQ at Gaydon, and into Louis Vitton's Parisian handbag factory on Monday.Originally Posted by kingofthering
There are still companies like Lotus, Caterham, Noble, Marcos, Morgan I suppose, it isn't much, but they are some of the most respected names in their fields.
Oh, one shouldn't forget the Japanese plants - amongst the most productive and efficient in the world - Honda at Swindon, Nissan at Sunderland, Toyota at Burnaston and Deeside.
And of course BMW build their engines in the UK, and the MINI too.
Jaguar and Land Rover are here in the Midlands, and Ford also builds Transit vans in Southampton, as well as two sites building engines.
GM also has a presence in Vauxhall.
On the commercial front LDV are producing vans in Birmingham, and Coventry itself is home to LTI - builders of the world famous London taxis.
Would you like me to remind you that the overwhelming majority of F1 teams are based in the UK, as well as companies like Prodrive, Lola and many other leading names from international motorsport?
So, what is it 1.5 million cars per year or something of that order, excluding commercial vehicles?
Yes, truly dying.
Lets see.... Toyota = Japanese
BMW = German
Land Rover, Jaguar, Ford= semi-American
Rolls/Bentley= owned by the Germans
Mini? Division of BMW
My point is that they aren't run in the UK or were UK based companies.
I'm dropping out to create a company that starts with motorcycles, then cars, and forty years later signs a legendary Brazilian driver who has a public and expensive feud with his French teammate.
Heres a word for you, globalization. Look it up.Originally Posted by kingofthering
Just because a company started in a country doesn't mean everything is made there...
Apart from the ones that are.Originally Posted by kingofthering
Jaguar, Land Rover, Bentley, Rolls Royce and Aston are all British companies, that are run and based in the UK.
If I buy your house and pay your bills and maybe give you a fancy new TV, but you still get to live in it as normal, are you British?
Sort of, my parents were born in a UK colony.
I've had a hard-ass week, I'm not thinking straight. Sorry if I sound stoopid. Blame America.
Last edited by kingofthering; 02-02-2007 at 11:57 PM.
I'm dropping out to create a company that starts with motorcycles, then cars, and forty years later signs a legendary Brazilian driver who has a public and expensive feud with his French teammate.
Exactly. And having a British company run by Brits doesn't mean everything would be made in the UK. For example, Renault is a French company run by French people and headquartered in Paris, and yet a larde part of their production is made in foreign countries (such as the Modus in Spain, Megane/Clio in Russia, Clio in Mexico, Bresil, Argentina, etc...).Originally Posted by The_Canuck
Cov, you are the master of sarcasm. I'm impressed.Originally Posted by Coventrysucks
Yes, I'm sure they'll announce their plan to move out of their hugely expensive, only-just-finished, high-tech flagship HQ at Gaydon, and into Louis Vitton's Parisian handbag factory on Monday.
"Take my swimming trunks, I won't need them." - Frank Costanza. "What does he want with your swimming trunks." - Estelle Costanza. "Why should they go to waste." - Frank Costanza - Seinfeld
British car industry is still thriving under the call of globalization? Get it right, they were deliberately left to operate in UK merely bacause the owners can still charge a premium on the "Country of Origin". NOTHING MORE.
British car industry is merely a puppet stage play.
Look at the Japs,now that's globalization.
www.secondaryperspective.blogspot.com
I don't understand why people have this attitude of attacking/ demeaning the UK car industry for no apparent reason.Originally Posted by Ingolstadt
It isn't the best in the world, but it is home to some of the most well known and respected brands in the business, some of the most well known and respected engineering and design consultancies in the business, and has some of the most advanced and productive manufacturing facilities in the business.
All people want to do, however, is ignore the positives (and the facts) and go on some rant (see above) about how it is "dead" and all British cars are "rubbish" etc, etc, etc.
What utter nonsense!Originally Posted by Ingolstadt
ALL cars are charged at a premium in the UK; whether they are build here or abroad makes no difference.
The strength of the pound is the main cause of problems for the UK, as it costs manufacturers much more to operate a factory in the UK than anywhere else - see Peugeot closing Ryton in favour of a cheap Eastern European facility.
That is not the fault of the industry, and the fact that despite the additional costs manufacturers are keeping their UK factories, investing heavily and indeed in some cases even opening new ones, proves that the UK is obviously offering some value that cannot be found elsewhere.
Do you have a good reason for being so negative and spiteful, or are you just surfing the wave of populist anti-Britishness?
Reply to CoventryS:
Contrary to what you've replied, i actually like British cars and Brisitsh Stuff, but i somehow could see the stubborn-ness and the overtly reliance on 'heritage' that strangles British car industry.
Would you buy a Rolls Royce made in Germany? I wouldn't. Crewe? I'd pay twice for that. Whatever technological marvels Germans tuck into their cars, they just couldn't charge it more expensive than a simple leather clad couch made in Britain; that's the reason they want the manufacturing lines, design house to stay in UK, to claim it's from UK. Skilled worksmanship? That's just a marketing tool.
Admit it, I too love British marques, but they just suck at economies of scale, business expansion etc. British car industries lack the flexibility and dynamism to catch up with the bandwagon of globalisation.
Rolls Royce
Bentley
Jaguar
Aston Martin
MG Rover
Lotus
TVR
These are prime examples.
www.secondaryperspective.blogspot.com
One of my English teachers a few years back told us never to use 'prime example', because it sounds stupid and isn't necessarily correct.Originally Posted by Ingolstadt
Sorry, just had to get that out of my head.
Rockefella says:
pat's sister is hawt
David Fiset says:
so is mine
David Fiset says:
do want
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