mwillems wrote: ↑15 Nov 2021, 18:59
godlameroso wrote: ↑15 Nov 2021, 14:31
Lamborghini competes with McLaren, I wonder how VW group is going to sort that out.
Big conglomerates breed success like that. If you go to the supermarket, look at the 20 cleaning product brands and they'll be owned by the same 2 or 3 manufacturers. Same with sweets, beauty products, food/drink products... Cars exist in the same economy. if you have 5 brands out of the 20 then you have a quarter of the brand choice and are more likely to capture more market share
It's an interesting theory, and it is curious how General Motors tried very hard to make this work but couldn't do so with their Saturn, Pontiac, Oldsmobile, Buick, SAAB, Cadillac, Chevrolet, GMC, Opel/Vauxhall, Daewoo, Geo, and Holden brands, and have retired or sold at least half of these brands. Indeed the sportscar maker Lotus (albeit long separated from Team Lotus Formula One team) was within the General Motors portfolio at one point (as was Izusu partially), wasn't it, and rumour has it that General Motors insisted that the Isuzu-powered Lotus Elan used a front wheel drive layout?
[In 1986], Lotus went into the hands of General Motors. With American dollars backing, Lotus launched an expansion plan aiming at 5,000 cars sales annually. To realize this, GM pumped US$40 million into a new project named M100, which turned out to be Elan Mk2. The new Elan was very different from the original - or just any other Lotuses - because it was front-wheel drive.
http://www.autozine.org/Archive/Lotus/c ... _M100.html
I think auto enthusiasts are quite discerning, and notice full well when a VW Golf GTI and Lamborghini Murcielago use the same coil packs, same EVAP solenoids, same cabin temperature sensor etc with the same VW Audi logo and same part number printed on them. Or when a Fiat Punto and Ferrari 550 use the same indicator stalks etc.
Conversely, customers do complain when they can't open their McLaren MP4-12C because the door handle sensor proximity doesn't work, and it indeed might be better for McLaren to use a VW Golf door handle proximity sensor that is made in the hundreds of thousands of units and is known to work.
mwillems wrote: ↑15 Nov 2021, 18:59
Especially since they can homogonise the products between cars and save cash that way. Even in supercars.
If the Citroen C4 is just a totally conventional Peugeot 307 with different styling instead of a wacky unconventional car (like the predecessor Xsara, GSA etc), then what's the point of buying the Citroen? Likewise, if the Lamborghini Huracan is just an Audi R8 with different styling, what's the point of buying the Lamborghini?