Not quite.1 serials are US
2 serials are CN
3 are germany
4 are Mexico
as I remember-
1, 4 & 5 are Yankee
2 is Kanook
3 and 9 is Mexicistan
6 is down unda
J is Japan
K is Korea
W or T is Kraut
S is Limey
V is France
Y is Sweden
Z is Italy
Not quite.1 serials are US
2 serials are CN
3 are germany
4 are Mexico
as I remember-
those cars will be for the asian market from what i understand. same with the jeep plant that china got.justinspeed79 wrote:Hardly any of the parts one any cars are made in the USA. Most of the parts on so-called "American" cars are made in Canada or Mexico, and many of them are assembled in the same place. There is no such thing as an American car. There's plenty of kool-aid. Chevy just built four brand new manufacturing facilities in China to build Corvettes amd Silverados.
Yup.those cars will be for the asian market from what i understand. same with the jeep plant that china got.
The regulations regarding parts/materials content and percentage of cost vary from product to product, but yes, a legally labeled "made in USA" item can contain a substantial amount of globally sourced parts/materials.More than half of the parts have to be made in the U.S. to be considered "American-made” According to the "Buy American Act of 1933" Federal Trade Commission oversees this. Substantial cost of those products also have to have come from some sort of US base... For example, if a part is made of steel and the company that made it got the steel from China, then that part cannot be considered "American made" since the substantial cost of the part is not from an American company..... So essentially, a car only has to be 50.1% American made.
DAMN............. i forgot about that again. my kid just bought a new 2014 avenger sxt blacktop edition last week.noony wrote:If it helps I can get you a friends discount,its not a lot but it'll save some.(Chrysler)
[youtube]RpKRfwQbYC8[/youtube]scr8p wrote:with reproduction parts made in china.
That's the thing, The FTC does not consider parts made out of out-sourced materials American made... They consider the material the most substantial cost of the product.... In other words, a chunk of steel could come from China and the part is made out of it in the USA and that is not considered "American Made" in the eyes of the FTC because its Chinese steel.Sixtysixdeuce wrote:The regulations regarding parts/materials content and percentage of cost vary from product to product, but yes, a legally labeled "made in USA" item can contain a substantial amount of globally sourced parts/materials.More than half of the parts have to be made in the U.S. to be considered "American-made” According to the "Buy American Act of 1933" Federal Trade Commission oversees this. Substantial cost of those products also have to have come from some sort of US base... For example, if a part is made of steel and the company that made it got the steel from China, then that part cannot be considered "American made" since the substantial cost of the part is not from an American company..... So essentially, a car only has to be 50.1% American made.
Then there is the newer labeling trend you have to watch for, which is to emblazon the box with an American flag and a little bitty subtext that says "assembled in USA" or "designed in USA". Perfectly legal, but the item may be 100% imported parts.
We haven't had a 100% American made automobile since the early 70s; they all started seeing imported Japanese or German electronics when solid state came in, and it was downhill from there.
This is one of the reasons I enjoy collecting firearms so much; they are one of the few products on the market that can still be found (in large numbers) that are truly American made. Yes, sometimes the raw materials are sourced, but I don't consider that imported, for the same reason that I won't tell someone they didn't build something from scratch just because they didn't forge their alloy from raw ore or pump their own oil and refine it into a polymer.
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