BYE-BYE BIG THREE
While a co-op student at Northeastern
University in the early
1970s, when Ford began getting
creamed by Toyota, Nissan,
and Honda, I had firsthand
experience at Ford Motor Co. I
was in its “Customer Relations”
department at the Boston Sales
Office and saw the company’s
(and independent dealers’ )
arrogance on a daily basis. It
was obvious that Management
and unions played a major role
in the demise of the domestic
auto industry. As you noted,
both parties are still at odds
and making excuses for their
failures. Whining rather than
working together and winning.
Protesting, rather than solving
problems and performing.
During the past 30 years I
have promoted products for
hundreds of manufacturers and
have seen the “Buy American”
reaction to global competition
first hand. I’ve also seen companies
that have dug in and
figured out how to win. Experience
and hindsight have taught
me that consumers want quality
at a fair price. And all things
being equal, it doesn’t matter
where they are made.
Steve Stroum
I hope the right people are paying
attention to the message
in your latest editorial (“Don’t
hold your breath waiting for
U.S. automakers to thrive, ”
Oct. 25). The UAW is a cancer,
which, I am sure a lot of your
readers would agree, needs to
eliminated. Their benefit to the
American society/worker has
long expired.
Charles Buchert
WIND SUCKS
The article you titled “Is wind
power ready for prime time?”
(Aug. 9) should have been
called “Why wind power will
never be ready for prime time.”
The ar t icle hi ts some high
points, but you also missed a
couple.
For example, the U.S. National
Renewable Energy Laboratory
and American Wind
Energy Assoc. are still under the illusion that this country
could get 20% of its power from
wind by 2020. But they are ignoring
the land use issue. Wind
and solar power require vast
amounts of land. You would
have to pave over several midwest
states for so-called alternative
energy sources to even
come close to 20% of our electricity
today. We’d need even
more 13 years from now.
Dr. David Pimentel at Cornell
published a paper (BioScience,
Dec. 2002) confirming
the above facts in an exhaustive
land-use survey. “We really
wish this had turned out
differently, we really do,” lamented
this truthful environmentalist.
This type is a rare
breed, especially when you see
what NASA’s James Hansen did
to try to hide the facts that six
of the 10 warmest years on record
were in the 1930s and 40s,
not the 1990s.
You al so say that “aver -
age output (of a windmill) is
roughly 30% of total rated capacity.”
That is not true. Their
true capacity has been stated as 23, 25, and 25% since 2003.
Both American Electric
Power and Florida Power and
Light have told me that the only
way they can justify their wind
farms is because of the federal
subsidy. Take away these
foolish subsidies and you will
never seen another windmill
project again. We know this because
our company supplied
80% of the windmill controls
for the 1980s Altamount Pass
fiasco in California.
Cheap energy, lower taxes,
and freedom are our country’s
reasons for continuing to lead
al l the wor ld’s economies.
Change any of those at your
peril.
Henry E. Payne
YOU GOT THE WRONG CAR
The gadget from this months
magazine (Oct. 25) is a hybrid
race car that gets it main propulsion
from a large flywheelbased
energy storage system.
Clearly a Group 44 car, most
likely an IMSA prototype. This was first race car to have
a plas t ic engine. I bel ieve
its name was Polyamotor. It
was raced in IMSA prototype
events.
This looks like a kit car body,
specifically a Fiberfab Laser
917 that bol ted onto a VW
chassis.