Notices
Australia/New Zealand Forum They come from The Land Down Under.

No cheap American 'slightly salted' Mazdas

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Rate Thread
 
Old 04-29-2008, 12:50 AM
  #1  
New Member
Thread Starter
 
takahashi's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Melbourne, Australia
Posts: 9,944
Likes: 0
Received 1 Like on 1 Post
Talking No cheap American 'slightly salted' Mazdas

A Crushing Issue:
How to Destroy Brand-New Cars
Mazda Forced to Design A 'Disassembly' Line After Odd Sea Disaster

By JOEL MILLMAN
April 29, 2008


PORTLAND, Ore. -- "Fire in the hole!" shouts Ron Hoodenpyle, covering his ears and stepping away from a brand-new Mazda 3 he just wired with special detonators. Suddenly, all six of the car's airbags explode at once.

Paying a "list" price: The Cougar Ace struggling in 2006; its cargo of Mazdas is now being shredded.
Within hours the metallic blue sedan will be drained, gutted, squished and shredded -- one of thousands to meet the same fate here. The cars are so new, most don't even have 10 miles on the odometer.

Auto makers usually try to find the best way to build new vehicles. These days, Mazda Motor Corp. is busy figuring out how to most efficiently destroy them.

It all started about two years ago, when a ship carrying 4,703 shiny new Mazdas nearly sank in the Pacific. The freighter, the Cougar Ace, spent weeks bobbing on the high seas, listing at a severe 60-degree angle, before finally being righted.

The mishap created a dilemma: What to do with the cars? They had remained safely strapped down throughout the ordeal -- but no one knew for sure what damage, if any, might be caused by dangling cars at such a steep angle for so long. Might corrosive fluids seep into chambers where they don't belong? Was the Cougar Ace now full of lemons?

The Japanese car maker, controlled by Ford Motor Corp., easily could have found takers for the vehicles. Hundreds of people called about buying cheap Mazdas. Schools wanted them for auto-shop courses. Hollywood asked about using them for stunts.

Mazda turned everyone away. It worried about getting sued someday if, say, an air-bag failed to fire properly due to overexposure to salty sea air.

It also worried that scammers might find a way to spirit the cars abroad to sell as new. That happened to thousands of so-called "Katrina cars" salvaged from New Orleans' flooding three years ago. Those cars -- their electronics gone haywire and sand in the engines -- were given a paint job and unloaded in Latin America on unsuspecting buyers, damaging auto makers' reputations.

No Easy Way

Mazda saw no easy way to guard against these outcomes. So it decided to destroy approximately $100 million worth of factory-new automobiles. "We couldn't run the risk of damaging the brand name that Mazda worked so hard over the years to develop," says Jeremy Barnes, the company's corporate-affairs director for North America.

It turns out that wrecking cars isn't a simple matter. "We had to create a disassembly line, basically," says Bob Turbett, the Mazda executive overseeing the destruction process.

It took more than a year to devise a plan that satisfied everyone. The city of Portland wanted assurance that nearly 5,000 cars' worth of antifreeze, brake fluid and other hazardous goop wasn't mishandled. Insurers covering Mazda's losses wanted to be sure the company wouldn't resell any cars or parts -- thereby profiting on the side. So every steel-alloy wheel has to be sliced, every battery rendered inoperable, and every tire damaged beyond repair. All CD players must get smashed.

Discharging Airbags

Little things make a big difference. For instance, most of the cars have six airbags, and discharging them individually (forcing them to inflate so they can't be resold) takes about five minutes apiece -- or a total of a half-hour per car. So engineers back at Mazda's headquarters, in Hiroshima, fashioned a device that can discharge all six at once. Multiplied by 4,703 cars, that trick alone saved months of work.

Mazda declined to put a price tag on the demolition, which was covered by insurance. The company says all its insurance claims have been settled.

The process runs with startling efficiency. It begins when longshoremen take the cars from the freighter and drive them to a nearby lot where the airbags get destroyed by men like Mr. Hoodenpyle.

On a recent day, dressed in a white jumpsuit and wearing goggles, he twiddled a few ***** on his special airbag detonator, and pushed a button. The staccato pop-pop-pop of exploding bags sounded like the muffled gunshots of a wise-guy assassination in a gangster film.

A forklift next piles the cars onto trailers for a brief ride to Pacific Car Crushing. There it takes about 45 minutes to prepare each Mazda for flattening. Steel-alloy wheels are sliced with high-power saws to make sure they won't be resold. Holes are drilled into every tire.

Mazda insists that armed guards patrol the site to deter pilferage. One guard keeps watch as catalytic converters, rich with precious metals like platinum, are removed. Parts like these have a street value of hundreds of dollars apiece.

The cars get placed into a crusher that applies 25,000 pounds per square inch of pressure, flattening them into colorful slabs.

Next stop: Schnitzer Steel, a salvage yard down on the waterfront that's home to an immense metal grinder. "You turn 7,000-horsepower hammers loose on them, and they're eaten in 10 seconds," says Jamie Wilson, Schnitzer's manager. A bemused smile spreads across his face as another load of Mazdas disappears into its maw.

Moments later, metal shards -- most no bigger than an ashtray -- sprinkle onto a mountain of scrap near Schnitzer's dock. There, a freighter prepares to take the scrap back to Asia where it will get recycled.

Mr. Wilson looks on and concludes: "It'll all probably end up coming back as cars."

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1209...googlenews_wsj
Attached Thumbnails No cheap American 'slightly salted' Mazdas-p1-al383_mazda_20080428185623.jpg  
Old 04-29-2008, 02:35 AM
  #2  
Hmmmmmm.........
 
auzoom's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Melbourne, Australia
Posts: 3,564
Likes: 0
Received 6 Likes on 4 Posts
What a waste!, as the saying goes...only in America.
Old 04-29-2008, 06:58 AM
  #3  
Registered User
 
DMRH's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Sydney, Australia
Posts: 782
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Does anyone know from the 4700 cars. Were there any RX-8's amongst them.........??

REgards
Old 04-29-2008, 08:09 AM
  #4  
Registered User
 
matt13b's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 635
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
That is just a ridiculous example of litiny gone mad. I agree,only in America. Just stupid,wer are all harping on about the environment and then they do something like that..
Old 04-29-2008, 05:00 PM
  #5  
Shootin' from the hip
 
Revolver's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Sydney, Australia
Posts: 7,584
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
My colleagues in the States have a lot to answer for...
Old 04-29-2008, 08:47 PM
  #6  
I zoom therefore I am.
 
laythor's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: San Jose, CA
Posts: 4,919
Received 12 Likes on 11 Posts
These cars being destined for the US have nothing to do with why they're being scrapped. Mazda's insurance totaled the cars, mazda has to ensure (to the best of their ability and to the insurance company's satisfaction) that all the totaled vehicles are destroyed.

These cars could have been shipped anywhere and the insurance company would demand the same thing. I'm sure the insurance company will also be getting any money made from the selling of the scrap as well.
Old 04-29-2008, 11:00 PM
  #7  
Registered User
 
labrat's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Brisbane Australia
Posts: 778
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Mazda did the right thing. It might seem over the top, but protecting your brand is everything. It's a shame some of their dealers don't quite see it that way.
Old 05-02-2008, 02:05 AM
  #8  
Shifty Bastard.
 
Gomez's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Melbourne, Australia.
Posts: 4,835
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Originally Posted by DMRH
Does anyone know from the 4700 cars. Were there any RX-8's amongst them.........??

REgards
Two hundred and fourteen RX-8's were on board.
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
05TR1CH
New Member Forum
14
04-18-2023 04:56 AM
ASH8
Series I Tech Garage
20
09-26-2022 11:55 PM
ASH8
Series II Technical and Trouble shooting
7
10-30-2021 12:50 PM
talonhart2
RX-8's For Sale/Wanted
4
08-26-2015 04:14 PM
cschoeps
RX-8's For Sale/Wanted
0
08-06-2015 12:44 PM



You have already rated this thread Rating: Thread Rating: 0 votes,  average.

Quick Reply: No cheap American 'slightly salted' Mazdas



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:26 PM.