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Everything posted by G. David Felt
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I could so see the white van with a Waterbed inside, mini bar and some funky custom window in the rear upper quarter panels on both sides and then a funky Graphics art sprayed on the outside of the van. Making an Ultimate Love Machine!!!
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Vehicle: Oldsmobile Starfire GT (1975)
G. David Felt replied to Elitedragon27's topic in Member's Rides Showcase
Nice modern Rat Car! I have to say is that after market seat belt added to the back seat? I cannot imagine someone sitting on the drive line tube. -
Chevrolet News:2013 Brings Forth The Camaro 1LE, Navigation
G. David Felt replied to William Maley's topic in Chevrolet
Sounds like a nice setup. Just think of the car being all Matte Black with limo tinted windows and remove all identification trim and then supercharge the engine so you have the ultimate sleeper with this tranny! Manual Love!- 13 replies
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- Camaro
- Camaro 1LE
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Chrysler News: Chrysler To Idle Mack II Engine Plant
G. David Felt replied to William Maley's topic in Chrysler
Wonder how long before they retool the MackII plant for some new I4 Turbo engine or Turbo V6. I can see this getting used again within the next year. -
VW News: 2014 Volkswagen Jetta To Drop 2.5 For 1.8T
G. David Felt replied to William Maley's topic in Volkswagen
So I hope they have worked out all the quality bugs so it is dependable. Only engines that seem to last in the VW auto's are the Diesels.- 16 replies
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Industry News: Spying: Next Suzuki SX4 Seen Testing
G. David Felt replied to William Maley's topic in Industry News
Bigger, but my gut tells me just as crappy as their existing product line. Suzuki, Mazda and a couple other small car companies need to merge into one larger company to have a full product portfolio. If someone on the boards here want a crappy coffin on wheels, your welcome to it, just take it out of this country. -
Date your son's ex-girlfriend. My coworker had a date over the weekend and after the first one on Saturday, met up on Sunday so he could introduce the girl to his 25 year old son only to find out it was his ex. They also slept together on the first night which is one of the things he told me his son told him he dumped her for, she was cheating on him with other guys. WOW WOW WOW,
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+1 I totally agree with you!
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Making a Honda go fast, made easy!
G. David Felt replied to A Horse With No Name's topic in The Lounge
Hope you do not scare easily as my wife says I drive way to fast, I tell her I am Aggressive Defensive driver! I support making drivers ed $2500 with racing training. Driving is a privilege you earn and you should enjoy it. Have a lane for bus/carpool and for self driving cars like the POS Prius from Google. All other drivers get to drive in American AutoBohn! Same rules as they have in Germany! -
That is very cool, could we find one for Politicians?
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Jaguar News: Jaguar, Land Rover NA CEO Wants Dealers To Merge
G. David Felt replied to William Maley's topic in Jaguar
News Flash to Idiot CEO, without a carrot, your dream that someone will just walk away from their dealership/sell it to someone else will not happen. Just look at the history of GM dealerships to see that this will not work. Make it a directive and review the dealerships for strength and then force them by giving fair compensation to the owners who would lose their dealership and move on. I agree that Jaguar/Land Rover should be one dealership. -
Jaguar News: Jaguar Readies Four, Six-Cylinder Engines For U.S.
G. David Felt replied to William Maley's topic in Jaguar
H'mmmmmmm I wonder just how big this will really help them.- 4 replies
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Lexus News: Rumorpile: Lexus Considering LF-LC For Production
G. David Felt replied to William Maley's topic in Toyota
This is the only car I like with the Predator Mouth on it. GM needs to build a new head turning car like this. -
Remember exprez Bush Jr fell over trying to ride one. It is a HOOT to see people attempt to ride one when they have no idea about balance.
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The Cool, odd and unusual car pics thread...
G. David Felt replied to A Horse With No Name's topic in The Lounge
Love me some Bee love! -
WOW, a triple trailer of towing! Saw a Roadmaster Station wagon on the way into work today. Very cool to see as my sister used to have one. It was great, could even tow their 20' boat.
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SWEET gotta love that Chevy!
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Thanks Ocnblu, I did not think about being put into a limp mode home state. With that I researched limp mode diesel state and found this nice write up on the GM duramax: http://www.dieselpowermag.com/tech/chevy/1003dp_2011_lml_duramax_diesel_engine/viewall.html Plus found this on a diesel blog, very cool info, but it looks like cost is going up for people running diesel. Chrysler Previews NOx Reduction Solutions for 2010 ...There are three ways to lower NOx emissions in diesels: The first is exhaust gas recirculation. EGR recirculates a portion of the engine's exhaust back into the engine at a lower temperature. The cooled gases have a higher heat capacity and contain less oxygen than air, lowering combustion temperatures and reducing the formation of NOx. EGR is prevalent in today’s clean diesel engines to reduce NOx, but it’s not efficient enough in current form to meet 2010 emissions levels. Navistar is the only diesel engine manufacturer that says it will use in-cylinder EGR only to reduce NOx next year, but it will be limited to large over-the-road truck applications and not HD pickups and chassis cabs. The second way is the use of EGR plus a special “adsorber” catalyst material to soak up and break down remaining NOx molecules before they leave the tailpipe. Chrysler is the only heavy-duty pickup manufacturer in the segment to use this approach in its Dodge Ram 2500 and 3500 trucks. The current 2007-09 6.7-liter Cummins six-cylinder diesel powertrain reached 2010 NOx emissions requirements three years early; it will carryover into 2010 and beyond without change in these models while Ford and GM are expected to update their next-generation diesel engines for 2010 using the last technology, below. The third, and newest, approach is selective catalytic reduction using urea DEF. The urea-based solution (32.5 percent industrial urea and 67.5 percent deionized water) is held in a separate storage tank and injected as a fine mist into the hot exhaust gases. The heat turns the urea into ammonia that - when combined with a special catalytic converter - breaks down the NOx into harmless nitrogen gas and water vapor. Like Ford and GM, Chrysler will use diesel exhaust fluid to scrub NOx from the exhaust but only in its new 2010 Dodge Ram 3500, 4500 and 5500 commercial Chassis Cabs. The Dodge Ram Chassis Cabs use the same Cummins 6.7-liter diesel as the 2500 and 3500 pickups. You might be wondering why Chrysler is using a NOx adsorber on its HD pickups and urea SCR on its Chassis Cabs. It’s because the NOx adsorber depends on rare earth metals. Until recently, the prices of these metals had been sky high. Urea DEF is much cheaper than rhodium or palladium. The drawback against urea though is it requires periodic maintenance and driver action. For demonstration purposes, Chrysler had a specially labeled Ram Chassis Cab on the floor at the 2009 Work Truck Show in Chicago to show off its new urea SCR components. “The 2010 Ram Chassis Cabs start with an eight-gallon tank to hold urea,” said Kevin Mets, senior development manager for Dodge trucks. “The eight gallons gives us a good range [approximately 4,000 miles] even though the entire package including the DEF fluid weighs about 200 pounds. We don’t rob as much payload capacity as a tank that, say, has a capacity of 16 gallons.” DEF is expected to cost about $2.75 a gallon when pumped at truck stops and other retailers, according to the North American SCR Stakeholders Group, an ad-hoc industry alliance of truck and engine manufacturers, regulatory agencies and associations, and DEF infrastructure partners and suppliers. It will be packaged in many ways including 2.5 gallon jugs, bulk storage and DEF dispensing units... So, lets see... Using urea injection to meet the 2010 emissions regs. adds roughly a 200 lb. weight penalty,the requirement to manually fill the urea fluid tank every 4,000 miles at a cost of at least $22. That adds up to about $550 per 100,000 miles just to refill the urea tank. Hmmmm... I wondered how much extra the rare earth metals used in the other method would add to the cost. So I decided to compare the cost of the 6.7L Cummins diesel engine in a new Dodge pickup (which according to the article above, already meets the 2010 emissions regs. without urea injection) to the cost of an LMM in a new Silverado. Here's are those prices according to Edmunds.com (MSRP / invoice): LMM Duramax 6.6L Turbodiesel V8 Engine: $7,195 / $5,972 MW7 Allison 6-Speed Automatic Transmission: $1,200 / $996 LMM Duramax 6.6L & MW7 Allison 6-Speed trans: $8,395 / $6,968 ________________________________________ 2EA ST Quick Order Package 2EA: $4,930 / $4,338 6.7L Cummins inline 6-cyl. diesel engine only (Includes vehicle with standard equipment, 6.7L Cummins turbodiesel inline 6-cylinder engine with 350 hp @ 3013 rpm and 610 lb.-ft. of torque @ 1400 rpm, 6-speed manual transmission, mini-floor console, 3.42 axle ratio, 11.50 rear axle, 750 amp maintenance free battery, current generation engine controller, diesel exhaust brake, electronically controlled throttle, GVWR of 9000 lbs., overhead console with trip computer and electronic vehicle information center, tow hooks, 5.5 additional gallons of diesel, hood insulation, premium body insulation, BLUETEC Diesel System and BLUETEC badge.) 2FA ST Quick Order Package 2FA: $6,505 / $5,724 6.7L Cummins inline 6-cyl. diesel engine & 6-speed auto. trans. (Includes vehicle with standard equipment, 6-speed automatic transmission, 6.7L Cummins turbodiesel inline 6-cylinder engine with 350 hp @ 3013 rpm and 650 lb.-ft. of torque @ 1500 rpm, mini-floor console, 3.42 axle ratio, 750 amp maintenance free battery, current generation engine controller, diesel exhaust brake, electronically controlled throttle, GVWR of 9000 lbs., overhead console with trip computer and electronic vehicle information center, tow hooks, 5.5 additional gallons of diesel, hood insulation, premium body insulation, BLUETEC Diesel System and BLUETEC badge.) ________________________________________ It doesn't appear that Dodge is having to charge a premium for their diesel engines to meet the 2010 regs. without urea, since they are currently about ($1,900 / $1,200) less than GM, and I assume GM will have to raise prices even higher to pay for all the extra hardware to meet the 2010 regs. According to this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BlueTec the SCR system Chrysler has now apparently does not meet the California emissions standards (also adopted by 4 other states). To do that they apparently may have to use AdBlue, which is urea injection. This claims that the current SCR system has the "potential" to meet the regs. in all 50 states: although it seems to imply that ammonia is injected into the exhaust. But I don't think ANY current Chrysler diesels have a urea tank, do they? Read here that Mercedes got the EPA to sign off on 20 starts when Urea is empty before the car shuts down till Urea is refilled. http://www.thecarconnection.com/news/1016299_diesel-urea-injection-fact-and-fiction Interesting, I will be watching BMW with interest to see how they do it also.
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Some very sweet gifs!
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Nice job on keeping it clean and new like.
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El Camino for me baby
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Astra Convertible is going back to a soft top; no more Astra CC As the ADAM is concerned, maybe Buick could revive the old Buick Opel name? After all, Opel's founder name was Adam Opel, so it's just a matter of picking the other name You want a Buick Eve???
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Very Cool, glad to see more diesels, but I do wonder about something. If anyone can offer their thoughts on the following question, If you do not refill the urea-based catalyst system, does the car still run? Does it run rough or have any negative affects other than just not being able to inject the pee juice to reduce certain particles in the exhaust? I know more and more states are getting rid of their emissions testing and Washington is no different with 2015 the end year for it due to how clean the current crop of cars run. Nice to reduce gov waste, but if there is no emissions testing, how will they make sure the diesels stay clean? If the car will run just fine with no Pee Juice in the system, then I do not see people paying the crazy amounts they want for this blue juice to keep the exhaust clean. Thoughts?