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GKN Driveline's New Technology Saves Weight and Fuel

   With its patented crosstrack(TM) designs, GKN Driveline combines straight-and-angled ball tracks to produce joints that allow car makers to further reduce driveshaft noise, vibration and harshness. GKN Driveline is developing new technologies to provide lighter driveshaft components, improved fuel economy and better overall vehicle performance. (PRNewsFoto/GKN Driveline)

DETROIT, MI UNITED STATES
   Because of its unique track design, GKN Driveline's countertrack(TM) system balances internal forces within a joint to improve operating efficiency by reducing energy losses due to heat and friction. Another design feature allows engineers to reduce overall package size and increase steering angles to enhance maneuverability. GKN Driveline is developing new technologies to provide lighter driveshaft components, improved fuel economy and better overall vehicle performance. (PRNewsFoto/GKN Driveline)

DETROIT, MI UNITED STATES
    AUBURN HILLS, Mich., Dec. 28 /PRNewswire/ -- Vehicle makers plan to
introduce "breakthrough" technology from GKN Driveline that provides lighter
driveshaft components, improved fuel economy and better overall vehicle
performance.
    (Photo:  http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20051214/DEW013-a
             http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20051214/DEW013-b )
    "Customers whose cars are equipped with this new technology will notice
significant improvements in performance," says Rob Rickell, director of
engineering for the GKN Driveline's global driveshaft group.
    The technology is scheduled to appear on new models built in the USA next
year, followed by European introductions.  Compared with current designs, GKN
Driveline's new driveshaft components will offer new-car buyers products that
are expected to be:

    *  Lighter by 8.8 pounds or more,
    *  More fuel efficient by up to .65 gallons per 1,000 miles,
    *  Easier to park with turning-circle reductions of one meter or more and
    *  Quieter, due to reductions in driveline noise, vibration and harshness.

    "Our new designs represent the first major change in constant-velocity
joint (CVJ) technology in more than 70 years," says Rickell.  "Teamwork played
a major role in the development process.  Engineering groups working together
at company research centers in Germany, Mexico, Spain and the USA were able to
develop production-ready components in less than three years."
    Driveshafts equipped with the new technology will be manufactured at GKN
Driveline facilities around the world.  The company is the industry's leading
supplier of CVJs designed to help transfer power from a vehicle's engine to
its wheels.  Car and light-truck drivelines typically are equipped with up to
12 such joints.  GKN Driveline currently produces more than 95-million CVJs
per year.
    With GKN Driveline's new technology, the owner of a mid-sized, front-
wheel-drive car equipped with a six-cylinder engine could expect annual fuel-
economy savings of $95 or more, according to Rickell.
    In addition to various consumer benefits, GKN Driveline's new generation
of CVJs also provides vehicle manufacturers with reductions in driveshaft
package size up to eight percent or more and improvements in operating
efficiency of more than 30 percent.  Package-size reductions also can reduce
component weight from eight to 15 percent.
    The company's patented countertrack(TM) and crosstrack(TM) technologies
currently are undergoing further development in collaboration with two
European manufacturers, two Japanese carmakers and one in the USA.
    "We expect countertrack(TM) and crosstrack(TM) technology to replace
designs currently used on an industry-wide basis within a relatively short
period of time," Rickell said.
    Because of its unique track design, GKN Driveline's countertrack(TM)
system balances internal forces within a joint to improve operating efficiency
by reducing energy losses due to heat and friction.  Another design feature
allows engineers to reduce overall package size and increase steering angles
to enhance maneuverability.
    With its patented crosstrack(TM) designs, GKN Driveline combines straight-
and angled-ball tracks to produce joints that allow carmakers to further
reduce driveshaft noise, vibration and harshness.
    GKN Driveline is a global tier-one supplier of vehicle driveline
components and systems with sales of $3.82 billion.  The company has 21,000
employees and 49 facilities in 31 countries.  Additional information is
available on the Internet at http://www.gkndriveline.com .


SOURCE GKN Driveline




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Related links:
  • http://www.gkndriveline.com
    Photo Notes:
    NewsCom: 
    http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20051214/DEW013-a
    http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20051214/DEW013-b
    AP Archive: http://photoarchive.ap.org
    PRN Photo Desk, photodesk@prnewswire.com
    CONTACT:
    Company Contact: Paul Dinwiddy of GKN
    Driveline, +44 1527 533 646, e-mail:
    paul.dinwiddy@gkndriveline.com ; or Media Contacts: Larry Weis,
    e-mail: lweis@usautocom.com , or Chip Drake, e-mail:
    cdrake@usautocom.com , of AutoCom Associates, +1-248-647-8621,
    for GKN Driveline