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Hush: the Buick LaCrosse.


Back in 2001, when Buick designers and engineers were working on what would become the replacement for not one sedan but two--the Regal and the Century--Bob Lutz took a look at what they were doing (like engineering a driver's interface that was largely based on voice-recognition technology with a steering wheel arrayed with so many buttons--to be used in the case that the voice system got hiccoughs--that Lutz describes it as "looking like a PC keyboard (1) Any keyboard made for the PC.

(2) The keyboard introduced with the first IBM PC in 1981 that provided a dual-function keypad for numeric entry and cursor movement.
")--and he said that they needed to seriously rethink what they were doing. They were looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 something that would make Buick distinctive in vehicle design. They figured that advanced technology would do the trick. He gave them an alternative direction: create a car that is as quiet as anything not merely in its class, but even at a price point above. And so the engineers set to work to accomplish that, as the marketing folks came up with a term to describe what the engineers were providing: "Quiet Tuning." And the first sedan that is described as having it is the '05 LaCrosse lacrosse (ləkrôs`), ball and goal game usually played outdoors by two teams of 10 players each on a field 60 to 70 yd (54.86 to 64.01 m) wide by 110 yd (100.58 m) long. Two goals face each other 80 yd (73. , a midsize car that's meant to take on the likes of the Camry and the Accord but with the levels of refinement and attention to detail that one might expect from a Lexus or an Acura.

A big part of the Quiet Tuning approach is through the implementation of various materials to deal with noise. Vehicle chief engineer Ed Hufnagle says that there are essentially three ways they're dealing with sound:

* Reduce it at the source

* Block it

* Absorb it.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

To accomplish this they've deployed things including:

* A large sheet of a deep-drawn steel laminate (Quiet Steel from MSC (1) (MSC.Software Corporation, Santa Ana, CA, www.mscsoftware.com) Founded in 1963 by Richard H. MacNeal and Robert G. Schwendler, MSC is the world's largest provider of mechanical computer aided engineering (MCAE) strategies, simulation software and services. ) for the front-of-dash area (a.k.a., the firewall)

* Laminated glass Noun 1. laminated glass - glass made with plates of plastic or resin or other material between two sheets of glass to prevent shattering
safety glass, shatterproof glass

glass - a brittle transparent solid with irregular atomic structure
 for the windshield and front side glass

* Acoustical engine covers

* Forged steel crankshafts (said to be quieter than those cast and machined)

* Structural aluminum oil pan

* Hood insulator pad

* Baffles in the roof pillars

* Thicker carpeting developed with Collins & Aikman

* Extensive foam in pillars

* Plenty of melt insulation.

But while they've worked to make the vehicle quiet, they didn't want to make it seem as though people were driving on a couch. So they took the suspension components from the Regal/Century and then retuned about 80% of them. So, for example, the constant-rate front springs are 20% stiffer than on the previous models, as is the case with the variable-rate springs in the rear. But there are new bits, as well, such as a new front strut mount that provides a reported 2X damping increase compared with previous designs (the LaCrosse represents the first application of this design on a GM midsize car ... which means that it probably won't be the last). The rebound dampers are 40 mm tall; they are 10 mm on the Regal/Century. The jounce bumpers are also longer, 85 mm versus 65 mm. The basic architecture of the suspension: MacPherson strut The MacPherson strut is a type of car suspension system widely used in modern vehicles, named after Earl S. MacPherson who developed the design. Though named for him, it was actually invented by an engineer named Fornaca at FIAT in the mid-1920s.  coil-over-spring front and trailing arm/tri-link rear.

There are two six-cylinder engines available. There is the top-of-the-line 3.6-liter VVT VVT Variable Valve Timing
VVT Validation, Verification and Testing
VVT Variable Volume & Temperature
VVT Variable Voltage Technology Ltd
VVT Vivid Virtual Theatre
VVT Variable View Table
 (continuous variable valve timing Continuous variable valve timing (CVVT) is an automotive technology that allows the intake and/or exhaust valve timing to be infinitely varied during engine operation. There are no discrete stages for affected components, as in a VTEC-style system. ) that provides 240 hp @ 6,000 rpm and 225 lb.-ft. of torque @ 2,000 rpm. This is one of GM's so-called "high feature" global engines. Used in other vehicles, it marks the first application in a front-wheel-drive vehicle. The other LaCrosse engine (standard on the entry and mid vehicles*) is the 3800 Series III 3.8-liter engine, which is an older architecture that has been improved with things like electronic throttle control Electronic throttle control (ETC) is an automobile technology which severs the mechanical link between the accelerator pedal and the throttle. Most automobiles already use a throttle position sensor (TPS) to provide input to traction control, antilock brakes, fuel injection, and . Both engines are held by a new all-aluminum engine cradle (which helps contribute to improved engine isolation--as in concerns for both noise and handling); both are fitted to the Hydra-Matic 4T65-E electronically controlled four-speed.

Stylistically, the car, which is said to be "the new face of Buick," resembles in many ways its predecessors. However, unlike the Buicks of the recent past, the tail lamp is not a single cross-car strip, but simply at each of the corners. Unlike Buicks of the more distant past, the outer sheet metal doesn't have portholes along the side. Word is that Bob Lutz Bob Lutz may refer to:
  • Bob Lutz (tennis)
  • Bob Lutz, Vice Chairman at General Motors
  • Bobby Lutz, US Basketball coach
 had had the platform team look into the price of adding the portholes onto the vehicle that was already designed without them; the cost was prohibitive. When describing the inside, Buick designers and executives throw around the word "craftsmanship" and tend to point to the French seam French seam
n.
A seam stitched first on the right side and then turned in and stitched on the wrong side so that the raw edges are enclosed in the seam.


French seam
Noun

a seam in which the edges are enclosed
 sewing pattern on the seats. The plastic wood (burl pattern) is said to appear more like wood than plastic. There is a sense of spaciousness that is helped by lowering the IP hood in front of the driver some 3 in. The vehicle is available with a six-passenger configuration, which does away with the center console and puts the gear shift lever on the steering column.

*The vehicle is available in three trim levels. There's the CX at $23,495, the CXL CXL

Used on the consolidated tape to indicate that a transaction reported earlier has been canceled: CXL.5 SLS.BK.GY 49.
 at $25,995 and the CXS CXS Coherent X-Ray Scattering  at $28,995 (all including the $660 destination costs).

By Gary S. Vasilash, Editor-In-Chief
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gardner Publications, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:ON CARS; LaCrosse, mid size car from General Motors Corp. Buick motor Div.
Comment:Hush: the Buick LaCrosse.(ON CARS)(LaCrosse, mid size car from General Motors Corp.
Author:Vasilash, Gary S.
Publication:Automotive Design & Production
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 1, 2004
Words:834
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