2017年2月28日星期二

Organized labor's Trump predicament How to back him on NAFTA, without sacrificing other goals

Empty factory floors. High-paying jobs shipped to Mexico and overseas. Once-thriving Rust Belt towns hollowed out and left for dead.

Those are the images Donald Trump painted during his unlikely rise to the presidency. Trump was describing what he saw as the effects of decades of poorly negotiated free-trade deals, presenting himself as an economic nationalist who would bring good-paying manufacturing jobs back to the U.S.

In describing free trade as harmful to the American worker, Trump aligned himself with the longtime view of organized labor, which has fought free trade for decades, even as presidents they endorsed signed new agreements into place.

Now, as Trump pursues his renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement, labor unions such as the UAW find themselves in a precarious spot: How do they work with the president to pursue their decades-long goal of overhauling NAFTA while maintaining enough distance to oppose him on a variety of other measures?

The answer could have ramifications for how the UAW approaches Trump over the next four or eight years -- and to the potential alliances unions could strike with traditional foes.

UAW President Dennis Williams told reporters this month that he plans to set up a meeting with the president to discuss NAFTA.

"Corporations have been taking advantage of cheap labor here in North America, which is something, quite frankly, the American people are fed up with," Williams said, echoing critiques Trump has made in the past. The UAW had endorsed Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton in the presidential race and campaigned against Trump.

"Changes to NAFTA will fundamentally affect the auto industry, and that's a core interest of the UAW," said Kristin Dziczek, director of the Industry, Labor and Economics Group at the Center for Automotive Research. "It's not surprising that they would want to get involved" in discussions with Trump.

Friendliness with Trump on trade, if not elsewhere, even extends north of the border to Canada, where Unifor President Jerry Dias says Trump's trade talk has blown open the doors to renegotiate NAFTA.

















News from:http://www.autonews.com/






2017年2月20日星期一

LEAR CEO claimed Trump’s new policy is blurred making the industry at a loss

Although US President Trump and the top manufacturers ( includes three major car manufacturers in Detroit ) had a meeting. But after the meeting, the decisions of parts supplier still remain obscure. The three major car suppliers have come to power to express their demands to the Trump government at the meeting at Detroit Economic Club on 14th, Feb. 2017.

CEO of LEAR Matt Simoncini said that the Trump government now has a border tax policy but the definition of “imported goods” is ambiguous, so that major suppliers cannot make judgments on Resource planning and central layout.

Simoncini said that if the provision of specific content can’t be provided then the major companies will be caught off guard under the time and unable to respond. There are still many projects to be launched in the US border line, such as "making a wall order" at the border, which is too sudden for the whole industry, and we are not ready at all.


"Infrastructure investment will often drive the demand for light trucks and trucks," he said, adding that it is necessary to set aside capacity adjustments for the automotive industry to prevent competition.


2017年2月15日星期三

How to Replace a Car's Starter Motor---Part 3



1. Yes, there's a Mitsubishi starter motor hiding up there. On most front-engined vehicles like this Suburban, it's well and truly buried under and behind the engine and next to the transmission.


2. Prepare to get dirty and uncomfortable getting it out. Front-wheel-drive cars with sideways-mounted engines may have the motor mounted above the trans, where you can reach it from above.

3. If you have ramps, they should provide enough clearance. If you need to jack up the car, use jackstands and chock the wheels. Stuck off-road? Dig a trench under the vehicle to crawl into, which is actually not horrible if it's dry.

Is Your Starter Motor Really Bad?

Before you get all greasy under the car, here are some tips for diagnosing a bad starter:

If you twist the key and the dash lights come on dimly, the solenoid buzzes or clicks, or nothing at all happens, it may well be the battery or the cables, not the starter motor. Charge the battery. Your voltmeter should read at least 12.6 volts with no electrical drain on the battery and the charger disconnected for an hour.

2. Check the battery capacity. I use a resistance-type battery load tester. A good, charged-up battery should deliver 150 amps for 15 seconds without dropping below 10.5 volts, and should recover nearly to the aforementioned 12.6 volts within a minute.

3. If the battery checks out okay, look for poor electrical connections to the starter or solenoid, as well as the battery and chassis connections. Accept no more than a 0.5-volt voltage drop between the battery post and the starter hot post. Ditto between the battery negative post and the engine block.




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2017年2月13日星期一

Tesla And SpaceX Finally Get Around To Opposing Trump's Immigration Ban

After a timid response to growing opposition against President Donald Trump’s executive order banning travelers from seven majority-Muslim countries from CEO Elon Musk, Tesla and SpaceX have finally joined an amicus brief filed by 96 other companies.

Reuters reports that Tesla and SpaceX joined companies including Apple, Google, Intel, Microsoft, Lyft, Facebook, and Twitter in the legal filing, which followed San Fancisco’s 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals rejection to reinstate the ban after it was blocked by a federal judge.

Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk is now in an even more precarious situation as he still sits on President Trump’s economic advisory council despite growing pressure for him to step down. Uber CEO Travis Kalanick stepped down from the council in opposition to the travel ban last week. Musk’s reaction instead was to use his position “for the greater good,” allegedly making concerns over the ban the priority of last week’s council meeting.


Trump, unsurprisingly, must not have taken Musk’s Twitter-requested ideason the ban to heart, as the Department of Justice has gone ahead and appealed the district court’s decision.









News from:http://jalopnik.com


2017年2月9日星期四

How to Replace a Car's Starter Motor---Part 2

Saturday morning you give your battery and charging system a full investigation. Even swapping in the new battery from your other car doesn't help. Nope—the screeching has become the only symptom you can elicit. That banshee wail is the teeth on the starter motor's bendix gear clashing against the ring-gear teeth because it's not completely engaged.

The solenoid, or on some starters, just a threaded part of the armature, pushes the bendix gear forward an inch or so until it meshes with the ring gear, allowing the starter motor to spin the engine over until it starts. When the engine rpm exceeds the cranking speed, the bendix automatically retracts, preventing the engine from spinning the starter too fast.

At least that's how it works in theory. Starter motor failure is rarely caused by a blown or shorted motor itself—usually it's a problem with the bendix mechanism or the solenoid. And frankly, most people will never need to replace a starter motor for the life of their vehicle. Intrepid but underfunded Saturday Mechanics might actually dismantle a malfunctioning starter and repair it themselves. You can still find auto parts stores that can get you new bearings, brushes and bendix assemblies. Generally, I just exchange the old starter for a new or remanufactured one, because repairing one doesn't save much money. On the other hand, if you have a rare or hard-to-find starter it might be necessary to fix what you have. Usually, auto electric shops (Denso Starter Supplier) can rebuild or repair a starter with a bad armature, shorted field windings, bad brushes, a bad commutator, or even a bad solenoid if there is no alternative. Be prepared to wait a few days or more.




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2017年2月2日星期四

How to Replace a Car's Starter Motor---Part1


Replacing a starter motor is usually a straightforward but inconvenience job. Here's how it's done.

This gear-reduction starter is a lightweight drop-in replacement for the older starter that failed. By spinning the armature faster and reducing its output speed with a planetary gearbox, it's possible to get the same starter power in a smaller, lighter package.

Click. Click. Click. That's the noise your car makes when you twist the key. A few more clicks and now you've got a metallic screeching that makes all the dogs in the neighborhood start to bark. The dash lights are plenty bright, the headlights don't dim much when the key is twisted, but obviously something is wrong. With the clock ticking, you resort to that old standby: a jump-start. A few more screeches grating enough to make you cringe, and the engine finally spins merrily.

After work, it's the same story: Clunking and clicking, a few bars of the "Ballad of the Tortured Ring Gear," and you get to drive home instead of ride in the cab of the tow truck.

You've got a bad starter motor. Time to fix it before you're on the bus.






















Tips from: http://www.popularmechanics.com