Difference between revisions of "Willow Run Transmission"

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'''Willow Run Transmission''' (also called '''Ypsilanti Transmission Operations''') is a [[General Motors Corporation|General Motors]] factory in [[Wayne County, Michigan]]. Opened in [[1953]], it produces [[Hydra-Matic]] [[automatic transmission]]s for use by General Motors and others. This factory was originally the [[Ford Motor Company|Ford]] [[Willow Run]] facility, which built [[B-24 Liberator]] bombers during [[World War II]].
'''Lakewood Assembly''' was a [[General Motors Corporation|General Motors]] [[automobile]] factory near [[Atlanta, Georgia]]. Opened in 1927, the plant was the first that the [[UAW]] staged a strike against in 1936.
From 1947 to 1953 it built Kaiser and Frazer cars for the Kaiser-Frazer Corp.
On [[February 14]], [[2006]], GM announced an investment in the Willow Run plant to produce the six-speed [[GM 6L80 transmission]].


Current products:
Initially, Lakewood was referred to as 'Atlanta' and coded as '8' on vehicle [[VIN]] plates, changing to 'A' when GM reshuffled their codes for 1953. For 1972, code 'A' Atlanta was now referred to as the Lakewood plant.
* [[GM 4L80 transmission]]
 
* [[GM 4L85 transmission]]
Lakewood assembled [[Chevrolet]]s, [[Pontiac]]s, [[Oldsmobile]]s and [[Buick]]s at various points in their history, and also began assembling Chevrolet trucks (though ''not'' [[GMC]]s) from 1929 thru at least 1986.  The 1990 model year [[Chevrolet Caprice]] [[B-Body]] model line was the last vehicle produced at Lakewood, the plant closing it's doors on August 6th.  At the time of its demolition some years later, Lakewood was a {{convert|2600000|sqft|m2|sing=on}} facility.
* [[GM 4T80 transmission]]
* [[GM 6L80 transmission]]
* [[GM 6L50 transmission]]
* [[GM 6L90 transmission]]


==See also==
==See also==
* [[List of GM factories]]
* [[List of GM factories]]
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[[Category:General Motors factories]]
[[Category:General Motors factories]]
[[Category:Motor vehicle assembly plants in Michigan]]
[[Category:Motor vehicle assembly plants in Georgia (U.S. state)]]
[[Category:Wayne County, Michigan]]
[[Category:Economy of Atlanta, Georgia]]


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[[nl:Lakewood Assembly]]

Revision as of 00:48, 3 February 2009

Lakewood Assembly was a General Motors automobile factory near Atlanta, Georgia. Opened in 1927, the plant was the first that the UAW staged a strike against in 1936.

Initially, Lakewood was referred to as 'Atlanta' and coded as '8' on vehicle VIN plates, changing to 'A' when GM reshuffled their codes for 1953. For 1972, code 'A' Atlanta was now referred to as the Lakewood plant.

Lakewood assembled Chevrolets, Pontiacs, Oldsmobiles and Buicks at various points in their history, and also began assembling Chevrolet trucks (though not GMCs) from 1929 thru at least 1986. The 1990 model year Chevrolet Caprice B-Body model line was the last vehicle produced at Lakewood, the plant closing it's doors on August 6th. At the time of its demolition some years later, Lakewood was a 2,600,000-square-foot (240,000 m2) facility.

See also

nl:Lakewood Assembly