Ford and GM to collaborate on ENGINE DEVELOPMENT!
When an engine family costs over $1Billion to develop, sharing those costs as much as possible seems prudent. What's my guess? HCCI. They're both working on it, and they both need help perfecting it. 2 companies working on it at the same time could save 3-4 years in devleopment time.
And it's not just outright performance engines that foster such reputations. Honda and Toyota have built reputations on how reliable their 4-cylinder engines are. People buys their cars because of it. Folks that couldn't even point out a spark plug seem to know that 3800s are supposed to be bulletproof. Some engines are so well regarded that their internal designations almost become part of the popular lexicon, e.g. LS1, LT1, B12.
In such a crowded market, at time when automakers are doing all they can to distinguish themselves from their competitors, sharing the very essence of a vehicle just doesn't seem right to me.
Yes, that six speed automatic in the Malibu is going to be the same that's in the Taurus.
Then you have GM and Toyota sharing quite a few vehicles since the 80s including the current Vibe/Matrix and the Honda V6 engines under the hoods of the Saturn Vue.
Should I get that Valium for you now???
Last edited by guionM; Aug 4, 2008 at 06:06 PM.
When a new motor costs $1 billion and a new trans is $800 million, it is the prudent thing to do. This wont affect the V8s that are out there now, but the power plants of the future, whether they are internal combustion or not.
Name a single main stream car company that doesn't do this? Almost every engine/transmission has more than one vehicle it is placed in.

Seriously, the fact that both companies are working together is clearly a sign of the times and how seriously they view their repective long term future.




.
