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View Full Version : Oh no...H1 going away??????


f5fstop
04-30-2006, 10:02 AM
Damn, I hope they wait until I win the Mega Million lotto http://www.elcova.com/infopop/emoticons/icon_biggrin.gif
Is H1 on its way out?

Off-road icon may have outlived its utility

Brett Clanton / The Detroit News

General Motors Corp.'s Hummer H1 -- a tank-like SUV used by the U.S. military, sold to the public by GM, and reviled by environmentalists everywhere -- soon may be decommissioned.

While there is no decision yet, Hummer's new general manager, Martin Walsh, said in a few years, the slightly smaller H2 sport utility vehicle could replace the H1 as the brand's flagship model. (YES FOLKS, IT WILL BE SMALLER http://www.elcova.com/infopop/emoticons/icon_biggrin.gif)

The H1, with fewer than 400 sales last year, is still "very important" to the brand's image as an off-road leader with iconic design, Walsh said.

"What we've found increasingly, though, is that the H2 has come to be seen by consumers as the Hummer. (MY H3 IS A HUMMER http://www.elcova.com/infopop/emoticons/icon_frown.gif ) In their minds, that's more representative of the Hummer brand than the H1."

The comments come as Hummer is trying to broaden its appeal to consumers and as gas prices hover near $3 per gallon.

In less than 15 years on the U.S. auto market, the H1 has become a status symbol to the moneyed elite -- thanks to enthusiastic endorsements from Arnold Schwarzenegger and hip-hop artists -- and a gotta-have-it toy for hard-core off-roaders.

But its $140,000 price tag, (THE ONE I PRICED WAS 150K.) poor fuel economy and massive size have made it impractical for many customers.

"People still like to come in and look at them, but no one buys them anymore," said Dan Frost, owner of Hummer dealerships in Detroit and Novi. "We might sell one, maybe two a year."

The H1 is based on the High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle, popularly known as the "Humvee," which was created by AM General Corp., a military contractor. It went on sale as a civilian vehicle in 1992, and was initially boosted by its exposure in the first Gulf War.

Seven years later, GM acquired exclusive ownership of the Hummer brand name, and in 2002 added the beefy H2. Last summer, the H3, a midsize SUV that achieves 20 miles per gallon, joined the lineup and now accounts for more than half of Hummer's annual sales.

In 2005, after a hurricane-fueled spike in gas prices, H1 sales fell 16 percent and H2 sales plummeted almost 30 percent -- a sign that the brand's biggest growth potential may rest in smaller, more fuel-efficient vehicles.

Walsh said Hummer would consider building a pickup truck, but would not -- as the Chrysler Group's Jeep brand recently started to do -- build car-based "crossover" vehicles. (BETTER NOT BUILD A CAR BASED HUMMER http://www.elcova.com/infopop/emoticons/icon_rolleyes.gif)

The "product expansion" planned for the Hummer brand will be based only on rugged truck frames, he said. (H3T... http://www.elcova.com/infopop/emoticons/icon_biggrin.gif)

Aside from adding a high-performance Alpha version last year, GM has done little to change the original H1, a vehicle it markets as "the most functional off-road vehicle ever made available to the civilian market."

Perhaps that's because the ailing automaker knows it cannot afford to throw money at a vehicle with such a small audience, said Erich Merkle, an industry analyst with IRN Inc. in Grand Rapids.

"There never really has been much of a market for that vehicle, except with the ostentatious crowd."

Hummer continues to require its dealers to accept at least one H1 a year, but with fuel economy becoming a bigger concern for consumers, it may get harder to sell a vehicle that gets 10 to 12 miles per gallon.

Yet Walsh left the door open to H1's future.

"It's still a part of our plan," he said. "Beyond that, I really can't say."

You can reach Brett Clanton at (313) 222-2612 or bclanton@detnews.com.

The Green Lantern
04-30-2006, 10:49 AM
"it may get harder to sell a vehicle that gets 10 to 12 miles per gallon."


- that's what I'm getting on my H3! http://www.elcova.com/infopop/emoticons/icon_biggrin.gif

fourfourto
04-30-2006, 10:59 AM
I cant even drive the 442 it gets about 6 to 10 mpg depending how I drive it http://www.elcova.com/infopop/emoticons/icon_biggrin.gif

HummerNewbie
04-30-2006, 01:52 PM
Originally posted by fourfourto:
I cant even drive the 442 it gets about 6 to 10 mpg depending how I drive it http://www.elcova.com/infopop/emoticons/icon_biggrin.gif

There is only one way to drive a 442 and that gets you 6 MPG http://www.elcova.com/infopop/emoticons/icon_biggrin.gif

Steve - SanJose
04-30-2006, 02:46 PM
No surprise based on military's recent decision that I read about months ago.

S.

RubHer Yellow Ducky
04-30-2006, 05:04 PM
The Green Lantern
Hummer Expert

Posted 04-30-06 05:49 AM
"it may get harder to sell a vehicle that gets 10 to 12 miles per gallon."


- that's what I'm getting on my H3!
Posts: 708 | Location: "The Devil will find work for Idle hands to do." | Registered: 09-12-05


With a heavy right foot you could be talking about the H-3

RYD

NoMoGMPG
05-01-2006, 12:57 AM
It was due to happen.

gc2488
05-01-2006, 10:12 AM
Why does the H1 cost so much?
Are the parts expensive?
I'd get an H1 in addition to my H3
if they could push down the price
significantly over time. Maybe the
great suspension design just costs a lot
to manufacture.

evldave
05-02-2006, 12:40 AM
f5, you may know more than me on this one, but had an interesting experience about this topic this morning. I'm at a quality conference in Milwaukee, and happened to have breakfast with a lady that's the lead of reliability engineering for the new '08 H2. She works for AM General.

I'd read this post before, so asked her if she's heard anything related to potentially discontinuing the H1. She said AMG is getting the H1 & HMMWV and GM is getting H2/3 + rights. What's really interesting is they are creating a new reliability engineering group for the H1/HMMWV - why go about that when they are discontinuing in the near future. Just doesn't make sense to me...

NEOCON1
05-02-2006, 01:05 AM
Originally posted by gc2488:
Why does the H1 cost so much?
Are the parts expensive?
I'd get an H1 in addition to my H3
if they could push down the price
significantly over time. Maybe the
great suspension design just costs a lot
to manufacture.

you can pick up a used one for what we paid for our 3's http://www.elcova.com/infopop/emoticons/icon_cool.gif i hope they keep making them

timgco
05-02-2006, 01:32 AM
DAMN! Owning an H1 has been in my head since my first H2. I want an 04 or even better an Alpha. I just couldn't spend that kind of cash..even if I had it. Too bad the Alpha wasn't about 75K. I think they would sell a lot more!!!! Maybe in two years they will be for a used one? Why are they so much dough? Hand built?

h2co-pilot
05-02-2006, 02:00 AM
Originally posted by timgco:
DAMN! Owning an H1 has been in my head since my first H2. I want an 04 or even better an Alpha. I just couldn't spend that kind of cash..even if I had it. Too bad the Alpha wasn't about 75K. I think they would sell a lot more!!!! Maybe in two years they will be for a used one? Why are they so much dough? Hand built?

Oh no. Here we go.... http://www.elcova.com/infopop/emoticons/icon_rolleyes.gifhttp://www.elcova.com/infopop/emoticons/icon_wink.gif

DennisAJC
05-02-2006, 02:03 AM
Originally posted by f5fstop:
"What we've found increasingly, though, is that the H2 has come to be seen by consumers as the Hummer.


OOOOOOOHHH!!!!!!!!!!!http://www.overtorqued.net/forum/customavatars/avatar731_1.gif