2019 Honda FitHandout / Honda Rhetoric south of the border about tariffs on Mexican imports continues apace. Current plans call for a five-per-cent tariff to be slapped on all goods entering America from Mexico, including cars and trucks. Furthermore, top brass say they want to increase the levy by a further five per cent each month, topping out at 25 per cent in October. What does this have to do with us in Canada? Plenty, according to the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association. They represent Honda, Toyota, Mazda, Nissan, Subaru and Mitsu, plus the luxury brands of those automakers. And they warn that small cars like the Fit and Yaris could be affected by the tariffs. According to a spokesperson for the association, in a conversation with Automotive News Canada, tariffs can impact Mexican-made cars heading to Canada a couple of different ways. In one case, vehicles could be shipped to Japanese subsidiaries in the U.S. and then re-sold to Japanese automakers in Canada. Otherwise, they’d be shipped through America into our country directly. Either way they get here, one thing’s easy to understand: the tariff cost will almost surely be passed on to consumers. While it’s likely the tariff will be applied to some other calculated number rather than the final MSRP, it could still make for an unpleasant price hike. Adding 25 per cent to the sticker of a base Honda Fit, for example, would add about $4,000 to its $15,590 asking price. A good many light trucks are also assembled in Mexico, vehicles which bear a much higher cost than the Fit. Tacking a 25 per cent surcharge onto a $50,000 pickup jacks the sticker to $62,500. Again, we know these tariffs, should they come into effect, will likely not go right on top of the MSRP. Still, these examples make the stark point that many vehicles could become a heckuva lot more expensive – and that car buying activity will probably stall – until cooler heads
Origin: Mexican tariffs will probably impact car costs in Canada
costs
Ford’s aluminum F-150 costs less to repair than you think
2018 Ford F-150Handout / Ford Ford got its fair share of flack from the competition when it decided to build its best-selling truck out of aluminum instead of steel. Many consumers were also worried it wouldn’t be as strong and would be costlier to repair, but Ford is proving naysayers wrong. According to Automotive News, Ford designed the aluminum body with repairs in mind from the get-go, creating a brand new modular architecture that’s much easier to repair compared to steel-bodied vehicles. Parts have also reduced in cost by 16 per cent overall, when compared with steel replacements on 2014 model-year pickups. The Highway Loss Data Institute (HDLI) found the prices for the hood and taillights have dropped 43 per cent, and front bumpers have decreased 37 per cent. Unfortunately, rear bumpers and bedsides are costlier, though. The combination of easier repairs and cheaper parts means it costs less to fix an F-150 with an aluminum body compared to a steel one. Ford also heavily invested in its dealer network, making sure that they received proper training in order to work on the new vehicles. This included the installation of new equipment that cost the dealers between US$30,000 and US$50,000, though they could get a US$10,000 rebate. All this has resulted in a truck with an insurance claim severity that is roughly 7 per cent lower than steel-bodied trucks. Ford took a gamble and
Origin: Ford’s aluminum F-150 costs less to repair than you think
This Bentley book costs more than an actual Bentley
Bentley is celebrating its 100th birthday, and to commemorate its long and storied history, they’ve written the whole thing down—yes, the British luxury marque’s just released a big book of stories about how it got where it is today, beginning with its inception in 1919. The Bentley Centenary Book is 800 pages and encompasses nine chapters about the famous brand. The foreword is by Ralph Lauren, while the chapters touch on subjects such as performance, design, craftsmanship, and its customers. The book also weighs some 30 kilograms and spans almost a metre across, when opened. Three versions of the book will be printed. The first is a basic’ edition which costs £3,000 pounds (about $5,100) and is limited to just 500 copies. The exterior is bound in the same leather used on Bentley vehicles in whatever colour you like, and sports a Bentley badge. Only 100 copies of the Mulliner version will be printed, at a cost of £12,500 each, or approximately $21,400. That extra cash gets you 10 portraits measuring 20-by-24-inches, each featuring an iconic Bentley, as well as 56 watercolour paintings. You also get a section of the front-left tire from the 2003 24 Hours of Le Mans-winning Bentley Speed 8, and a chance to have your car – provided it’s a Bentley – photographed and featured on special pages. The big boy is the Centenary Edition, which features 100 carats of diamonds and costs a whopping £200,000. That’s about $340,000, or almost $10,000 per kilogram. Only seven of the centenary edition will be printed, one for each continent. We’re confident if all seven owners ever get together, they will probably conjure W. O. Bentley’s ghost, who will tell them what the next 100 years will
Origin: This Bentley book costs more than an actual Bentley