Tag: chevy

Chevrolet Sonic Becomes Canvas

By Ron Fonger | Flint Journal

FLINT, Michigan — A lot of cars have been built in Flint but none have been finished quite like this.

A handful of comic book artists from the Flint area have started to  transform a 2012 Chevrolet Sonic into a work of art and no one, including the creators, is sure what the end product will look like until they finish Thursday.

“You want a door? Take a door,” Flint Comix Editor-In-Chief Randy Zimmerman said Monday, just hours after the first group of artists started their shift of work on the Sonic.

Wrapped in an extra skin that can handle markers, colored pencil, and paint, the Sonic is on display at the Buick Gallery and the work continues Thursday.

Within a few hours Tuesday, a golden-green dragon was taking shape on the roof of the four-door hatchback , Bludgeoner the Bunny Butcher stretched across a front fender in bbasic black and white, and a set of eyes peered out from the signature Chevy bowtie logo on the front of the Sonic.

General Motors spokesman Tom Wickham said the idea for teaming up Flint Comix and the Sonic came from a similar event held this fall at New York Comic Con, an annual gathering of some of the most popular comic book artists and their fans.

Wickham said the compact Sonic makes an interesting canvas but said the real reason for the event is to bring attention to the new small car and to give comic artists a new audience.

“I’ve always liked comics, and a lot of these artists don’t get exposure like this,” he said. “What we are really hoping is that people come see what’s being done.”

Flint Comix artists get exposure now through the monthly comics and entertainment newspaper, which is available free at more than 250 outlets and distribution boxes in the mid-Michigan area.

Zimmerman started the publication three years ago, and Publisher Ted Valley said his artists haven’t taken on a project quite like this before but he said he couldn’t resist because both the car and the paper have a shared connection.

“Cars and comics: What do they have in common? Flint,” Valley said.

Read the full article: here.

GM Unveils New Safety Tech

September 30, 2011
By Frank Markus
General Motors is advancing the airbag art in a direction that can’t earn it any extra stars or crash-test brownie points. That’s because its new industry-first front-seat center airbag provides protection in a crash nobody tests for, one in which the side impact is on the opposite side of the car from the crash test dummy. But this new bag, which deploys from the inboard side of the driver’s seat aims to prevent the 11 percent of all deaths occurring in these so-called “far-side side impacts.” 

Developed with supplier Takata (with whom four pending patents are shared), this elaborately tethered bag forms a rigid tube in the shape of a figure-8, that’s tethered to angle toward the driver. It inflates in 26 milliseconds using a combination of pressurized argon and pyrotechnically generated gas, and stays inflated for several minutes to provide protection in a rollover or multiple-impact crash. Its main purpose is to cushion the driver’s head and torso from colliding with the center console, passenger seat or its occupant, or the intruded structure in a nasty pole-type hit, and to cushion the passenger from the driver.

The front center air bag arrives for 2013 as standard equipment on the Buick Enclave; optional on the GMC Acadia and Chevrolet Traverse, bundled so as to appear on 90 percent of these midsize crossovers. These family-oriented vehicles were chosen for their higher likelihood of use with two front occupants, but the technology is expected to proliferate throughout the GM portfolio. No rear center airbag is envisioned yet because of the very low incidence of reported fatalities in the rear. The module adds 2.4 pounds to the car and is somewhat bulky, so it may package easily in every seat design. The only other minor modification required was to the console latch to ensure it wouldn’t open during deployment. No cost figures were discussed, but its larger, more elaborate design makes it cost more than the typical outboard seat-mounted airbags.

Collision Warning on the Cheap

Remember when only fancy Mercedes-Benzes and Volvos could rouse you from your texting to warn of impending doom? In an industry-first, General Motors’ computer programmers have managed to make this technology available at an option price of just $295–including free lane-departure warning. Such a deal! The key is teaching the computers to use a single forward-looking high-def camera to examine 14 images per second looking out at a 37-degree field of view and determine what objects in these images are cars, trucks, motorcycles, pedestrians, and to then determine which ones are in the path of travel, and furthermore which might pose a risk of collision. It does this by noting the rate of change in image size from one frame to the next, and by comparing sizes to known dimensions like the lane width.

It’s not easy, and it gets particularly tricky in bad weather or at night (is that a close-up motorcycle, or a far-away ’55 Ford with one burned-out tail lamp?), but the system performed flawlessly on a demonstration drive. It illuminates a red warning signal high atop the center console near the base of the windshield, and sounding eight quick tones through the front stereo speakers for forward collision warning, and sounds lower tones from the speaker on whichever side of the car has strayed out of its lane.

Best of all, it seems unlikely to aggravate enthusiast drivers. The driver can set the warning/following distance warning to far, medium, or near settings, and even at the “far” setting, the tailgating/collision warnings appeared at what this aggressive driver deemed a mighty close distance. Also, the lane-departure only nags when the tire is on the line and the driver hasn’t signaled a lane change. Fair enough. Both systems can be independently switched off from the steering wheel, and the system remembers the selected following distance upon restart.

Additional features that may roll out in the near future include traffic sign recognition and automatic high-beam assist, though there’s no current plan to use it for adaptive cruise control. Those systems generally employ forward-looking radar (which currently costs from 2-5 times what the camera costs). The system was developed with Magna and Mobileye, and mounts inside the windshield behind the passenger side of the rear-view mirror, where its view is well cleared by the windshield wipers. Look for the option to appear first on the 2012 Chevy Equinox and GMC Acadia, and to spread quickly throughout the lineup

Read more: http://www.motortrend.com/features/auto_news/2011/1109_gm_unveils_new_safety_tech/#ixzz1hfQa4FGm

Feature Flick: Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport and Volt Added to Universal Studios Sound Library

Written by: Jason Udy on December 22 2011 1:00 PM

Movie studios need to keep up-to-date on the latest sound effects so they have all the sounds necessary for future movie and television scripts. To provide these audio samples,the job falls to sound engineers who spend their time capturing all the latest sounds.
In this feature flick, sound engineers from Universal Studios share the process they use to record two of Chevrolet’s more popular vehicles: the Corvette Grand Sport and the Volt. The sound engineers explain the processes they use to record the engine and driving sounds of these two different vehicles.

Check out the video below to see what techniques they use for each vehicle and why.

Read more: http://rumors.automobilemag.com/feature-flick-chevrolet-corvette-grand-sport-and-volt-added-to-universal-studios-sound-library-96677.html#ixzz1hefIO265