[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Ukrainian Population's Support For War Effort Collapses, Poll Shows

The Earth Is Being Absolutely Pummeled By Disaster After Disaster

Here’s What It’s Really Like to Live as a Christian in the Holy Land

Democrats say D.C. has no crime problem…

‘Africans Built Nothing’, Black Pastor Exposes Ugly Truth About Black People.

This Amino Acid (Glycine) was Accidentally Found to Improve Our Sleep

How to Increase Testosterone Naturally: 10 Ways

Spirulina Benefits: 14 Reasons to Use This Superfood

Trump pulls Obama portrait from public display inside White House

The Fed, NY Fed, and Treasury Are Tendering for Eight Billion Global Citizens Through Stablecoins

This One Document Just EXPOSED DHS’s Big Lie About FEMA

The Ultimate Longevity Protocol: 10 Science-Backed Anti-Aging Strategies

AI Made a Movie About Its Own Future

"Super Steel": China Unveils Game-Changing Cryogenic Steel for Fusion Reactors

New Russian Missile. S8000 Banderol Cruise Missile

The Last Time This Signal CRASHED, Markets Followed!

Geologists Issue RED ALERT After Satellite Detects Sudden Uplift in Mount Rainier

Alaska Earthquake of 1964 and the Putin-Trump Summit

Thousands still without water in San Fernando Valley as repairs continue

Why the U.S. Buys So Much Nuclear Fuel From Russia | WSJ

'Anti-Racist' ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt Laments Rising 'Intermarriage Rates' Among Jews

Dog Persuades Thief To Return That Purse

California hospital covered up surge in stillbirths after Covid shots

‘I’d F*** Your Old Lady In The A**’: Liberal Mayor Berates Christian At LGBT Festival

Africa Set To Test Critical-Minerals-Backed Currency

Mapping Data Center Capacity Around The World

Cash Jordan: Illegals ‘Forcibly Evict’ LA Millionaires… Wiping Gated Community OFF THE MAP

Ivermectin for Autoimmune Disease and Arthritis

These Foods DESTROY Your LIVER

VIDEO: Your Legs Weaken First! Eat These 6 Foods to Strengthen Them FAST


Editorial
See other Editorial Articles

Title: India offers cheapest car on earth
Source: [None]
URL Source: [None]
Published: Jan 8, 2008
Author: http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/01/07/b
Post Date: 2008-01-08 00:04:03 by tom007
Keywords: None
Views: 169
Comments: 5

India offers cheapest car on earth By Anand Giridharadas Published: January 7, 2008

MUMBAI: There was the $400 airplane seat that plummeted to $40. Then there was the $2,000 laptop reborn for $200. And now the $25,000 car has a $2,500 cousin.

Every now and again in business history, a disruption comes along that breaks the conventional wisdom about cost, tweaking and paring features once thought untouchable.

Likewise, the $2,500 car, scheduled for introduction Thursday by the Indian company Tata, swims against the current, with a rear-mounted engine, a trunk that fits little more than a briefcase, and plastics and adhesives replacing metal and bolts in certain nooks. (Some analysts expect the car to be priced closer to $3,000, still making it the cheapest on earth.)

But the still-untold story of how the Tata car was built is less about big-bang innovations than about a long string of $20 trims: a steering-wheel shaft rendered hollow here, a small headlight leveler removed there, the use of an analog speedometer less accurate than its digital equivalent.

The car is thus a triumph, not of one great invention but of a new engineering philosophy rising out of the developing world, with potential to change how cars everywhere are made, industry experts say. Just as Japan popularized kanban (just in time) and kaizen (continuous improvement), so Tata may export to the world what can perhaps be called "Gandhi engineering" - a mantra that combines irreverence toward established ways with a scarcity mentality that spurns superfluities. Multimedia Graphic: Shifting the price paradigm » View Video: Tata and Volkswagen consider Thai plants » View Blog: Managing Globalization » View Related Articles European car shares languish over all, but there are still some gems Chrysler reports record sales outside of North America in 2007 GM to unveil car that needs no driver Today in Business with Reuters France warns of a period of sluggish growth Asian shares edge up in early trading Tuesday CEO plans to depart Bear Stearns Click here to find out more!

"It's basically throwing out everything the auto industry had thought about cost structures in the past and taking out a clean sheet of paper and asking, 'What's possible?' " said Daryl Rolley, the head of North American and Asian operations for Ariba, which provides parts for Tata and other auto makers like BMW and Toyota. "In the next 5 to 10 years, the whole auto industry is going to be flipped upside-down."

Low-cost cars are already having global impact. Tata's move, announced in 2004, has already inspired two rivals to plan their own ultracheap cars: the French-Japanese alliance Renault-Nissan and the Indian-Japanese joint venture Maruti Suzuki. Meanwhile, struggling Western automakers are increasingly borrowing from the cost-obsessed ethos of the developing world.

Yet it is unclear whether the Tata car itself, so small and wispy and lacking the most cutting-edge emissions and safety technologies, will ever drive a Western road - or whether it can sell briskly enough at home to reap a profit.

The "People's Car," so called in homage to Volkswagen's Beetle and Ford's Model T, is a carefully guarded secret. The company refuses to provide details of how it was built, and it has signed legal agreements with suppliers not to divulge details. But as the debut date approaches, a handful of suppliers broke their silence to offer an early, impressionistic picture of how the automobile, a machine invented by a 19th-century German, is being propelled by 21st-century Indians across a new frontier - to cost as little as the optional DVD player on the Lexus LX470 sport utility vehicle.

The handful of people who have seen the car describe a tiny, charming, four-door, five-seat hatchback shaped like a jellybean, tiny in the front and broad in the back, the better to reduce wind resistance and permit a cheaper engine.

"It's a nice car - cute," said A.K. Chaturvedi, senior vice president for business development at Lumax Industries, a supplier in Delhi that developed the headlights and interior lamps for the car.

Driving the cost-cutting were Tata's engineers, who in an earlier project questioned whether their trucks really needed all four brake pads or could make do with three. As they built the People's Car, for about half the price of the next-cheapest Indian alternative, their guiding philosophy appears to have been one question: Do we really need that?

The model appearing Thursday has no radio, no power steering, no power windows, no air conditioning, and one windshield wiper instead of two, according to suppliers and Tata's own statements.

Bucking prevailing habits, the car lacks a tachometer and uses an analog rather than digital speedometer, according to Ashok Taneja, who until recently was president of the Automotive Component Manufacturers Association of India, representing many of Tata's suppliers as they signed deals with the company.

"So what if I'm going at 65 or 75?" Taneja said, referring to the use of a less precise speedometer.

The frugal method also pervades the car's internal machinery, invisible to consumers but perhaps with even greater implications for the vehicle's safety and longevity.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: All (#0)

More info on the car at the author's link above. I think it has a 1.3 l engine.

"Satan / Cheney in "08" Just Foreign Policy Iraqi Death Estimator

tom007  posted on  2008-01-08   0:08:03 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: tom007 (#0)

I wouldn't mind a nice pair of Tatas to play with.

Tag Line For Rent    (M, 48, NY)

Critter  posted on  2008-01-08   0:36:20 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: tom007 (#0)

They're also trying to buy Jaguar and a couple of other brands.

Honi soit qui mal y pense

Mekons4  posted on  2008-01-08   0:42:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Critter (#2)

I wouldn't mind a nice pair of Tatas to play with.

OK But that is a different web site, seems to me. But have at it, I've no objection.

"Satan / Cheney in "08" Just Foreign Policy Iraqi Death Estimator

tom007  posted on  2008-01-08   0:53:33 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Mekons4 (#3)

They're also trying to buy Jaguar and a couple of other brands.

Yes that is true.

Jaguar being owned by Tata of India is interesting.

"Satan / Cheney in "08" Just Foreign Policy Iraqi Death Estimator

tom007  posted on  2008-01-08   0:55:04 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]