Collision Repair |
Sometimes lost in the discussion on new and emerging automotive materials, aluminum continues to make inroads in an ever- increasing number of parts. This month ABRN examines how aluminum is impacting the collision repair community. Upping the aluminum ante
In August of this year General Motors announced that it will now be using aluminum wheels, blocks and cylinders to reduce vehicle weight, in concert with other improvements, to boost fuel economy and reduce the emissions in its full size SUVs and pickup trucks. "Importantly, GM used this 'lightweighting' strategy to maintain the size of its Silverado, Sierra, Tahoe and Yukon while also ensuring they continued to deliver the same towing capacity of earlier models," says Stemple.
"New research that we have provided to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) demonstrates that making hybrids and diesel cars and trucks lighter – without making them smaller – can reduce the consumers' initial vehicle cost and pay them back faster than traditional heavier-bodied models," he says. "Due to available data and on-the-road examples of lighter, yet larger and safer vehicles, we also strongly support a size-based passenger car and light truck standard. Vehicle size, not vehicle weight, is a better safety determinant and such a size-based rule will encourage the development and availability of lower-weight materials whose use might advance fuel economy and preserve or even enhance safety," says Stemple.
"The amount of aluminum exterior panels will likely continue to grow, but the number of aluminum-intensive unitized structures will not increase as much," forecasts Jason Bartanen, technical director at I-CAR. "Some vehicle makers — Audi, Jaguar and Aston Martin, for example — have made a commitment to aluminum with some of their product offerings, but they are the minority at this point. I'd hate to speculate too much, but I believe that they will continue to be the minority when it comes to aluminum-intensive structures," he says. Vehicles utilizing complete aluminum structures include the Audi A8, Jaguar XJ and XK series, BMW Z8, Aston Martin Vanquish, Ford GT, and the Chevrolet Corvette model Z O6. The BMW 5 and 6 series have a combination of a steel body and an aluminum front section. |