Everything about Gm Daewoo totally explained
GM Daewoo Auto & Technology (
GM Daewoo or
GMDAT) was first established as National Motor in
1937 in
Bupyeong-gu,
Incheon,
South Korea. After changing its name to Saenara Motor in 1962, Saenara Motor was bought by Shinjin Industrial in 1965, which changed its name to Shinjin Motor after establishing collaborations with
Toyota.
After
Toyota's withdrawal in 1972, Shinjin Motor started a joint venture with
General Motors under the name General Motors Korea, but was renamed again in 1976 to Saehan Motor. After the
Daewoo Group gained control in 1982 the name was changed to Daewoo Motor. In the early 1990s the company started to expand heavily throughout the world. Until 1996 all cars were based on models from
General Motors. After the
Asian financial crisis started in 1997, it took over the troubled
4WD specialist
SsangYong in 1998, but ran into financial trouble in 1999.
In 2001 General Motors decided to buy most of
Daewoo Motor's assets to form
GM Daewoo. The new company started operations on
October 17,
2002, with GM and its partners
Suzuki and
SAIC holding a stake of 66.7% with investments of US$400 million. The remaining equity stake of 33.3% was held by Korea Development Bank and several other Korean creditors with investments of US$197 million. The deal didn't include 15 plants, especially Daewoo's oldest plant in
Bupyeong-gu which now operates under the name Daewoo Incheon Motor Company as a supplier to GM Daewoo; General Motors plans to buy this plant by 2008. In 2004,
Tata Motors purchased
Daewoo's Truck manufacturing unit. In February 2005, GM invested US$49 million to raise its share in the company to 48.2%. Furthermore, GM acquired 6.9 million shares in GM Daewoo for US$21 million from Suzuki Motors in August of the same year. General Motors' share in GM Daewoo then increased to 50.9%. Suzuki still holds 11% of GMDAT but is reported to be considering selling this to GM.
GMDAT has design, engineering, research & development facilities that are involved in development for various GM products. On
November 25,
2003, the design center was relocated to the new 2-story building at the
Bupyeong-gu headquarters and assigned the task to style a new SUV based on GM's
Theta automobile platform to be released in 2006.
GMDAT has manufacturing plants in Korea and an assembly plant in Vietnam. GMDAT-designed cars are also assembled in
mainland China,
Thailand,
India, and
Colombia (as of February 2005). Its cars are marketed in over 140 countries (as of February 2005). In 2004, GMDAT sold more than 900,000 vehicles worldwide.
Car models
Daewoos were first sold around the world as the
Daewoo LeMans or
Pontiac LeMans or known as
Daewoo Racer, a model based on the
Opel Kadett E. The
Saehan Bird, based on the
General Motors T-car platform, was exported to Malaysia as the Opel Gemini; this was also known in South Korea as the
Daewoo Maepsy. A larger
Opel Commodore-based model, called the
Daewoo Royale was also available. The
Daewoo Prince, which had commonalities with the Australian
Holden Commodore, was built until 1993.
In the 1990s, Daewoo expanded its presence under its own brand, notably in Europe, where it sold the
Opel Ascona-based
Espero and Kadett-based
Daewoo Nexia (also Racer and Cielo in the domestic market; the latter is often spelled as
Ciero for more
Korean-like sound. The Cielo was named Heaven (
Cielo means
heaven in
Spanish) in the
Chilean market.
Ssangyong models
Korando and
Musso were sold briefly under the Daewoo brand in certain European countries (most notably France and Germany) from 1999 to 2001.
Under the supervision of Dr.
Ulrich Bez, Daewoo developed its own models not based on any GM platform. These were codenamed as the T100, J100 and V100, reflecting the code names used by General Motors, with
Italdesign Giugiaro working on the T100 and V100. The J100 was designed by IDEA of Italy. These were exported from late 1998 to Daewoo Motor America as the sub-compact
Daewoo Lanos (meaning "pleasure" in Latin), compact
Daewoo Nubira ("to go everywhere/anywhere" in Korean), and the mid-size
Daewoo Leganza (combining the words
elegante and
forza, the latter meaning
power in
Italian). Other markets received these three cars, too. The Leganza's styling was reportedly based on an Italdesign show car based on
Jaguar XJ-12 mechanicals; the real thing was more modest, with
Holden-built 2.2 L engines shipped from
Melbourne to Daewoo's Korean plant.
The
Rezzo/Tacuma minivan and the
Matiz/Spark micro-car are other models sold by Daewoo in various markets. The
Magnus/Evanda is a development of the Leganza. The
Daewoo Kalos subcompact was released in late 2002. A new version of the Nubira sedan was released in 2003 while the
Daewoo Lacetti, a 5-door
hatchback version of the Nubira, followed in 2004. The Kalos and the Lacetti were styled by Giugiaro, and styling of the Nubira sedan was the responsibility of
Pininfarina. These models are sold under the Chevrolet brand in Europe.
Overseas engagements
Daewoo owned a share of
ZAZ, an automobile manufacturer based in
Ukraine, from 1998 to 2003. The
CKD assembly of the Daewoo Lanos started 2002 and lately it was adopted for full-scale production as the
ZAZ Lanos. A version of the Daewoo-developed
Chevrolet Aveo is being assembled for local market at the
Iliychevsk subsidiary.
In August 1992, Daewoo set up
UzDaewooAuto, a joint venture and a factory in
Asaka city,
Andizhan province,
Uzbekistan, leveraging the presence of a large
local ethnic Korean minority. Currently, the plant assembles the Matiz and the Nexia for both the local market and export, as well as the Lacetti hatchback and sedan for the domestic market only.
Daewoo also invested into Poland's
Fabryka Samochodów Osobowych in 1995, forming a joint venture for assembly of the Matiz microcar, a successor to the
Tico that was very popular in the
Eastern European market. Since January 2005 FSO began to produce Matiz and Lanos under their own trademark.
Since 1995, Daewoo has acquired a factory in
Craiova,
Romania which was producing a derivate of a
Citroën model, the
Oltcit. The entire production facility was refurbished to mainly produce the Cielo model and later, other models. Currently it's producing the Daewoo Cielo, Matiz and Nubira models for the Romanian market, but also exports car parts, such as engines and gearboxes to GM Daewoo and to other companies. The factory was acquired by the Romanian Government which aims to start a new privatisation procedure. GM is one of the potential buyers, alongside
Ford and
Chery.
In 1998, the low-volume assembly of the Lanos, Nubira and the Leganza started in
Taganrog,
Russia, at the
TagAZ factory. The cars were sold on the local market under the
Doninvest brand, as the
Assol, the
Orion and the
Kondor, respectively. The project didn't have much success, so TagAZ recently turned to
Hyundai and started producing the
Hyundai Accent and the
Kia Rio
Following the
GM buyout in 2002, GM Daewoo lost interest in its overseas assets; the deals on supplies of pre-assembled CKD kits will end in 2005 and the facilities are likely to rely on its own production capabilities from that point on.
Badge engineering
GM changed the Daewoo name to something with more prestige in order to increase sales in the local market. GM decided to comply and started selling the Daewoo Lacetti as Chevrolet Optra. This was the first time GM sold
re-badged Daewoo cars.
No Daewoo-built vehicles were offered in the US for the 2003 model year. However, Daewoo exports found their way to countries such as Canada, India and the
People's Republic of China. In some places of the world (notably Canada, India and Israel) the Daewoo brand didn't exist at the time anymore and Daewoo cars were sold as "Chevrolet".
The re-branded Daewoo models sold in Israel succeeded far beyond GM's expectations so the Daewoo re-branding strategy was adopted to other countries as well. In most European countries however, GM retained the Daewoo brand and original model names until December 31, 2004.
GM Daewoo-built vehicles returned to the US market in 2004 and continue to be marketed to this day. The
Chevrolet Aveo,
Suzuki Forenza and
Suzuki Reno, all offered in the US market, are re-badged Daewoos (they are sold in South Korea as the Daewoo Gentra, Lacetti sedan, and Lacetti hatchback, respectively).
In 2005, GM branded most Daewoos as
Chevrolets in most markets, with Europe starting in January. Exceptions are China (where the cars are rebadged as Buick and Chevrolet), South Korea (GM Daewoo), Vietnam (where Daewoo is retained), Australia and New Zealand (
Holden), the United States (Chevrolet, Suzuki), and Canada (Chevrolet, Pontiac, and Suzuki). The intent of utilizing the Chevrolet brand worldwide is to make Chevrolet a global brand of GM. One casualty of this is that the "Nubira" name disappeared in favor of "Lacetti" in the UK, although the "Nubira" sedan remains in the rest of the Europe. A final odd consequence in Europe for 2005 is that the
Chevrolet Corvette, which continues to be imported, dropped the
Chevrolet name, with "Corvette" becoming the marque.
In areas where GM Daewoo has no official distributors, it's possible to buy the same car under several brand names.
Recent developments
The
Daewoo Kalos, which was exported globally as the Chevrolet Aveo, was released in September 2005. The
Daewoo Tosca, the Magnus replacement, appeared in early 2006.
The
Daewoo Winstorm SUV, based on the
Chevrolet S3X concept developed using the
GM Theta platform, was released in summer 2006 release. It is also sold in South Korea as Daewoo Winstorm. It feature a
common rail Diesel engine for the first time in a Daewoo vehicle, in addition to regular
gasoline engines. The engine design is licensed from the Italian engine maker
VM Motori.
Future plans
A model based on the
Chevrolet T2X, a "sport coupé–SUV" concept car, may join the lineup in 2008.
GM Daewoo will also take responsibility for developing the future version of the
GM Gamma platform, currently used by the
Opel Corsa D and the
Fiat Grande Punto. Therefore, it has been speculated that the Chevrolet Corsa C, sold in Latin America since 2002, may be replaced or joined by a slightly modified version of the Corsa D - in the latter case, it might be named Astra (like the
Chevrolet Vectra, which is a
Opel Astra C with a different front end), and the Corsa may be followed by a Kalos/Aveo built on the Corsa B's platform with many shared pieces with the
Chevrolet Celta.
Manufacturing facilities
South Korea
- Bupyeong-gu: vehicle assembly and gasoline/LPG engine manufacturing (production capacity: est. 440,000/year)
- Gunsan: vehicle assembly and diesel engine manufacturing (production capacity: est. 260,000/year)
- Changwon: vehicle assembly and gasoline/LPG engine manufacturing (production capacity: est. 210,000/year)
- Boryeong: transmission and engine components manufacturing
Vietnam
VIDAMCO at Hanoi: vehicle assembly (production capacity: est. 11,000/year)
List of Daewoo models
Passenger cars
Daewoo-based models
- Espero (1990–1997, also known as the Aranos)
- Kalos (2002–present, also marketed as the Chevrolet Aveo/Kalos, Daewoo Gentra/Gentra X Holden Barina, Pontiac Wave, and the Suzuki Swift+)
- Lacetti (2003–present, also known as the Suzuki Forenza, Chevrolet Optra/Lacetti, Holden Viva and Buick Excelle/Excelle HRV)
- Lanos (1996–2005, also known as the Doninvest Assol, ZAZ Lanos (Sens), FSO Lanos and Chevrolet Lanos)
- Leganza (1997–2002, also known as the Doninvest Kondor)
- Magnus (2000–2006, also known as the Evanda, Chevrolet Epica/Evanda, Suzuki Verona)
- Matiz (1998–present, also known as the Chevrolet Matiz/Spark/Joy, FSO Matiz and Pontiac Matiz G2)
- Nubira (1997–2003), also known as the Doninvest Orion)
- Tacuma (2000–present, also named as the Chevrolet Tacuma/Rezzo/Vivant)
- Tosca (2006–present, also known as the Chevrolet Epica or Holden Epica)
- Winstorm (2006–present, also known as the Chevrolet Captiva and Holden Captiva)
Holden-based models
Honda-based models
Opel-based models
- Cielo (1994–1997, based on the Opel Kadett E, also known as the Cielo, Heaven, Nexia, Racer.)
- LeMans (1986–1994, based on the Opel Kadett E, variants were the Racer (sedan) and Penta (hatchback), also known as the 1.5i (Australia), Fantasy (Thailand), Pointer, Asüna GT (Canada 1991–1993 hatchback), Asüna SE (Canada 1991–1993 sedan), Passport Optima (Canada 1989–1991) and Pontiac LeMans (North America).)
- Maespy (1982–1986, based on the Opel Kadett C)
- Prince (1991–1997), based on Opel Rekord E, also known as the Super Salon and Brougham (1991–1999)
- Royale (1975–1991, first generation (1975–1978) based on Opel Rekord D, second generation (1980–1991) based on Opel Rekord E, variants: Royale Salon/Royale XG/Royale Prince/Royale Duke/Royale Diesel]].)
Saturn-based models
SsangYong Motor Company-based models
Suzuki-based models
Commercial vehicles
» Daewoo's commercial vehicle business was acquired by Tata Motors in 2004. The business is now known as Tata Daewoo Commercial Vehicle. Daewoo Bus isn't owned by Tata.
Daewoo BM090
Daewoo BS090
Daewoo BF101/105
Daewoo BS105/106
Daewoo BV101
Daewoo BV113
Daewoo BH113
Daewoo BH115
Daewoo BH115E
Daewoo BH116
Daewoo BH117
Daewoo BH120(H)
Daewoo Chasedae Truck
Elf (Rebadged Isuzu Elf)
Concept cars
Daewoo DEV-4 (1994) - electric vehicle based on the Daewoo Cielo
Daewoo No.1 (1995)
Daewoo No.2 (1995)
Daewoo Mya (1996)
Daewoo Tacuma (1997)
Daewoo Joyster (1997)
Daewoo Matiz (1997)
Daewoo DEV-5 (1997)
Nubira HEV / Leganza NGV (1997)
Daewoo Shiraz (1997)- all 1997 concepts shown in the 1997 Seoul Motor Show
Daewoo Mirae (1999)
Daewoo DMS-1 (1999)
Daewoo Musiro (2000)
Daewoo Vada (2001)
GM Daewoo Flex/Universe (2001)
GM Daewoo Oto/Scope (2003)
GM Daewoo M3X (2004) - third generation of Matiz since 2005
GM Daewoo S3X (2004) - GM Daewoo Winstorm since 2006
GM Daewoo T2X (2005)
Chevrolet WTTC Ultra (2006) - designed by the GM DAT Design Center
GM Daewoo G2X (2006) - sold in South Korea since the end of 2007
Chevrolet Trax (2007) - designed by the GM DAT Design Center
Chevrolet Beat (2007) - designed by the GM DAT Design Center
Chevrolet Groove (2007) - designed by the GM DAT Design CenterFurther Information
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