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Thursday, 11 November 2010 13:00

Peek Inside the Chevrolet Volt Factory

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DETROIT — General Motors always said we'd get the Chevrolet Volt in 2010, and damned if it didn't pull it off.

After spending three years and hundreds of million of dollars developing the innovative plug-in car, GM starts cranking them out this month. The first Chevrolet Volts headed for showrooms are due to roll out of Detroit-Hamtramck Assembly Center any day now.

GM's being coy about when it officially flips the switch at D-Ham, but the

company confirmed that full-scale production begins this month. The first Volts are slated for delivery in December. The Volt, and the Nissan Leaf, are at the vanguard of the coming wave of cars with cords. As such, it is a milestone for GM and the electrification of the automobile.

We spent some time at D-Ham watching the General build pre-production "pilot" cars used to calibrate the line and work out any kinks in the assembly process. None of those cars can be sold to the public, but they are identical to the Volts you'll see on the road.

Above: It all starts with a steel unibody assembled by robots using body panels stamped at GM factories in Flint and Lansing. There are more than 900 robots in the body shop at D-Ham, and they can make 285 welds in 14 seconds.

Volts roll down an assembly line that stretches 24 miles through a factory that covers 3.6 million square feet. (That's about 62 football fields, including end zones.) The cars are built alongside Cadillac DTS and Buick Lucerne sedans in a factory that employs 1,048 people. It built 35,764 cars last year.

GM plans to build 10,000 Chevrolet Volts in 2011, and they'll all come out of D-Ham.

Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com

Authors: Chuck Squatriglia

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