Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 98: Ford Production Woes, 2022 Toyota Corolla Cross

Ford Production Woes

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

Whether you drive a car, need a car, or just occasionally bum a ride with friends, you’ve come to the right place. Join the editors of Consumer Guide Automotive as they break down everything that’s going on in the auto world. New-car reviews, shopping tips, driving green, electric cars, classic cars, and plenty of great guests. This is the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast.

Episode: 98

Broadcast date: September 12, 2021

Guest: Sam Fiorani

Ford Production Woes, 2022 Toyota Corolla Cross

Host Tom Appel and co-hosts Jill Ciminillo and Damon Bell kick off the show by discussing the new-for-2022 Toyota Corolla Cross subcompact SUV, and the redesigned 2022 Infiniti QX60 midsize SUV. Sam Fiorani, Vice President of Global Vehicle Forecasting for AutoForecast Solutions, joins us to give his insight on Ford’s current spate of production setbacks, including the Ford Bronco’s hardtop production woes and the product-allocation challenges for the soon-to-arrive Ford Maverick compact pickup. Tom has a zany quiz for Damon and Jill that links the new Ford Bronco and actor Jimmy Smits, and Damon runs down the latest articles on the Consumer Guide Daily Drive blog–including a look back at the 2002 Mercury Marauder Convertible concept vehicle.

The Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast is broadcast every Sunday on Chicago’s WCPT AM 820 at 1:00 PM CST.

Discussed this week:

First Spin: 2022 Toyota Corolla Cross

Jill’s Corolla Cross Review

First Spin: 2022 Infiniti QX60

AutoForecast Solutions

First Look: 2022 Ford Maverick

Real-World Walk-around: 2021 Ford Bronco

Boyertown Museum of Historic Vehicles

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The End of Terrestrial Radio? Electric Cars and AM Radio

Electric Cars and AM Radio

The all-electric 2021 Volkswagen ID.4 is not available with AM radio.

By Jim Flammang

At this point it’s fairly clear that electric vehicles are the future, but the road to get there is full of hurdles big and small. One of the smaller challenges, at least for a good number of traditional consumers, is this: Electric cars have a problem with AM radio. Why? Because the electric motors that power their drive wheels, propelling the vehicle, also tend to generate electromagnetic interference with AM broadcast reception.

Porsche, for one, has advised that this interference may result in static and crackling sounds. Other automakers point out such possible audio annoyances as distortion, buzzing, and signal fading.

Note that the interference potential applies only to “terrestrial” AM radio. That’s the ground-based transmission method whereby signals are sent from the broadcast transmitter through the air, directly to the radio receiver. Electric motors have no impact on internet-based streaming audio. FM radio reception also is unaffected.

Electric Cars and AM Radio

What Causes the Static?

Many electronic components, including electric motors, have always produced static of some sort. Electric cars are powered by one or more electric motors, fed by a rechargeable battery. Rapidly fluctuating voltage results in the high-level, low-frequency electromagnetic interference that reaches into the radio.

Electromagnetic frequencies generated by EV motors happen to be comparable in wavelength to AM radio signals. The competing signals clash, effectively cancelling each other, as if they were opposing forces. As EV motors grow more powerful, AM static tends to increase.

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Automaker Responses

Concern about electromagnetic interference is nothing new. Back in 2016, a Tesla spokesperson wrote that “AM audio quality can be very poor” in a full-electric car. BMW noted that it had recognized the interference problem early, in its 2009 Mini E and 2012 ActiveE models.

BMW took the lead in skipping AM radio, when the German automaker introduced the i3 sedan as a 2014 model. A spokesperson explained at the time that electric-motor interference was the reason. If AM were not disabled in the i3, unhappy customers were likely to complain about poor sound quality. BMW’s performance standards were very high, the explanation continued. No product that failed to comply would be acceptable.

Tesla followed suit in 2018, omitting AM radio in the original Model S as well as the newer Model X, while introducing an updated internet-radio option. No current Tesla product offers terrestrial AM radio.

Among recently introduced and coming-soon models, Porsche deleted AM radio from its new-for-2019 Taycan’s standard-equipment list. No Audi full-electric models come with AM radio reception, led by the e-Tron. “We don’t want our drivers to have a poor experience,” an Audi spokesperson advised. Many “radio favorites are available seamlessly through digital signals,” via a cellular or wi-fi connection.

Mercedes-Benz hasn’t released a features list for its forthcoming EQS battery-electric sedan, because it won’t reach dealerships for a while yet. We wouldn’t bet that terrestrial AM radio will be included in a car that hovers around the $100,000 neighborhood.

The EV’s “drivetrain generates frequencies that heavily interfere with AM … signals,” a Mercedes-Benz representative explained. “This leads to static, buzzing, and distorted sounds that can overwhelm and block out the broadcast [and] lead to customer dissatisfaction.”

Volvo’s new XC40 Recharge and C40 Recharge omit AM radio because of potential interference.

No specific word yet on audio prospects for Cadillac’s new Lyriq, the GMC Hummer large EV pickup – or for a new brand in town, the Lucid Air, scheduled for unveiling in September 2021.

As for more-mainstream models, Ford is keeping AM radio in the Mustang Mach-E, as well as the new F-150 Lightning pure-electric pickup. A GM spokesperson told the Wall Street Journal that the company was aware of AM reception problems and had “taken steps,” but no details were supplied.

Not every automaker wishes to comment. Some stay mum on details of new models that have not yet been introduced.

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Solutions Wanted

Blaupunkt Frankfort

Broadcast AM radio is uncommon on the Continent, possibly disincentivizing European automakers from developing a fix for the interference issue.

Engineers have found no easy way to eliminate this interference, without adding excessive weight to the car or dollars to its price. As early as 2016, German engineers were said to be working on a prototype that would minimize interference by adding shielding to various cables and wiring components, and increasing insulation around the electric motor. One analyst asserted that Tesla engineers struggled with the early Model S, striving to make AM reception acceptable.

A Toyota expert told the Wall Street Journal that the auto industry faced a comparable challenge long ago, when gasoline cars first began offering AM radio. At that time, they were plagued with noise from the tiny motors in heater fans. As time passed, shielding and other methods helped suppress that bothersome interference.

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AM vs. FM

AM broadcasts are transmitted using “amplitude modulation,” in which the signal strength varies continuously. With FM (“frequency modulation”), signal strength remains constant, while its frequency changes.

AM radio has been declining in popularity for years, but it’s still favored for traffic, weather and news broadcasts during morning commutes. AM fans point out its benefits.

FM delivers higher sound quality – especially for music – but AM signals can travel farther. AM stations cost less to run, allowing more transmission of niche broadcasts, such as foreign-language, religious, and special-interest programming.

5 Reasons Why You Still Need to Learn to Drive Stick

Critical Comments and Customer Complaints

In BMW forums following the i3’s debut, some customers complained about lack of AM radio. A few even said they wouldn’t buy one without it.

As reported by the Wall Street Journal, the National Association of Broadcasters criticized BMW’s 2014 decision, advising that “AM radio continues to serve an important role in America’s cultural landscape.” Later, the NAB insisted that “this narrative that somehow AM radio is dying is silly.”

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The Internet Alternative

Iheart Radio, Tune In Radio

Most major AM radio stations make their programing available in real time on streaming services, including iHeart Radio and TuneIn. WCPT AM 820 in Chicago, which broadcasts the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, is available on both platforms.

Internet-based audio streaming is displacing traditional AM radio reception, which could possibly end up joining cassette players and ashtrays as relics of the past.

Automakers are turning toward this and other options to replace true AM radio. Mercedes-Benz suggests multiple alternatives, including satellite radio, Internet streaming, and numerous AM simulcasts on HD FM radio. Teslas use a service called TuneIn, which allows users to listen a variety of audio content, including more than 100,000 radio stations from around the world.

Why this 50-Year-Old German Radio is the Ultimate Automotive Accessory

Future of AM

Back in the age of crystal sets and headphones, and into the postwar years, intense folks sat hunched over their radios listening to WWL, out of New Orleans. Broadcasting since 1922, it was best heard late at night, when signals traveled the farthest.

As depicted so colorfully in the 1973 film American Graffiti, rock-loving Sixties teens were enthralled by the flamboyant style of DJ Wolfman Jack, broadcasting from XERF in Ciudad Acuña, Mexico. XERF was one of the breed of high-powered radio stations dubbed “border blasters,” which could be heard clearly across the U.S. southwest and beyond.

commuting

The average commuter spends almost an hour a day in the car–plenty of time to listen to something, including the radio.

To AM fans, FM might be deemed elitist, high-falutin’, somber – the domain of classical music devotees. AM comes across as working-class: raucous, loud, unrestrained.

In the view of automakers, a luxury motoring experience should be accompanied by premium audio entertainment. A touch of static and crackling might be tolerable in a lower-priced automobile, but taboo in a luxury vehicle. Unwanted sounds might be less noticeable, too, if the budget-priced car is a tad on the noisy side.

Up to now, at least, only luxury cars have made the change. Most full-electrics (especially middle/low-end) still install AM.

So, is AM radio doomed? Not yet, at least, as a reported 150 million Americans listen to at least some radio each day, especially commuters seeking news, weather, and talk radio.

Listen to the very entertaining Car Stuff Podcast

Electric Cars and AM Radio

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Electric Cars and AM Radio

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What is the Lordstown Endurance?

Lordstown Endurance

Lordstown Endurance

The Lordstown Endurance is a battery-electric pickup truck developed by Ohio-based electric-vehicle startup Lordstown Motors. Yet to see regular production, the Endurance is unique among electric vehicles in that it is designed to use hub motors instead of axle- or transmission-mounted motors, thus eliminating the need for a transmission, traditional axles, or half shafts.

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What is the Lordstown Endurance?

The Endurance is planned to be offered only as a 5-passenger crew cab, and, at least initially, only with all-wheel drive. Per Lordstown, the four hub motors combine to deliver 600 horsepower. The Endurance is equipped with what is estimated by outside sources as a 109-kWh battery, which provides a Lordstown-claimed driving range of 250 miles. The pickup is rated to tow 7500 pounds, and prices are planned to start at $52,500.

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 82: EV Smartphone Apps, 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning

Lordstown Endurance, Hub Motors, What is the Lordstown Endurance?

Like many EV startup companies, including Tesla, Lordstown is opting to sell vehicles directly to consumers, sidestepping the traditional franchise dealer system employed by mainstream manufacturers.

Production of the Endurance has been delayed twice as of this writing. The first trucks were scheduled to be delivered by the end of 2021, but Lordstown has recently said that timeframe will not be met, and a new target date for delivery has not yet been set. The company also recently announced that it would need to raise additional cash before it is able to deliver production examples of the Endurance.

Lordstown Motors’ success had been predicated in part by the ability of another EV startup company, Workhorse, to secure a U.S. Postal Service contract to supply electric mail-delivery trucks. Workhorse had contracted with Lordstown to manufacture the mail trucks it had designed, but those plans fell through when the USPS opted to contract with OshKosh Defense instead of Workhorse to manufacture a new-generation postal delivery vehicle.

Lordstown Motors and Workhorse have an interesting history. Lordstown was created in 2018, largely by the ownership of Workhorse, for the sole purpose of acquiring General Motors’ idle Lordstown, Ohio, assembly facility. The purchase of that plant was financed in part by General Motors, which also took a minor equity stake in the project. At one time, the same man—Steve Burns—was the CEO of both Workhorse and Lordstown.

First Spin: 2021 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited 4xe

Lordstown Endurance

Lordstown Endurance

Even if Workhorse had been granted the USPS contract, Lordstown would have been left with considerable surplus manufacturing capacity, with which it had planned to build its own vehicles, beginning with the Endurance.

Listen to the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

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Lordstown Endurance Gallery

(Click below for enlarged images)

What is the Lordstown Endurance?

Mail-Truck Mainstay: What Was The Grumman LLV?

What is the Lordstown Endurance?

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Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 67; New-Car Affordability, 2022 Nissan Pathfinder and Frontier

New-Car Affordability

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

Whether you drive a car, need a car, or just occasionally bum a ride with friends, you’ve come to the right place. Join the editors of Consumer Guide Automotive as they break down everything that’s going on in the auto world. New-car reviews, shopping tips, driving green, electric cars, classic cars, and plenty of great guests. This is the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast.

Episode: 67

Broadcast date: February 7, 2021

Guest: Todd Lassa

New-Car Affordability, 2022 Nissan Pathfinder and Frontier

Host Tom Appel and co-hosts Jill Ciminillo and Damon Bell start the show by discussing the recent unveiling of the 2022 Nissan Pathfinder midsize SUV and 2022 Nissan Frontier midsize pickup.  Todd Lassa, veteran automotive journalist and founding editor of The Hustings (thehustings.news), joins us to talk about some current auto-industry trends and fill us in on The Hustings–a news website that is designed to deliver straight news and non-partisan political analysis, with liberal and conservative commentary all on one page.  Tom has a “buzzer-style” name-that-vehicle quiz for Damon and Jill, and Damon runs down the latest articles on the Consumer Guide Daily Drive blog, including a test-drive review of the 2021 Ram 1500 TRX and 2021 Genesis GV80.

The Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast is broadcast every Sunday on Chicago’s WCPT AM 820 at 1:00 PM CST.

Discussed this week:

2022 Frontier by the specs

The Hustings

shinymetalboxes

Test Drive: 2021 Ram 1500 TRX

Test Drive: 2021 Genesis GV80 2.5T Prestige

Cold Snap: Why Your Tire Pressure Warning Light Is On

Review Flashback: Luxury Sedans of 1973 (Comparison Test)

Follow the crew:

The CG Daily Drive Blog

Car Stuff Facebook Page

Consumer Guide on Twitter

Todd Lassa on Twitter

Tom on Twitter

Damon on Twitter

Jill on Twitter

Tom on the radio:

Tom on WGN Radio

Tom on Green Sense Radio

Tom on the Stan Milam Show

The Crew

Infiniti QX55

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 57; 2021 Consumer Guide Best Buys

New-Car Affordability

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Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 36: Cars of 1940, 2021 Ford F-150

Cars of 1940

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

Whether you drive a car, need a car, or just occasionally bum a ride with friends, you’ve come to the right place. Join the editors of Consumer Guide Automotive as they break down everything that’s going on in the auto world. New-car reviews, shopping tips, driving green, electric cars, classic cars, and plenty of great guests. This is the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast.

Episode: 36

Broadcast date: July 5, 2020

Guest: John Biel

Cars of 1940, 2021 Ford F-150

Host Tom Appel and co-hosts Jill Ciminillo and Damon Bell start off the show by discussing Ford’s recent unveiling of the redesigned 2021 F-150 pickup and the truck’s many new features. Next, we talk about our test-drive experiences with the 2020 Alfa Romeo Giulia. Collectible Automobile magazine Editor-in-Chief John Biel joins us to chat about the great features in the August 2020 issue, including an overview of the cars of 1940 and a retrospective on the 1978-80 Chevrolet Monte Carlo. Tom has a quiz for Damon and Jill on unusual vehicle co-branding tie-ins, and Damon runs down the latest articles on the Consumer Guide Daily Drive blog, including a first-look article on the 2021 Kia K5 midsize sedan.

The Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast is broadcast every Sunday on Chicago’s WCPT AM 820 at 1:00 PM CST.

Discussed this week:

First Look: 2021 Ford F-150

2021 F-150 PowerBoost Details

2021 F-150 Trim Levels in Photos

First Look: 2021 Kia K5

Quick Spin: 2020 GMC Sierra 2500 AT4

Forgotten Concept: Lincoln Sentinel

Subscribe to Collectible Automobile Magazine

More Consumer Guide Test Drives

Follow the crew:

The CG Daily Drive Blog

Car Stuff Facebook Page

Consumer Guide on Twitter

Tom on Twitter

Damon on Twitter

Jill on Twitter

John Biel on Twitter

Drive, She Said (Jill’s blog)

Tom on the radio:

Tom on the Nick Digilio Show

Tom on Green Sense Radio

Tom on the Stan Milam Show

Cars of 1940

First Look: 2021 Kia K5

 First Look: 2021 Kia K5

2021 Kia K5

Kia unveiled an all-new version of its mainline midsize sedan today, and with it a new model name. “Out” is the Optima nameplate, replaced by a badge that Kia uses for this car in global markets: K5. “In” is dramatic new styling, available all-wheel drive, a choice of two turbocharged 4-cylinder engines, and fresh technology features.

2021 Kia K5

The 2021 Kia K5 is built on an all-new “N3” platform, which is a bit lower, wider, and longer in both wheelbase and overall length than the previous-generation Optima’s architecture. Kia says the N3 platform is stronger and quieter too.

First Look: 2021 Kia K5

2021 Kia K5

Kia says the K5’s striking exterior design incorporates DNA from its high-performance Stinger hatchback sedan, while expanding the brand’s future design language. Highlights of the new look include a “shark-skin” mesh grille, daytime running lights and taillights with a “heartbeat” shape inspired by an EKG pulse monitor, a gloss black applique on the rear trunk that emphasizes the fastback-esque profile, and a striking chrome accent strip that flows from the tops of the side windows to the forward edge of the trunk lid. The interior design is similarly sporty, with a cockpit-like horizontal layout, aircraft-style shift lever, and available flat-bottom steering wheel.

First Look: 2021 Ford F-150

 First Look: 2021 Kia K5The base engine, which comes in LX, LXS, GT-Line, and EX models, is a turbo 1.6-liter 4-cylinder that makes 180 horsepower and is paired with an 8-speed automatic transmission. Optional on LXS and GT-Line is all-wheel drive in place of the standard front-wheel drive. The AWD system (the first offered in Kia’s midsize sedan) comes with a snow mode for better all-weather performance.

Test Drive: 2019 Kia Optima SX Turbo

The performance-oriented K5 GT gets a turbo 2.5-liter 4-cylinder that makes 290 horsepower and is paired with a new dual-clutch 8-speed transmission; Kia claims a 0-60-mph time of 5.8 seconds. The GT also gets a sport-tuned suspension, 19-inch wheels on Pirelli P-Zero tires, and a Sport + setting on the drive-mode control system.

The Kia Drive Wise suite of safety features is standard on all K5s. Available technology features include natural-language voice-command software, wireless smartphone charging, wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto functionality, hands-free Smart Trunk, remote engine start, Bose 12-speaker sound system, and a 10.25-inch high-resolution touchscreen in place of the standard 8-inch touchscreen.

The 2021 Kia K5 is built in Kia’s West Point, Georgia, assembly facility alongside the Telluride midsize SUV. The K5 goes on sale this summer, with GT and all-wheel-drive versions following later in the fall.

First Look: 2021 Lexus IS

First Look: 2021 Kia K5

2021 Kia K5

CG Says:

Domestic manufacturers may be turning away from traditional sedans as of late, but import brands are remaining committed to this declining, but still vital, market segment. Kia’s press presentation for the K5 noted that there were 1.5 million midsize cars sold in America last year. With crossover SUVs taking over as the default family vehicles of choice, we’ve seen the latest iterations of traditional midsize sedans get more style-forward and performance-focused. The 2021 Kia K5 is in keeping with that trend. The K5 shares is basic architecture with the redesigned-for-2020 Hyundai Sonata, but there are significant differences in powertrain/feature availability between the two, and the interior and exterior styling is likewise completely different. The K5 strikes us as the sportier, more driver-oriented choice.

We’re not quite sold on Kia’s decision to ashcan the Optima name in favor of K5. Though the change better aligns with Kia’s global presence with this car, there was nothing wrong with the Optima name, and alphanumeric monikers have had a spotty success rate in the U.S. market. Names aside, the K5 strikes us as a winner overall.

First Look: 2021 Nissan Rogue

First Look: 2021 Kia K5

2021 Kia K5

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Check out the Car Stuff Podcast

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