News From the Auto Industry

June 25, 2007

Chroma by F. A. Porsche Type 301 Carving Fork

Filed under: Car Dealerships — Administrator @ 2:25 pm
2008 GT-R: Warning, Explicit Content
It s beyond me why they continue to disguise the 2008 Nissan GT-R as its design has remained about as much of a secret as a Paris Hilton home movie. Thankfully however, unlike the jailed heiress, the GT-R radiates what can only be described as sex appeal.
Engineered as Japan s answer to the Porsche 911, the GT-R is the epitome of Japanese performance prowess.
It s twin-turbo 3.7L V6 should pump out more than 500bhp sent to all four wheels putting it roughly

Mon, 25 Jun 2007 22:32:25 GMT
KVIA.com El Paso Las Cruces - Weather News Sports - Nickelodeon Secures Multi-Million Advertising and Promotional Partnership With Chrysler That H
Deal Pairs Town and Country SIRIUS Backseat TV(TM) with Jimmy Neutron and Extends to Multiple Platforms Including Nickelodeon and Nick at Nite Television Print and Digital NEW YORK and DETROIT June 25 /PRNewswire/ Nickelodeon the number-one entertainment brand for kids has partnered with the Chrysler brand in a brand new multi-million advertising and promotional multiplatform deal. The agreement was announced today by Jim Perry Executive Vice President 360 Brand Sales for Nickelodeon and MTVN …

Mon, 25 Jun 2007 00:00:00 EST

New Book: CMMI for Outsourcing Gives Practical Intro to CMMI-ACQ

Filed under: Car Dealerships — Administrator @ 10:05 am

“Existing mobile air conditioning systems are not designed to use a hydrocarbon refrigerant that is highly flammable and similar to what supplies the fire in your back yard barbeque.” said Ward Atkinson, Chair of the SAE Interior Climate Control Standards Committee. Nineteen states and the District of Columbia have laws prohibiting the use of a flammable refrigerant in mobile air conditioning systems. (Arkansas, Arizona, Connecticut, Florida, Idaho, Iowa, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin, and the District of Columbia).



The motor vehicle service community and environmental authorities are working to phase out the use of CFC-12 refrigerants that deplete the stratospheric ozone layer and to reduce the emissions of HFC-134a, a greenhouse gas. “Professional service protects the environment and saves money,” said Elvis Hoffpauir, president of the Mobile Air Conditioning Society, “Hydrocarbon refrigerants are dangerous products being sold to unsuspecting consumers.”



EPA has found no persuasive evidence that hydrocarbons are safe to use as refrigerants in vehicles designed for non-flammable refrigerants such as CFC-12 or HFC-134a. EPA banned the use of hydrocarbon refrigerants as a replacement for CFC-12 under the authority granted by the Clean Air Act and has authority to take enforcement action to protect the public against companies violating the law.



Companies marketing hydrocarbon refrigerants point out that EPA lacks specific authority to prohibit the use of hydrocarbons to replace HFC-134a. They use this fact to argue that CFC-12 systems converted to an EPA-listed retrofit refrigerant such as HFC-134a can be safely converted to hydrocarbons. There is no evidence to prove that hydrocarbons are safe to use in mobile air conditioning systems designed for either CFC-12 or HFC-134a.



No vehicle manufacturer has endorsed or authorized the use of hydrocarbon refrigerants in current production mobile air conditioning systems and no professional or technical association has approved the use of hydrocarbon refrigerants. Vehicle warranties are voided for any air conditioning system that has been charged with hydrocarbons. Vehicle manufacturers only recognize HFC-134a as acceptable for use in their current mobile air conditioning systems. Easy identification by service technicians using sophisticated refrigerant identifiers will help avoid the risk of explosion and guard against the contamination of equipment when refrigerant is recovered and recycled.



“Every car has a manufacturer’s label under the hood that identifies the recommended refrigerant that is safe to use and that will provide reliable system operation.” said William Hill, General Motors. “Customers should only use the recommended refrigerant.”



“Manufacturers, owners and fleet managers of heavy trucks, buses, rescue and other specialty vehicles will want to take extra efforts to avoid hydrocarbon refrigerants that can endanger drivers and passengers.” said Dr. Alex Moultanovsky, Vice President of ACC Climate Control.



“Off highway and large commercial vehicles require substantially more refrigerant than a passenger car. Use the refrigerant designed for the system–stay away from hydrocarbon refrigerants.” states Gary Hansen, Vice President of Engineering for Red Dot Corporation.



“The U.S. Army operates fleets of armored tactical vehicles equipped with air-conditioning,” said John Manzione, Chief of the Environmental Technology R&D Team at Fort Belvoir, “But we would never jeopardize soldier safety by putting hydrocarbon refrigerants in our vehicles.”



What Car Owners Can Do to Protect the Environment

•Service your A/C using quality parts and trained certified technicians.

New Definitive Handbook Helps PR Practitioners Take Command of Explosive PR Technology

Filed under: After Market Parts — Administrator @ 4:48 am

A Warning to Consumers About Hydrocarbon Refrigerants Common Sense in Protecting the Environment Without Endangering Safety

Filed under: New Car Models — Administrator @ 3:02 am

“Existing mobile air conditioning systems are not designed to use a hydrocarbon refrigerant that is highly flammable and similar to what supplies the fire in your back yard barbeque.” said Ward Atkinson, Chair of the SAE Interior Climate Control Standards Committee. Nineteen states and the District of Columbia have laws prohibiting the use of a flammable refrigerant in mobile air conditioning systems. (Arkansas, Arizona, Connecticut, Florida, Idaho, Iowa, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin, and the District of Columbia).



The motor vehicle service community and environmental authorities are working to phase out the use of CFC-12 refrigerants that deplete the stratospheric ozone layer and to reduce the emissions of HFC-134a, a greenhouse gas. “Professional service protects the environment and saves money,” said Elvis Hoffpauir, president of the Mobile Air Conditioning Society, “Hydrocarbon refrigerants are dangerous products being sold to unsuspecting consumers.”



EPA has found no persuasive evidence that hydrocarbons are safe to use as refrigerants in vehicles designed for non-flammable refrigerants such as CFC-12 or HFC-134a. EPA banned the use of hydrocarbon refrigerants as a replacement for CFC-12 under the authority granted by the Clean Air Act and has authority to take enforcement action to protect the public against companies violating the law.



Companies marketing hydrocarbon refrigerants point out that EPA lacks specific authority to prohibit the use of hydrocarbons to replace HFC-134a. They use this fact to argue that CFC-12 systems converted to an EPA-listed retrofit refrigerant such as HFC-134a can be safely converted to hydrocarbons. There is no evidence to prove that hydrocarbons are safe to use in mobile air conditioning systems designed for either CFC-12 or HFC-134a.



No vehicle manufacturer has endorsed or authorized the use of hydrocarbon refrigerants in current production mobile air conditioning systems and no professional or technical association has approved the use of hydrocarbon refrigerants. Vehicle warranties are voided for any air conditioning system that has been charged with hydrocarbons. Vehicle manufacturers only recognize HFC-134a as acceptable for use in their current mobile air conditioning systems. Easy identification by service technicians using sophisticated refrigerant identifiers will help avoid the risk of explosion and guard against the contamination of equipment when refrigerant is recovered and recycled.



“Every car has a manufacturer’s label under the hood that identifies the recommended refrigerant that is safe to use and that will provide reliable system operation.” said William Hill, General Motors. “Customers should only use the recommended refrigerant.”



“Manufacturers, owners and fleet managers of heavy trucks, buses, rescue and other specialty vehicles will want to take extra efforts to avoid hydrocarbon refrigerants that can endanger drivers and passengers.” said Dr. Alex Moultanovsky, Vice President of ACC Climate Control.



“Off highway and large commercial vehicles require substantially more refrigerant than a passenger car. Use the refrigerant designed for the system–stay away from hydrocarbon refrigerants.” states Gary Hansen, Vice President of Engineering for Red Dot Corporation.



“The U.S. Army operates fleets of armored tactical vehicles equipped with air-conditioning,” said John Manzione, Chief of the Environmental Technology R&D Team at Fort Belvoir, “But we would never jeopardize soldier safety by putting hydrocarbon refrigerants in our vehicles.”



What Car Owners Can Do to Protect the Environment

•Service your A/C using quality parts and trained certified technicians.

•Insist that leaks be repaired before systems are recharged.

•Retrofit CFC-12 systems to HFC-134a.

General Motors hosted a brunch saluting its top-performing African American dealers at the NAACP awards in Pasadena, California - Top Dealers - Brief Article

Filed under: New Car Models — Administrator @ 1:03 am

Out of the 375 GM dealers, 125 are African American-owned. (Pictured above from left to right: Perkins, Eric Peterson, Rod Gillum, Judge Grog Mathis, Rodgers, and Martin.)

European Stocks Fall for Third Day; Deutsche Bank, France Telecom Decline

Filed under: New Car Models — Administrator @ 12:34 am
Nissan to Buy Parts From China, India to Cut Costs (Update1) (Bloomberg.com)
June 25 (Bloomberg) — Nissan Motor Co., Japan’s third- largest carmaker, will buy more components from China and India after profit fell for the first time since the company’s record loss in 2000.

Mon, 25 Jun 2007 02:07:25 GMT
Chrysler Valiant astor? radio
US $56.41 (7 Bids) End Date: Monday Jun-25-2007 4:33:48 PDTBid now | Add to watch list

Mon, 18 Jun 2007 04:33:48 PDT
iPod Gets The Shonky Award From Down Under
? BMW = Musical Bliss iPod and iTunes Hacks by Hadley Stern In the Nexus: iTrip Review Linux on iPod ?

Fri, 17 Nov 2006 05:50:32 GMT
valentin elizalde lalo el gallo
valentin elizalde lalo el gallo
The 27-year-old Valentin Elizalde was born in a town named Etchojoa
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Sun, 24 June 2007 17:03:41 PDT
Tonycocks BMW cars 2007 June
“Bmw crazyfan blog” Posted by mattcats (who is an author) to bmw325 bmwfan tunning e36 e30 m3 bmw on Sun Jun 10 2007

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