Your Location > Home > News & Market >International News > Cadillac rolls out repair network for aluminium-intensive CT6 sedan
Today' Focus
-
Hangzhou Jinjiang Group's general manager Zhang Jianyang, vice general manager Sun Jiabin and their team had attended the SECOND BELT AND ROAD FORUM FOR INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION, they also attended the signing ceremony of comprehensive strateg...
International News
Domestic News
International News
Cadillac rolls out repair network for aluminium-intensive CT6 sedan
- China Aluminium Network
- Post Time: 2015/12/4
- Click Amount: 388
The Cadillac CT6, the first aluminium-skinned vehicle from General Motors, will have its own dedicated factory-certified repair facilities.
Cadillac said Wednesday, December 2nd, that it is launching the Cadillac Aluminium Repair Network to ensure the lightweight rear-wheel-drive luxury sedan is repaired properly after a crash.
Aluminium vehicles require repair facilities that are sealed off from those used to fix steel-bodied vehicles, dealers need different tools to repair aluminium body panels and technicians need to learn different repair techniques.
With the CT6, Cadillac joins an elite but growing group of automakers producing aluminium-intensive cars and light trucks, including Jaguar Land Rover, Tesla, Ford and Audi.
John Eck, Cadillac’s collision manager for wholesale dealer channel, says dealers with no aluminium repair equipment likely will need to spend around $50,000 for the special tools to fix the car.
Cadillac plans to have between 100 and 200 dealers and independent body shops signed up and trained before the CT6 goes on sale in the first quarter next year, Eck said. The CT6 uses aluminium outer body panels and a combination of ultra-high-strength steel, cast aluminium parts and extrusions for the unibody or inner structure. These components are held together by GM’s patented aluminium welding process, self-piercing rivets, screws and adhesives.
Eck said Cadillac won’t follow Ford and ship collision parts with repair instructions from the manual, but it will put repair procedures online and make them available for any body shop, in the program or not. But independent body shops that are not part of the Cadillac repair network will not be able to buy structural repair parts, Eck said.
“Some cosmetic parts are open to anyone in the market, but you have to join the program to get structural parts,” he said. The reason: Cadillac wants to ensure structural repairs bring the car back to factory specifications.
Eck said the CT6 repair procedures were designed to cause as little disruption to dealers and body shops as possible. As long as a tool meets Cadillac’s specifications, it doesn’t matter what brand it is, he said. Also, a dealer can seal off an area of the shop with a tent to repair a CT6 instead of dedicating a separate facility to fix the car.
Eck said dealers and body shops will pay $4,500 a year to join the Cadillac Aluminium Repair Network. The training will be mostly done online and carried out through GM and I-CAR, the Inter-Industry Conference on Auto Collision Repair.
- Copyright and Exemption Declaration :①All articles, pictures and videos that are marked with "China Aluminum Network" on this website are copyright and belong to China
Aluminium Network (www.alu.com.cn). When transshipment, any media, website or individual must list the source from "China
Aluminium Network (www.alu.com.cn)". We seek legal actions against anyone that disobey this.
②Articles that marked as copy from others are for transferring more information to readers, do not represent or endorse their opinions or
accuracy and reliability. When other media, website or individuals copy from our website, must keep the source. Anyone that changes the
articles' sources will hold the responsibilities for copyright and law problems. We also seek legal actions against anyone that disobey
this.
③If any articles copied by our website concern the copyright and other problems, please contact us within one week.