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13-03-2011, 01:43 PM | #1 | ||
FPRJET
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 1,143
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I do no want this to be a Holden bashing thread but more fact related please.
It goes like this my mate and his ex went to the drags last night and she comes out with Ford aren`t even Australian as oppose to holden being Australian. P.s should also state she is over 25 and drive a brand new subi. |
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13-03-2011, 01:46 PM | #2 | |||
No longer a Uni student..
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In other words, they are equally un-Australian |
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13-03-2011, 01:51 PM | #3 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Victoria
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Yep,
Ford of Austalia is an Australian company, owned by American company Ford Holden is an Australian company, owned by American company GM You could ask whether the Falcon or Commodore has more Aussie sourced parts, in which case I think I have read the Falcon does, making it a more "Australian" car. |
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13-03-2011, 01:53 PM | #4 | ||
Lukeyson
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Maitland, NSW
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Well, depends on your measure.
(1) % Australian vs foreign employees (2) % of development dollars from local revenue vs foreign funding (3) % of local content in locally assembled products (4) % of local design of locally assembled products (5) Origination and ownership of the name. 1 to 4 are a matter of rolling percentages and are where you need to be clued up in order to engage in a pub-brawl conversation. As for (5), Holden can claim the origination bit as Australian, but not the ownership..... Lukeyson
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13-03-2011, 03:03 PM | #5 | ||
Trusted Seller
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holden by a country mile
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13-03-2011, 03:07 PM | #6 | ||
FPRJET
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 1,143
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Why? Just interested in why you say that? (seriously would like to know the reasoning).
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13-03-2011, 03:25 PM | #7 | ||
moderator ford coupe club
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my take on things is that
ford are a company that makes cars general motors are not - they are a company that own other companys that make cars that may be a very generalised view, but to me it is accurate when henry ford expanded his company, he took it to other countries, and of course with "ford" being the company name - each new entity within a new country was called ford general motors on the other hand, went out an bought under achieving companies such as chevrolet and the like. because chevrolet was the company that made cars, they kept their name. it became a master stroke in reality because america, the uk, australia etc. all had their own perceived car even though they were all american owned i assume that when general motors came out to australia and took over an australian company, general motors were the ones to create/import the tooling and everything else needed to start building pos' in 1948. if that is the case, then holden is not australian and never has been. it is just an australian branch of an american company |
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13-03-2011, 03:49 PM | #8 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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If Holden claim their origination is Australian, you could argue that's even wrong too because the "Holden" name came from James Alexander Holden who founded a saddle maker shop (which eventually evolved into a coach building business) was a British migrant.
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13-03-2011, 03:52 PM | #9 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Ford Motor Co Australia have been producing vehicles in Australia since 1925. Originally from fully imported kits, then gradually increased the local content. There has been several Falcon generations which were wholly Australian designed.
Ford Aus have been building cars in Australia for about 25 years longer than GMHolden have. http://et-ee.facebook.com/topic.php?...170&topic=3544 GM Holden has been operating as a vehicle producer since 1948. The VE Commodore was the first to designed in Australia, rather than being based off an Opel.
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13-03-2011, 03:58 PM | #10 | |||
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13-03-2011, 04:08 PM | #11 | ||
Member
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I think in terms of current products, Ford is.
Today, Ford engineer and build both Falcon and Territory here in Australia - including the motors which are also designed and built in Australia. Holden engineer and build the Commodore, but not it's motor - which is a GM unit. They do however build it here. Holden also built the VE Commodore from the ground up to suit the US market. Holden also changed their name to GM Holden in recent years to reflect the fact that they are increasingly tied to their US parent. Based on that information, Ford Aus is currently technically more Australian than Holden- the Falcon and Territory are all Aussie designed (except the German gearbox) and you won't find a Falcon anywhere else in the world (well, maybe NZ). I believe Ford uses a higher percentage of local parts as well. However with Holden running all these "Holden means alot to Australia" commercials, most bogans still think that Holden is true blue Aussie, forgetting that Holden have a history of mashing up Opels into Commodores, importing their V8s from Mexico, having no design input into their volume selling V6s & the first Commodore they do actually design from the ground up (motors excluded) they designed it for the US market. Since the Holden name is endemic to Australia (and NZ) most people will see Holden as the more Australian brand. The reality is different, as far as products go atleast. |
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13-03-2011, 04:09 PM | #12 | |||
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13-03-2011, 04:12 PM | #13 | ||
not here much anymore
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Can I be blunt and say neither?
Holden brings in complete cars and motors from overseas - so does Ford (BOSS is a USA V8, Windsor was too) - probably the only point to make here is the I6 is Australian from birth. Falcon is not Australian by birth, neither is Commodore. Both companies do ultimately send profits overseas in one way shape or form, and both are HQ'd in the USA.
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13-03-2011, 04:50 PM | #14 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Yes the orginal falcon was based on an American car... but that changed with the XA which was a wholly designed Australian car. The current Falcon has no link to any other car in terms of looks.. or even the current floor pan?? Cant recall if the Kingswood was copied of an US design? The Commodore was very much based on the Opel design and maintained that link up until a few years ago?
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13-03-2011, 05:14 PM | #15 | ||
meh.
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The Falcon is australian.. Ford though is american
the "commodore" and all their sub-names (like our XT's, Futuras etc) are american.. answer: the FALCON is more australian than the COMMODORE.
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13-03-2011, 05:20 PM | #16 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Going by all the badges i see lately I'd have to say neither. The Chev Commodore is the most aussie car.
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13-03-2011, 06:17 PM | #17 | |||
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their logo (unique), hsv, and ofcourse legends like peter brock, craig lowndes and skaifey all claimed by the holden faithfull, the media's love affair with holden and perhaps ford's lack of marketing or advertising at some point over the journey. that is ofcourse only my view of why holden is more aussie, however on the flip side, ford would have to be the most well known motor company in the world and needs little introduction. |
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13-03-2011, 06:32 PM | #18 | |||
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13-03-2011, 06:42 PM | #19 | ||
let it burn
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Neither. But if you want to get into a hair splitting argument, then Ford is probably a tad more Aussie for many of the reasons already listed above.
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13-03-2011, 06:43 PM | #20 | |||
Regular Member
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Duncan & Fraser Ltd. 1865-1927 1925 "Dalgety" Assembled Ford The "Dalgety Wool Store, Gheringhap Street, Geelong. Photo courtesy "The History of Ford Australia". Dalgety Wool Store Assembled Fords As we discussed on Ford Australia's First Ford , the Gheringhap Street Wool Store in Geelong was Ford Australia's first building used to assemble cars. Although the bodies were made in Adelaide by Duncan & Fraser Ltd., they were supplied through Duncan Motors Ltd. as the Ford agents and transported by railway in a "knocked down" form to Geelong. By October 1925 the bodies were being shipped minus the upholstery and trimmed in Geelong. Although a cost saving for Ford Australia, in effect it was another measure that further hindered the Duncan's ability to recoup their tooling and body assembling costs. Surviving registration records in South Australia indicate that only 726 "Dalgety" assembled Fords were sold in South Australia from its release on 1st July 1925 to when it was replaced by the "All Steel" bodied "Improved Ford" in April 1926. Duncan & Fraser Ltd. did continue to build some bodies in very few numbers for Studebaker and some of their other brands, but this basically signals the end of Duncan & Fraser Limited's body building operations. The cost of French's corporate agenda was a truly sad way to end some of the most elegant and highest quality body building in Australia. http://www.duncanandfraser.com/dalgety%20original.htm Further adding to French’s problems, setting up the plant in Geelong came with severe restrictions. A complete factory would take about 3 years to build. So a car built from scratch could not even be considered until at least 1928 at the earliest. The next option was to import panels and assemble a car. Ford USA and Canada were already in the throws of retooling for the “New Improved” 1926 model with all steel panels. Neither factory was anywhere near ready for production. That meant importing the old Canadian body that was totally different to anything currently being offered by the current distributors. If French implemented this option he would be guilty of adding another body variant into the Ford market. The different makers and body variants had been one of French’s strongest criticisms and one of the main reasons for setting up a manufacturing plant in Australia in the first place. This left using a current body until the new all steel paneled body was ready to import. But from where? An interim body could not be bought from Holden’s or T.J. Richards as they were building bodies for Dodge and Chevrolet amongst many others. Buying a body from them for the Ford would be supporting the competition. Ironically the Holden plant at Woodville was the former Kilkenny site sold by Duncan & Fraser Ltd. in 1923. http://www.duncanandfraser.com/ford%...ia%20first.htm |
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13-03-2011, 06:45 PM | #21 | |||
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apart from being behind the times, the 48-215 was a '46 chev with shortened guards and was powered by a '42 oldsmobile engine that sat around unwanted in their warehouse for years. holden thought, no one else wants it, lets bring it to australia - the sheep will love it; and they did neither company is australian - which one is more is more so, is almost irrelevant, because the increments that indicate which one is in front are so small that the average earthling would have no idea at all |
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13-03-2011, 06:49 PM | #22 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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I think the myth that the Holden Commodore is the " Australian " car is a result of Holden doing a much better job at marketing it as such, as compared to Ford Australia.
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13-03-2011, 06:51 PM | #23 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Without money from the government, they wouldnt exist, so I guess you could say they both are as aussie as the Public Service
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13-03-2011, 06:51 PM | #24 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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The lion logo has been on several marques including Ford over the years. My XF has 3 lions on it. Peter Brock drove many cars. His first championship win was in a Ford as were his second and third series placements in 1989 & 1990.There is even a Brock Falcon. Mark Skaife started racing (and winning) in a Ford Laser and was one of the drivers of the Nissan Skyline R32 that won Bathurst and arguably caused the destruction of production racing and the creation of World Championship Wrestling on wheels, I mean, V8Supercars. About half of Craig Lowndes wins and places have been in Fords including his first ever championship win. It is rather hard to have a view of anything with blinkers on and both eyes shut..... |
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13-03-2011, 06:54 PM | #25 | ||
Trusted Seller
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it's all about perceptions not facts other wise we would believe adam and eve started the human population
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13-03-2011, 06:56 PM | #26 | ||
335 - STILL THE BOSS ...
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Any body wants to make smart **** comments can do so with the threat of a warning to follow ...... Don't like the discussion? Go away!
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13-03-2011, 07:03 PM | #27 | |||
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13-03-2011, 07:04 PM | #28 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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13-03-2011, 07:07 PM | #29 | |||
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and this would make holden more aussie than ford.....i rest my case with facts and perceptions goodbye PS the LS1 guys would love me |
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13-03-2011, 07:15 PM | #30 | ||
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People who think the 1948 FX Holden was designed in Australia are either miss informed or I'm sorry to say just plain dumb.
The Engine was a direct import from General Motors as was the brakes transmission differential and suspension. All imported. The panels were stamped in the USA also. The car was assembled here. Like Ford Customlines of the fifties, American Motors Rambler and Chev's were also assembled here. The only thing unique to Holden was the name. 1950 or 1951 General Motors took over the company and actually Called themselves General Motors Holden or G.M.H. for short. If you doubt what I say, I think I can still lay my hands on dads old pay slips which had General Motors Holden on the top. Last edited by billy302; 13-03-2011 at 07:17 PM. Reason: spelling |
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