Reddog
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Mike
- Joined
- Jul 10, 2023
- Threads
- 1
- Messages
- 278
- Reaction score
- 386
- Location
- Alexandria, Virginia
- Vehicle(s)
- 2023 Jeep Gladiator Rubicon
- Occupation
- Retired Army. Retired Construction Manager / Contracting Officer
Your father must have witnessed some amazing times while at GM. But Toyota, not an inconsequential company, thinks hydrogen is the future as I do. As for GM, there was a time when our economy went as GM's fortunes did, but that's gone. GM is no longer the king of cars. They have made too many mistakes and Mr. Obama finished them off. My opinion. Look how far GM has fallen in the last forty years. They are not the king makers any longer. The future for cars is smaller, leaner companies that can react to swift changes in market direction. Obviously, none of us know what the future holds. But when GM tied itself to the federal government during the Obama years, they locked themselves in a servants of the governments programs and mandates. Time will tell who is right I guess. Or more aptly put, time will tell who will prevail. I'm betting GM will not be there at the finish. Hope I'm wrong.Respectfully, this isn't happening- at least not in the next 25 years. My father worked as a Director for GM until very recently when he became a Senior Mechanical Engineer for a different company in the same field, and he was working on all electric Buick models for the 2027 models all the way back in 2013. My father worked under Henrik Fisker at Ford/Aston Martin prior to working at GM, where he took his extensive auto cad knowledge and electric system engineering knowledge and was tapped to work in a program that began retrofitting existing vehicles to being electric. My fathers job at the time was literally 3D modeling existing (at the time Chinese market) vehicles, sending 3d ideas of how to shove batteries in to the shop next door to him, and having the modelers physically putting blocks of material that represented what could be batteries into these vehicles. For perspective, my father was one of the first handful engineers for GM that worked on the Bolt, and his signature is inscribed inside the concept vehicle that was released in 2015.
He told me 10 years ago that GM had a hard goal of all-electric by 2027. He use to regularly mention the Hydrotec Program, which was effectively a "Vhs/Beta" type race, in his own words, and it was hydrogen Vs. Electric. GM didn't hit the 2027 goal, obviously, but the Ultium battery technology they are currently working with is a game changer. Conversely, the Hydrotec program fizzled, and there is not an active engineering team on it- I want to say it was right when things started closing down during COVID that he told me they moved the HydroTec team to a different area of responsibility.
Not to say that 1 company makes a difference, but GM is 15-17% of the auto market in the USA. Ford only has about 75% of the marketshare that GM does. So, if GM isn't working on it, It's hard to believe they find it to be a viable option.
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