AM Generalis an American heavy vehicle andcontractautomotive manufacturer based inSouth Bend, Indiana.It is best known for the civilianHummerand the militaryHumveethat are assembled inMishawaka, Indiana.[4]From 1974–1979 the company also manufacturedtransit buses,making more than 5,400 of them.[5]

AM General LLC
Company typePortfolio company
IndustryAutomotive
PredecessorKaiser Jeep
Founded1971;53 years ago(1971)[1]
FounderAmerican Motors
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
James Cannon (CEO)[2]
Products
Revenue740,000,000 United States dollar (2012)Edit this on Wikidata
ParentKPS Capital Partners(2020–)[3]
SubsidiariesGeneral Engine Products
General Transmission Products
Websiteamgeneral

AM General has also been a provider of vehicles for theCUCVprogram carried out by theUnited States Armed Forces.[6]

History

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Beginning

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AM General traces its roots to theStandard Wheel CompanyofTerre Haute, Indiana,which expanded in 1903 to include theOverland AutomotiveDivision.[7]In 1908,John North Willyspurchased the Overland company, then based inIndianapolis, Indiana,and renamed itWillys-OverlandMotors. In the 1940s, as Willys, it collaborated withFordto develop a vehicle toUS Armyspecifications. It then mass-produced that vehicle as "America's first four-wheel-drive, one-fourth-ton, tactical utility truck" —theJeepofWorld War IIfame.[7]In 1953,Kaiser Motorspurchased Willys-Overland, changing its name first to Kaiser-Willys Motor Company, and in 1963, toKaiser-JeepCorporation. In 1970, it was purchased byAmerican Motors Corporation(AMC). In July 2020,KPS Capital Partnersacquired the company.[8]

Defense and Government Products Division

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In 1964, Kaiser-Jeep purchased theStudebaker facilities on Chippewa AvenueinSouth Bend, Indiana,which included Studebaker's "General Products Division", along with its substantial defense contracts.

At the time, Kaiser had been awarded aUS$87 million Army truck contract, and under government pressure, agreed to perform the work at the South Bend plant it had recently acquired from Studebaker.

American Motors

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American Motors Corporation(AMC) purchased the Jeep Corporation from Kaiser in 1970 when Kaiser decided to leave the auto business.[9]

In 1971, AMC made the General Products Division ofJeep(producing military trucks as well as contract and non-commercial vehicles) awholly owned subsidiaryand renamed it "AM General Corporation".[1]

American Motors ceased to function as an independentautomakerin 1982 when a controlling interest was purchased byRenault.[10]

US government regulations at that time forbade ownership ofdefense contractorsby foreign governments—and Renault was partially owned by the French government.[11]

LTV Corporation

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In 1983,LTV Corporationbought AM General and established it as a wholly owned subsidiary. In 1984, its headquarters moved from the American Motors AMTEK Building inDetroit,Michigan,toLivonia, Michigan,and two years later to South Bend, Indiana, where primary manufacturing operations were located.

Renco Group

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In 1992, AM General was sold toRenco Group,which in 2002 converted it to alimited liability company.

Hummer brand

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In 1984 AM General built a separate factory at 13200 McKinley Hwy in Mishawaka for HMMWV production.

In 1992 AM General began marketing the HMMWV to the civilian market under theHummerbrand. In 1999, GM acquired the rights to the brand and continued production of the original civilian Hummer as theH1until June 2006.[12]

TheHummer H2went on the market in 2002, and was produced until January 2009. It was designed and marketed by GM, but manufactured by AM General at the Mishawaka plant. AM General did not build the H3 model.

GM was sued early in 2003 byDaimlerChrysler,owners of theJeepbrand, for the resemblance of the Hummer's seven-slot grille to Jeep's.[13]The lawsuit was dismissed after acknowledgment of the shared corporate history of AMC and Jeep.[14]GM in turn sued boutique automaker Avanti Motor Corporation of Cancun, Mexico after it introduced the Studebaker XUV at the Chicago Auto show in 2002. GM said Avanti infringed on the Hummer looks by planning a vehicle that closely resembled the Hummer. It seemed the AM General Hummer line had gone full circle back to the original Studebaker General Products Division which was responsible for all military contracts.

2004–present

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On August 20, 2004, it was announced thatRonald Perelman'sMacAndrews & Forbescompany would form a joint venture with AM General's then-owner, Renco Group, to give Perelman 70% ownership. The deal reportedly cost close to US$1 billion.[15]

In 2008, AM General and theVehicle Production Group(VPG), ofTroy, Michigan,announced that contracts had been signed for AM General to begin producing purpose-built taxi-cabs in 2009.[16]Actual production would not begin until October 2011. The first vehicle off the line was presented to Marc Buoniconti, a former linebacker forThe Citadelwho was partially paralyzed in 1985.[17]

In May 2010,Azure Dynamicsannounced it had chosen AM General to assemble its electric drivetrain forFord Transit Connectvehicles for the North American market at its Livonia, Michigan, factory.[18]

In September 2013, AM General reached an agreement to purchase theUnited States Department of Energy's secured loan to theVehicle Production Group(VPG). Prior to this, AM General acted as the sole vehicle assembler for VPG. As a result of this transaction, AM General created a wholly owned company, Mobility Ventures LLC, to operate the Mobility Vehicle-1 (MV-1) business and receive all VPG assets.[19]

In 2015, production of theMercedes-Benz R-Classbegan at the Mishawaka assembly plant.[20]Without this deal, "the German automaker would likely have had to shut down production of the vehicle, currently only sold in China."[21]Production ended in October 2017.[citation needed]

In July 2020, it was revealed thatinvestment companyKPS Capital Partnershad reached an agreement to acquire AM General from its previous owner,MacAndrews & Forbes.[3][22]

AM General submitted a prototype to become theUnited States Postal Service'sNext Generation Delivery Vehicle,but their entry was not chosen.[23]

Products

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Jeep Dispatcher 100

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1975 AM General RWD postal delivery van

Another familiar product from the AM General line was theJeep DJ-5 series—a purpose-built "Dispatch Jeep" 2-wheel drive (RWD) version of theJeep CJ-5—used in huge numbers as a right-hand drive mail delivery vehicle by theUnited States Postal Service.

Buses

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A 1976 AM General bus of Tri-Met, in Portland, Oregon, showing AM General logo on front

TheAM General Metropolitanbuseswere manufactured for city transit use from 1974 until 1979, producing a total of 5,431 buses (including 219electric trolley buses).[5]The Metropolitan was built under a 1971 agreement withFlyer IndustriesofWinnipeg,Manitoba; AM General licensed the rights to build and market theWestern Flyer D700for the US market. The D700 itself was similar in design to the contemporaneousGM New Look buses.[24]The front end of the D700 was restyled and thus the resulting Metropolitan was not simply a Flyer design built under license but rather a jointly designed vehicle. Flyer later adopted the design changes for its own line as themodels D800 and E800.[5]Buses were built in lengths of either 35 ft (10.7 m) or 40 ft (12.2 m), and widths of 96 in (2,438 mm) or 102 in (2,591 mm).[24]The model numbers reflected the chosen dimensions; for example, model "10240" indicated a 102-inch wide, 40-foot long bus. Suffixes "A" or "B" were used for later models to indicate certain options. In total, 3,571 40-foot diesel buses and 1,641 35-foot diesel buses were produced.[5]

Articulated buses

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AMANarticulated busin Seattle that was completed by AM General

In 1977–1979, AM General also worked under a partnership withMANof Germany to buildSG 220articulated busesfor US transit systems. MAN fabricated the bodyshells in Germany and shipped them to the US for AM General for final assembly.[25]Two different lengths were offered, 55 ft (16.8 m) and 60 ft (18.3 m); 93 buses were built to the shorter length while the rest were 60 feet long. By October 1978,[25]the company discontinued bus production with the last unit completed in March 1979.[5]The total number built was just under 400 (392[25]or 399[5]), the largest group by far being 150 for Seattle'sMetro Transit.[5]MAN subsequently set up its own factory for US production inCleveland, North Carolina.[5]

Trolleybuses

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Production of completemotor buses(and of any two-axle motor buses) had ended in 1978 and aside from the fitting-out of the last articulated MAN shells, the only production in 1979 was two batches oftrolleybuses(and the only such vehicles ever built by the company).[26]These were all 40-foot (12.2 m) vehicles, model 10240T: 110 trackless trolleys for thePhiladelphia trolleybus system,operated bySEPTA;and 109 for theSeattle trolleybus system,operated byMetro Transit(now King County Metro). One of the latter has been preserved since its retirement in 2003 by King County Metro (seeKing County Metro fleet).

Development and production of the HMMWV

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AM General HMMWV in Iraq

In 1979, AM General began preliminary design work on theM998 Series High Mobility Multi-Purpose Wheeled Vehicle(HMMWV, pronounced Humvee), a 1.25-ton truck intended to replace theM151and otherLight Utility Vehicles.The US Army awarded AM General a prototype contract in 1981 with development and operational testing conducted over a five-month period in 1982. In March 1983, AM General won an initial $1.2 billion contract to produce 55,000 Humvees to be delivered in five basic models and 15 different configurations over a five-year period.

Production began at theMishawaka, Indiana,assembly plant in the fall of 1984 and the first deliveries were made in early 1985. The total international production by mid-1991 was more than 72,000. Since 1991, an additional 20,000 HMMWVs ordered brought total international production to 100,000 in March 1995.

Late in 2000, AM General was awarded another contract for 2,962 M998A2 series trucks. The contract contained six single-year options running to the fiscal year 2007 and continues to be renewed. Nearly 250,000 units have been produced.

Humvees feature full-time four-wheel drive, an independent suspension, steepapproach and departure angles,60-percent grade ability and 16 inches (406 mm) of ground clearance. More recent production models include the M1151, M1152, M1165, and M1167. As of 2015, Humvees are in use by the US Army, Marine Corps, Air Force, and Navy. The combined fleet numbers 140,000.[27]More than 50 nations have bought these vehicles.

The Humvee's replacement, a completely newJoint Light Tactical Vehicle(JLTV) design, has been in production byOshkosh Corporationsince 2016.[27]AM General was unsuccessful in its bid for this $30-billion 25-year contract, and it is now focused on military Humvee support (they still outnumber JLTVs by three to one) and development of a new ambulance model.[28]

Other military vehicles

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AM General also acquiredDepartment of Defensecontracts for medium and heavy trucks, including theM151 series,[29]2 1/2 tonM35 series,and 5 tonM809 seriesin the 1970s then theM939 seriesin the 1980s.

In 2005, AM General was contracted to take over militarization, sales, and marketing ofLSSVvehicles.[30][6]

Notes

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  1. ^Only manufactured that model (2002–09) undercontractfromGeneral Motors
  2. ^Only manufactured that model under contract.

References

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  1. ^abHyde, Charles K. (2009).Storied Independent Automakers: Nash, Hudson, and American Motors.Wayne State University Press. p. 194.ISBN978-0-8143-3446-1.
  2. ^James Cannon Joins AM General as Chief Executive Officer"James J. Cannon Joins AM General as Chief Executive Officer"(Press release).
  3. ^abKPS Capital Partners To Acquire AM General LLCon AM General, 22 Jul 2020
  4. ^"Track Record - AM General".AM General.Retrieved10 September2016.
  5. ^abcdefghStauss, Ed (1988).The Bus World Encyclopedia of Buses.Stauss Publications. pp. 20–22, 116–117.ISBN978-0-9619830-0-0.
  6. ^abMilitary Trucks: From the Dodge WC to the GM LSSVby Edward A. Sanchez on Motor Trend, 4 Jul 2013
  7. ^ab"Company History".AM General. Archived fromthe originalon 26 August 2010.Retrieved17 May2015.
  8. ^"Private equity firm buys Humvee-maker AM General".defensenews.2020-07-22.Retrieved2020-10-02.
  9. ^Statham, Steve (2002).Jeep Color History.MotorBooks International. pp. 97–100.ISBN978-0-7603-0636-9.Retrieved17 May2015.
  10. ^Foster, Patrick (2002). "Biography: Roy Chapin, Jr".Automobile Quarterly.42(3): 109.
  11. ^Olsen, Byron; Cabadas, Joseph P.; Cabadas, Joseph (2002).The American Auto Factory.MotorBooks International. p. 127.ISBN978-0-7603-1059-5.Retrieved21 September2010.The Pentagon didn't want a French-controlled company making American military equipment
  12. ^"GM: End of Production Line for Hummer H1".Fox News. Associated Press. 12 May 2006.Archivedfrom the original on 22 October 2007.Retrieved17 May2015.
  13. ^"DaimlerChrysler Files Suit to Block Copycat Jeep Grille".autointell.21 February 2001.Retrieved17 May2015.
  14. ^Crain, K.C.; Jewett, Dale (25 November 2002)."GM wins another round in the Hummer-Jeep grille battle".Automotive News.Archived fromthe originalon 10 June 2020.Retrieved10 June2020.
  15. ^Sorkin, Andrew Ross; Hakim, Danny (10 August 2004)."Perelman Seeks Controlling Stake in Maker of Hummer".The New York Times.Retrieved17 May2015.
  16. ^"VPG Partners with AM General to Build the Standard Taxi!".Vehicle Production Group. Archived fromthe originalon August 15, 2008.RetrievedDecember 29,2017.
  17. ^Ewing, Steven J. (6 October 2011)."2011 VPG Autos MV-1".autoblog.Retrieved17 May2015.
  18. ^Snavely, Brent (28 May 2010)."AM General to assemble electric Transit Connect".Retrieved17 May2015.
  19. ^"AM General Announces Agreement Leading To Ownership And Control Of The Vehicle Production Group"(Press release). AM General. 5 September 2013. Archived fromthe originalon 29 November 2014.Retrieved17 May2015.
  20. ^Gardner, Greg (27 January 2015)."Mercedes-Benz moves R-Class output to AM General".USA Today.Detroit Free Press.Retrieved24 November2016.
  21. ^Naughton, Nora (11 August 2015)."Mercedes R class production launched at AM General".Automotive News.Retrieved24 November2016.
  22. ^KPS Capital Partners adquirirá AM General LLCon PR Newswire, 22 Jul 2020
  23. ^Rodríguez, José Jr. (25 February 2021)."Here Are All The Mail Trucks That Didn't Get Selected".Jalopnik.Retrieved14 August2021.
  24. ^abBrophy, Jim (March 12, 2016)."Bus Stop Classic: Flxible and AM General New Look Buses – Playing Second Fiddle to GM".Curbside Classic.Retrieved28 January2019.
  25. ^abc"AM General Corporation (history of)".Motor Coach Age:3–18. February 1985.ISSN0739-117X.
  26. ^Murray, Alan (2000).World Trolleybus Encyclopaedia.Trolleybooks.ISBN978-0-904235-18-0.
  27. ^abShalal, Andrea (2015-08-25)."Update: 3-Oshkosh Corp wins U.S. Army award for Humvee replacement".Reuters.Retrieved2015-08-25.
  28. ^Joint Light Tactical Vehicle Award Shakes Up IndustryArchived2017-02-09 at theWayback Machine- Nationaldefensemagazine.org, October 2015
  29. ^M151 Truck, Utility, l/4-Ton, 4×4
  30. ^"Light Service Support Vehicle (LSSV)".Olive-Drab.Retrieved17 May2015.
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