Word Smithing 101
When Toyota announced their Star Safety System, we started to scratch our heads like, “Gosh, what makes that so special?” I put together lists of what Volvo had, when we had it, when it was fitted, to what models, if there were any markets we didn’t have something fitted … and it became overwhelming.
So I called Toyota’s customer service line to have them explain exactly what systems were installed and when. Seems that starting model year 2011 they will have things fitted across their model line, but not all cars right now. Interesting.
Trying to get that list going again, I asked Bruno in Regulations and Compliance if he could help. So he started his own list. About one week later, I learned that Mike in Product Planning was putting a list together, too. As easy as it seemed, it was impossible to pin it all down. We know in the last four to five years we already have everything that Toyota’s Star Safety System has, and in one form or another those systems have been in our cars for many years.
Much like we do today, our most advanced systems – like City Safety and the upcoming Pedestrian Detection with Full Auto Brake – need progressively higher levels of electronics than prior generations. In fact, the XC60 has City Safety, yet it can not initially be fitted with Pedestrian Detection since its electronics are like version 9.00.01.01 and the S60 is 9.00.01.02 (made up numbers, but you get the idea).
So here’s what NY Times Blogger Dexter Ford said about Star Safety System:
“Toyota is the first full-line manufacturer to make the Star Safety System standard on all vehicles.”
Not certain what a “full-line” means. I guess if that means pick-up trucks, okay, you got us.
“Toyota Motor Sales is not aware of any Toyota patents on the five safety technologies, but we were innovative in combining these systems economically in non-luxury vehicles … ” states their advertising manager.
I wonder what luxury means? Guess that’s us. They never considered Volvo luxury in prior years. It’s good to know we’re now considered an upscale competitor to them, but we’re excluded from their definition of a car company that offers safety.
You know, safety isn’t a surface condition, it’s not something that is touted one year and dismissed the next. It is a constant target for improving quality of life for people in and around cars. Safety is not a marketing slogan, it’s not even a DNA issue. It’s more like an unseen bit of our Swedish soul. We’re very pleased that Toyota is finally adding safety to their cars that we have had in ours for years. Welcome to the party!
Dan
Posted in City Safety, customer care, distracted driving, news, pedestrian safety, Quality of Life, S60, safety, XC60, XC60 General | Comments OffTeacher of the Year – Volvo of Charleston
Working here, there is an underlying feeling that what we do helps people. We support Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation (https://www.alexslemonade.org/), and have since almost day one. Many of our dealerships support local organizations helping to spread the Volvo feeling into other parts of people’s lives.
Teachers are special people. I think they chose their career because it is their way of helping people, they certainly didn’t chose teaching to get rich. We all have one special teacher that changed something in us, turned on a switch into something wonderful, and hopefully helped us in our life journey.
Congratulations to Volvo of Charleston for recognizing just such a person. Here is her story:
Volvo of Charleston is maximizing a way to acknowledge outstanding citizens in its community – and is doing so in a manner consistent with Volvo’s commitment to caring, conscience and character.
For nine years, Volvo of Charleston has donated a one-year lease to the Charleston County School District Teacher of the Year. For 2010, a C30 will be driven to school each day by Maisha Rounds, a teacher who also happened to grow up in the school district.
Rounds was inspired to teach after her high school Teacher Cadet class visited students with profound mental disabilities. She earned a bachelor’s degree in special education and a master’s degree in community counseling from Winthrop College. Her classroom lessons are arts-infused and multi-sensory. She is often found engaging her students by playing her keyboard to teach new skills and concepts while her students dance and create art. She has coauthored several books, addressing issues that come with special needs, abuse and illiteracy, and she strives to improve the teaching profession by serving as a mentor and professional development trainer for teachers and administrators in the district.
“We got involved several years ago as a way to serve our community and reward our teachers for all that they do,” said Sheila Sines Thomasson, who oversees marketing and business development at Volvo of Charleston. “We also host a get-together for the finalists each year at Volvo of Charleston and we attend the awards banquet.”
It’s evident that Volvo of Charleston understands how civic involvement can have long-term rewards for its community and its business.

Teacher of the Year
Don’t you just love chest pounding?
Last June we launched the Volvo Safe + Secure Vehicle Coverage Plan. It instantly hit a sweet spot with our retailers and more importantly customers. Considering all we offer on our entire lineup of vehicles, with safety, competitive pricing, feature content and options, Safe + Secure was just icing on a buyer’s cake.
About the first thing I hit up each morning, aside from some coffee and walking our dog, is checking Automotive News video cast. About four minutes of important stuff happening in my world. They just did a piece on Caddy’s new coverage program and how wonderful it and BMW’s programs are but they missed us in their content. We sent over a “hey…we’re here with something better” but time will tell if they hear us.
Here’s what we wrote:
Your piece, AN video news, about BMW and Caddy having extended warranties and service coverage is good but our coverage, which started June 2009, is better. In a nut shell:
The Volvo Safe + Secure Coverage Plan gives owners peace of mind for five years or 60,000 miles, which ever comes first, and is transferable to the next owner. It includes:
5 years/60,000 miles of New Car Warranty
5 years/60,000 miles of Complimentary Factory Scheduled Maintenance
5 years/60,000 miles of Wear and Tear Coverage
5 years/Unlimited miles of Volvo On Call Roadside Assistance.
Since its launch last June, we have seen continued positive sales months, back to back. We, and more importantly our retailers and buyers, believe that this one program has help differentiate us from all other brands, and continues today, even as others join this kind of customer support program.
If you wish to speak with someone here about this, please feel free to email/call us back.
And, if you want to see full details, visit: https://www.media.volvocars.com/us/enhanced/en-us/Media/Preview.aspx?mediaid=19682
Don’t you just love it when chest pounders are proved wrong.
dan
Posted in customer care, General, news, Quality of Life | Comments Off
Durability
We have two hard core corporate values: Safety and Quality. Used to be we called out Durability as a separate core value, but in reality it should have always been part of Quality. So to make life simpler for me (ok, a whole bunch of me’s) we added it to Quality.
What does durability mean? From a mechanical engineering perspective, it means the length of time an object or assembly will provide its intended function over an anticipated range of operating conditions.
An interesting point about our Swedish culture: value for money spent. Take IKEA – is it the best furniture made? No. BUT their promise is value, styling, and durability. We know buying something from IKEA will not go out of style; it’ll last longer than other kinds of ‘kit’ furniture and has a higher value to money ratio, at least that’s the opinion in my family. We love just walking through an IKEA. Coffee is great and good place to get our Swedish food/lunch fix.
Our Volvos are built for the tough Swedish environment, especially the long winters. But we sell cars all over the world so we build them for harsh summers in the desert countries of Western Sahara and Arizona. Driving through some places in Arizona is like being in another country – it’s so hot, dry and barren – tough places for cars with durability in their heritage. Our cars are built for global buyers who want value for money spent, even if it’s not in Kroners.
So, some months ago, I get a call from Irv Gordon, “A guy wants to write about my car and needs your permission to use a file photo.” Sure, no problem. Done and forgotten, until couple of weeks ago. Mr. Prasad Boradkar just wrote: Designing Things: A Critical Introduction to the Culture of Objects. Below, with Mr. Boradkar’s permission is an excerpt about Volvo and Irv Gordon. Irv is very close to 2.8 million miles on his 1966 P1800.
Will all Volvo’s go 3 million miles? Don’t know, but it’s very common to find ones sporting 100,000 and 200,000 High Mileage badges. Enjoy this excerpt.
Here is Mr. Boradkar’s home page: http://designingthings.org/
And link to purchase his book: http://www.amazon.com/Designing-Things-Critical-Introduction-Culture/dp/1845204271/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1275914216&sr=8-1
And no I didn’t get a book free, just placed my order on Amazon.
Good week to you all,
dan
—
Designing Things
A Critical Introduction to the Culture of Objects
Prasad Boradkar
Oxford • New York
1 9 4 d e s i g n i n g t h i n g s
Durable Things
The anti-obsolescence literature, produced by such scholars as Vance Packard (1960), John
Kenneth Galbraith (1998, original in 1958) and others did have its effect, especially on the
automotive industry in the 1960s. One of the first car companies to promote the culture of
durability through its smartly minimal anti-obsolescence advertisements was Volkswagen.
The advertising copy critiqued planned obsolescence and poked fun at American cars. In
a direct mockery of the annual model change, one of the ads for the Beetle shows a single
image of the car with the caption “The ’51, ’52, ’53, ’54, ’55, ’56, ’57, ’58, ’59, ’60, ’61
Volkswagen.” In the advertising copy, Volkswagen reassures readers by saying, “We don’t
make changes lightly. And never to make the Volkswagen look differently, only to make
it better.” Several of these highly successful and quirky adverts, designed by Doyle Dane
Bernbach, used the notion of obsolescence for the contrary effect. Other companies, such
as Volvo, ridiculed consumers who succumbed to the practice of the annual model change.
In a 1967 advertisement, Volvo sarcastically suggests that a paper car is the next step in the
evolution of the stylistic obsolescence of cars. The text reads:
at a time when people trade in their cars every two or three years, it’s reasonable to assume that the next step might be paper cars. After all, we’re living in a “throw-away society.” So why not jump in with both feet? Why not have a car you can trade every month? Why not have a dandy polka-dot one for weekends and a swinging striped one for going out on the town and, of course, a plain black one for when you want to be serious?
Further along, the ad promotes durability because Volvo knows that “to make a car that
lasts, you begin with nice, thick steel.”
Figure 7.2. Volvo Ridicules the American Practice of Planned Obsolescence. Image courtesy of Dan Johnston, Volvo.
Volvo owners are known to keep their cars for a long time, and some are proud members
of the Volvo High Mileage Club, affiliation to which is available only to those how have
clocked more than 150,000 miles (241,406 kilometers) on their cars. According to this club
(and the Guinness Book of World Records), Irv Gordon of East Patchogue, NY holds the
leading spot on the list with a stunning 2.7 million miles clocked on one vehicle. The car,
miraculously surviving with the original engine, radio, axles and transmission is certainly
one in a million, and has become an icon of durability. “I’ll keep on driving,” Gordon
said, “but whether I drive three million miles is more up to me than it is the car. The car’s
parts may be able to take it, but I’m not so sure about my own.”5 This car is eternally his.
In a phone conversation, Gordon said, “I bought it on June 30th, 1966 from the Volvo
showroom for $4,150 . . . when it had one-tenth of a mile on it.” As of July 2009, the
odometer read 2,715,000 miles.
Gordon recognizes the impact that this vehicle has had in his life. In a conversation, Gordon (2009) said: “You never know how these decisions could affect the rest of your life. If it wasn’t for the car, everything that I do these days would be totally different. I’ve had opportunities to go places and meet people that I wouldn’t have had if I didn’t own this the
car.” And, as he suggests, if he is outlived by his car, he will have achieved the status that
Ford desired for all his consumers when he said, “we want the man who buys one of our
products never to have to buy another” (Henry 1922: 149). In such scenarios the culture of
durability is embraced and encouraged.
Figure 7.3. Irv Gordon with his 2.7 Million-mile Volvo. Image courtesy of Irv Gordon and Volvo.
Ray and Charles Eames designed their classic lounge chair and ottoman for Herman
Miller in 1956. Joe Schwartz, then Marketing Director for Herman Miller recalls, “I think
it sold for about 900 U.S. dollars at that time. And not a lot of people liked its aesthetic then
. . . it was an unfamiliar visual object. Eames made it to give it as a gift for his friend Billy
Wilder. It was not originally designed to as a Herman Miller product” (Schwartz, personal
interview 2008). Over 50 years since their introduction, the lounge chair and ottoman are
still being manufactured with minor modifications and they continue to sell. Durability,
endurance and timelessness are not easy to capture in the design of products.
Herman
Figure 7.4. The Eames Lounge Chair. Image courtesy of Herman Miller, Inc.
Family Road Trips: Fun, Exhausting, or ?
We used to drive across the Mojave Desert – from California to Utah – reading Burma Shave signs. Dad had an “Air Conditioner” which was just a window mounted swamp cooler. Those were long, hot, boring trips. Today, we have awesome A/C cooled cabins, TV’s built into headrests (for Elmo), heated/cooled seats, tinted windows, and my favorite – Cruise Control. Travel is a lot easier and more pleasant now.
Because the economy is as unpredictable as weather, there are conflicting reports as to whether Americans are traveling more or less this summer for vacation.
But typically, Americans are more apt to reach their vacation destinations by car than air during down times. And, be honest, aren’t your favorite vacations the ones taken by car? Skimming down the interstates or blue highways – toward the beach, Disneyland or a national park – with a cooler of sandwiches in the trunk, singing along with the radio and cracking jokes with your family? Ok, a little corny but you get the idea.
Our trips are ones of eating. I like ‘hole in the wall’ places, my wife cringes and okay’s my choices, sometimes. We both like off freeway/turnpike/toll road vacations. We took a motor home up over “Oh My God” road just outside Idaho Springs, CO (not my video but you’ll get the idea – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fhyoyr1L1tc ) It wasn’t built for a 27′ motor home.
You have some good roads to share? Love to hear from you all. Heck, even if in another country.
Generally speaking, are summer road trips with your friends and family fun, exhausting, or both? What tips can you share to help ensure your summer trips by car are enjoyable and memorable?
As a little incentive, the best summer road trip story and/or tips will win this picnic basket:

Happy driving!
dan
Posted in contest, Quality of Life | Comments OffC30 Electric starts limited production this Fall
We still have a ways to go before this comes to our shores but an end must start somewhere.
Volvo C30 Electric ready for delivery
Volvo Cars and energy company Göteborg Energi yesterday signed a letter of intent regarding cooperation in the area of electrical vehicles and recharge infrastructure. Within the terms of the agreement Volvo provides 10 Volvo C30 Electric cars with delivery start during the autumn.
“This is a landmark first step,” says Lennart Stegland, director of the Volvo Car Corporation’s Special Vehicles division.
The Volvo C30 Electric project has attracted immense international attention. Volvo Cars has received visits from many potential overseas customers, but the first confirmed user is Swedish.
“Ten cars will be delivered starting this autumn. The Volvo C30 Electric is a natural part of our focus on DRIVe products, with the aim of promoting a sustainable society. We are happy with the cooperation with Göteborg Energi. What is more, it’s happening in Volvo’s home town of Göteborg,” says Lennart Stegland.
The cars in the demo fleet are equipped with advanced measuring instruments. It is important for Volvo Cars to build up additional know-how about how parameters such as driving habits and charging patterns affect the battery and lifetime of the electric car.
The Volvo C30 Electric has the same safety, comfort and interior space as the standard Volvo C30. The difference is that the C30 Electric is powered solely by electricity – so it has absolutely no exhaust emissions on the road.
90 miles on one charge
If the car is recharged using electricity from renewable sources, travel is virtually free from carbon dioxide emissions. The range is up to 150 km on a single battery charge.
“That’s way further than 90 percent of commuters in Europe cover on a daily basis. The car could be used for the average family’s everyday commuting needs,” says Lennart Stegland.
The Volvo C30 Electric is powered by a lithium-ion battery that is charged from a regular mains power socket. A completely depleted battery takes about eight hours to recharge.
The car has a top speed of about 130 kilometres per hour and accelerates from zero to one hundred in 10.5 seconds. Volvo Cars’ electric car project currently encompasses about 250 vehicles.
“However, with more customers we would of course be able to expand our production series,” says Lennart Stegland.
Electric cars are the future
He is convinced that electric cars will gain a major foothold in the market.
“By 2020 about 5-10 percent of cars in Sweden are expected to be electric. By 2020-2025 we believe that electric cars will account for 3-10 percent of the market share in the EU countries. Different markets have different preconditions,” adds Lennart Stegland.
Göteborg Energi comments the letter of intent signing and the cooperation with Volvo Cars to build its first 10 electric cars as follows:
“We believe in the future of the electric car and are extremely proud that we will be the first recipients of electric vehicles from Volvo Cars. We work to promote a sustainable society in Göteborg so to participate in the development of new infrastructure for safe electric cars and cooperate with Volvo Cars at such an early stage feels absolutely right,” explains Anders Hedenstedt, President of Göteborg Energi.
dan
Posted in C30, Environment, Quality of Life | 13 Comments »Twilight Fans – Get Lost in Forks
Get lost in Forks.
Are you a TWILIGHT SAGA devotee? Then you’ll want to read further. Volvo is challenging all Twilight fans again this year with a new online promotion.
Visit www.LostinForks.com for the chance to win a pair of tickets to The Twilight Saga: Eclipse world premiere in Los Angeles on June 24, and come back on June 22 to play the game to win a shiny new XC60, just like Edward drives.
Not bad, huh?
The objective of the game is to reach the Cullen’s house in the shortest number of “forks in the road.” Everyone who reaches the Cullen’s in the shortest number of forks will be invited back for the finalist round, which will start July 13 and end July 15.
Now … get lost!

Posted in contest, Quality of Life, Twilight, XC60 | Comments Off
What can we do to stop 6,000 deaths annually? Today Starts Teen Safety Driving Week.
Last year 6,205 people were involved in a teen driving accident…and they died. Yes we should feel sorry for those whose lives were cut short – think of those who might have been our leader to bring world peace, a doctor, scientist, or artist. Perhaps it is our fault for not putting more emphasis on teaching our children what is acceptable behavior when piloting 4,000 pounds of metal down our highways. Think what we, as citizens, would ask our government to do if 6,000 people died in plane crashes last year. I think that driving is the last responsibility we give our children; it is their final ticket to independence. We should make certain they truly understand how deadly this responsibility can be. Did you take sharp knives away from them when they were young?
The National Safety Council (NSC) names June “National Safety Month.” While every month should be about safety, this designation does encourage us to think a bit more about the steps we take to ensure we’re making safe choices at home, at the job and on the roads.
Specifically, NSC emphasizes “Teen Driving Safety” the week of June 7, and for good reason. Vehicle crashes are the leading causes of death and injury for U.S. teens between ages 15 and 19.
So Volvo is wondering: Have you had “the talk” with your teen? And, we don’t mean that “the talk” (which is none of our business). We mean the talk about driving safely (which is our business).
No texting.
No phone calls.
No drinking.
Always wear a seatbelt.
Stay focused on driving when friends are with you.
Their job is to drive with total concentration and respect for what is entrusted in them.
Teen driving safety is a talk that’s just as serious as the other talk. Have you had it? How did you present it to your child? Did you provide an ultimatum? How did they respond? Are there tips you can provide other parents? Please share below.
Posted in distracted driving, Quality of Life, safety | Comments OffOur Safety Center Celebrates Saving Lives
Volvo Safety Center
10 years ago we moved from a very cramped, limited ‘real world’ crash testing facility to one that no one could top. One key feature was a movable track that rides on an air cushion, which can duplicate just about any kind of impacting angle where two vehicles could meet at varying speeds. No one had that kind of capability. While removing earth from this movable track area, workers found stone tools and artifacts from very early Swedes. For many years they were on display, which is kind of ironic that we saved something from past lives to help future lives.
Posted in Quality of Life, safety, Volvo History | Comments OffRacer on Sunday, FTS every other day
On a breezy spring Sunday morning just outside of Fort Worth, Texas, I found myself standing among a group of car geeks. Or maybe fans is a nicer way to say it.
Okay, fans it is.
I’m here because the day before I had been a guest of the Texas Chapter of the Volvo Club of America. The idea was simple: Show the club folks that we actually make cars that are no longer called 242D or 760GLE. So I brought along a bunch of new hardware from corporate and a couple of the regional field guys brought their cars. The club loved it and spent the entire day reacquainting themselves with the newest cars.
It was here that I met Ben Castillo.
Ben Castillo and his 2008 C30 T5
Ben’s been with Volvo since 1971 and got his start working for the Guatemalan importer back when mutton shops were in vogue. Life happens and Ben found himself in the U.S. Today he’s what is known in Volvospeak as an FTS, or Field Technical Specialist. Primarily he visits our retailers in the Southern Region to diagnose particularly tricky service issues. Needless to say, Ben knows how to use a wrench and he knows a hell of a lot about Volvos.
But Ben’s passion for Volvo runs deeper than a 9-to-5 job. “I’ve had about 1oo Volvos since I joined the Guatemala distributor back in 1971,” he says between bites of an enormous Reuben sandwich. He smiles and his eyes squint and he’s the kind of guy you’d like to have a beer with. Or a Reuben sandwich.
He’s also an SCCA certified race driver. His ride is a lowered 2008 C30 T5 with a six-speed manual. He races in the Stock class which allows for some modifications, but not much. He’s swapped the shocks for some Konis and he’s running a low-restriction exhaust which adds a very nice burble at idle and a nicer bark when he’s on the track. He went to the Volvo parts catalog for some lowering springs and he’s running on a pair of racing slicks up front and some performance tires at the rear. “I’m trying to get the car to rotate more with throttle input,” he says. “I’m losing traction in the corners because the inside drive wheel isn’t sticking to the ground.”
You’d never know Ben was struggling with the C30′s setup. While I was visiting he asked if I’d like to join him in the car for the next heat. I explained that adding 200-pounds of ballast wasn’t going to improve his time. At that point he was running third in the standings. He smiled that smile and strapped on his helmet. It was a good thing I didn’t go. On that run he ran his fastest time of the day and took second place in his class. Not bad, he thought, but there is still room for improvement.
So he’s going to keep tinkering. He’s going to swap out the rears for a stickier compound than the high-performance tires he used this time, and he’d love to get his hands on a much thicker front sway bar. “I need one that’s about an inch.” Ah, it’s the ol’ extra inch problem. Who couldn’t use one?
Ben figures he attends about 15 SCCA events annually, including the national meet in Lincoln, Nebraska. He drops about $5,000 a year on tires alone. After each event, he jacks the C30 up, takes off the racing tires and replaces them with the standard 17-inch wheels and tires. The slicks go in the cargo hatch, along with the jack and his helmet, and he drives home.
Tomorrow he’ll be back out visiting his retailers and solving their pesky service issues.
-James Hope
Posted in C30, General, Quality of Life, Volvo Club of America (VCOA) | 1 Comment »



