It's been awhile since I've been here. My Supra still progresses slowly (as in it doesn't). No this post is not about race. This is about engineering tolerances. I recently had a discussion with a friend of mine about some of the main reasons why GM can't compete in the current market in terms of reliability and build quality. I summed it up as saying for the past decade or so, GM has half-assedly built cars. He posted it somewhere (he won't tell me yet) and got some interesting replies. He said the discussion then delineated into a Chevy Vs Dodge debate so forget it. Anyway, what I basically said was that companies like Toyota and Honda generally design their vehicles with a wider tolerance range. Like say +- .002 instead of +-.0001. The vehicle is designed to be put together with that tolerance range and subsequently is put together "better" with tigher gaps and less chance for error. My friend said someone in the medical industry who was an "engineer" posted that their machines create pieces with a very precise tolerance spec of .00005 or something and argued that if they can do that, GM shouldn't have a problem. My reasoning behind my argument would then be that machinery used to create vehicles, while having good precision still can make mistakes. EG, if the machine can make things within a tolerance level of .001 and the tolerance spec is .0009 the machine fails because the spec is too small. But if the tolerance spec is .001 all is well right? Wrong. Machinery can have minute errors because just because it's .001 doesn't mean its perfectly on that line. When the japanese car companies design it, they try to ensure that the expected range of the machinery and supplies is within the range of their specs. Someone please chime in on this whether you agree or disagree and why or if you need clarification.
On a side note, GM needs to fire the board, the CEO, COO, and dismantle and replace the UAW. Or at least the UAW needs to re-structure itself. Why the UAW? They help make it increasingly harder for manufacturers to try to turn out good products. But the manufacturers have to meet them halfway and stop ballooning the damn CEO's take every year. Put more of that money into vehicle development and quality control. As an engineering student, I hope I don't get overconfident in my engineering abilities in the future so as to minimize mistakes. If your mistakes costs lives, your career as an engineer is pretty much done. But making mistakes about the manufacturing technology? That's not something experienced engineer's should do IMO. I've always learned all departments have to work together to create a good product or service taking into accounts things like cost, materials, etc. Only after this is done, then can you think about PROFIT.
On a side note, GM needs to fire the board, the CEO, COO, and dismantle and replace the UAW. Or at least the UAW needs to re-structure itself. Why the UAW? They help make it increasingly harder for manufacturers to try to turn out good products. But the manufacturers have to meet them halfway and stop ballooning the damn CEO's take every year. Put more of that money into vehicle development and quality control. As an engineering student, I hope I don't get overconfident in my engineering abilities in the future so as to minimize mistakes. If your mistakes costs lives, your career as an engineer is pretty much done. But making mistakes about the manufacturing technology? That's not something experienced engineer's should do IMO. I've always learned all departments have to work together to create a good product or service taking into accounts things like cost, materials, etc. Only after this is done, then can you think about PROFIT.