General Motors and Ford
Motor Co. have formed an unusual alliance designed to help them meet
increasing stringent fuel-economy standards by jointly development a new
10-speed automatic transmission.
The announcement underscores
the increasingly difficult challenges manufacturers face as they shoot
for a 54.5 mile-per-gallon mandate set to take effect in 2025. That has
led a growing number of automakers to set aside traditional rivalries
and form potentially far-reaching alliances aimed at development new
engines, transmissions, even entire vehicles that can be shared among
various brands.
The new gearbox envisioned by GM and Ford will be
utilized on a variety of different front- and rear-wheel-drive
products, the makers said, noting their shared goal of bringing the
technology to market sooner, and at a lower cost, than if they worked
together.
“Engineering teams from GM and Ford have already
started initial design work on these new transmissions,” said Jim
Lanzon, GM vice president of global transmission engineering.
While
Lanzon did not outline specific mileage gains targeted by the project,
he said, “We expect these new transmissions to raise the standard of
technology, performance and quality for our customers while helping
drive fuel economy improvements into both companies’ future product
portfolios.”
Advanced transmissions have become a critical
technology in the industry’s push to increase mileage while also
reducing vehicle emissions. A growing number of automakers have migrated
to six, seven and even eight-speed gearboxes, and both Chrysler and
Land Rover recently confirmed plans to introduce 9-speed transmissions
on various models.
Those makers will use a design developed by
German supplier ZF whose CEO Stefan Sommer estimated they could reduce
fuel consumption by “nearly 13%” compared to older-style 6-speeds.
The
GM/Ford project would take the gear count up to 10, which many
automotive engineers believe is about the maximum before mass, inertia
and friction – as well as cost – would overcome any potential advantage.
Indeed,
even at seven and eight speeds, transmissions have to be carefully
designed to prevent constant “hunting” as an automatic gearbox switches
from gear to gear, something studies reveal can disrupt customer
comfort.
As a result, the physical design of the transmission
itself becomes only part of the development process. Making the new
GM/Ford 10-speed live up to expectations will require extensive work on
the software that controls the gearbox. Notably, while Ford’s
transmission chief Craig Rennecker says the two makers will develop
common parts and components, they will develop their own software –
which could run into the 100s of thousands of lines of code.
For
decades, domestic automakers were barred by law from cooperating with
one another, but such restrictions have been eased in recent years to
reflect the increasing challenges the industry faces, especially for
makers hoping to go it alone.
The new 10-speed will become the
third joint project between GM and Ford. But those makers each have
entered into a number of other alliances. General Motors’ European
subsidiary is working closely with France’s PSA Peugeot Citroen on a
variety of projects.
Courtesy of Autos.Yahoo.com
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