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  • Posts Tagged ‘technology’

    Starting an Auto Mechanic Career

    Despite what you may have heard, the automotive industry continues to be one of the largest and most important industries in the world. It’s true that the industry (and the car itself) is undergoing many rapid changes, which are creating numerous challenges, but these changes are also providing great opportunities for anyone who has an interest in an auto mechanic career.

    Numerous new employment opportunities are being created today by auto trends based on advances in technology, large production overcapacity, heavy fuel consumption, environmental concerns, and a steady retirement of skilled or trained personnel. This means that an already large employee base is set to expand, and well-trained candidates will be highly sought after. Consider recent statistics from Canada, which show that there are 162,000 people employed in auto technical trades in that country. 96% of those employees work full time and more than one-third of those jobs require a skilled trade designation or a college diploma. These numbers reflect similar situations in countries across the western world. What this means is that there are great opportunities for trained, highly skilled auto mechanics. Now is a great time to enroll in an automotive trades training program.

    The best auto mechanics training programs mix theoretical class time with hands-on training. Some, in fact, offer an apprenticeship in an auto repair facility, where you can earn practical on-the-job experience while studying. This is highly recommended as it can develop confidence and knowledge, helping you step right into the workforce upon graduation.

    Auto Mechanics are usually paid hourly, but some highly skilled mechanics are guaranteed a minimum weekly salary. Some repair shops also offer commission incentives and performance bonuses to make this basic auto mechanic salary even more attractive. On average, Automotive Service Technicians earn between $45,000 and 70,000 per year plus benefits. If you’re passionate about cars, this can be a dream come true. Imagine earning a good living while doing something you love – working on cars!

    Classic Cars – The Audi Quattro

    The year was 1980 and Gary Numan’s Cars was at the top of the Music charts. In Britain at the time and throughout Europe, fast cars and so called ‘Yuppys’ were the order of the day in what becoming an increasingly competitive and socially divided world, prior to the technological advances brought by the infant information age.

    At the Geneva Motor Show in March that year a car was revealed that was to technically change the future design of most road cars – The Audi Quattro.

    The four-wheeled drive turbocharged road car, rally car and angular designed coupe, stole the show and proved that Audi with the new Quattro really had made ‘Vorsprung Durch Technik’ a massive advancement through technology.

    The original or Ur Quattro as it became known, as opposed to subsequent quattro models with a small q, was not the first 4×4 road car; this honour is held by the Jensen FF.

    However the innovative four-wheel drive system that Audi developed for the Quattro, did away with all the previous problems of additional driveshafts and extra weight. The Quattro team had produced a practical solution that amazed the motoring world of the day and led the way for the development of all modern 4×4 road cars.

    Audi in the 1970′s was not the most avant garde of the stoic German manufacturers, however they had a young and enthusiastic research and development team and more importantly, since 1969 the financial backing of owner Volkswagen, which was needed for the Audi Quattro to be born.

    The seeds of the Quattro had sprouted three years before the car was launched in 1977 when chassis engineer Jörg Bensinger and a team of Audi engineers were visiting Northern Scandinavia to evaluate the performance of another Audi car, the front wheeled drive 100 series saloons.