Analyst report: Japan's auto output is reduced by half a month or 340,000

Yesterday, IHS Automotive Insight, a global market research agency, issued a report predicting that the earthquake or Japanese vehicle production will shrink by nearly 340,000 vehicles in two weeks. The report pointed out that if the daily average output of Japanese automobiles is estimated at 37,200 vehicles, the total output of production vehicles for two weeks will be 521,000 vehicles. Among them, Toyota accounted for 44% of Japanese auto production, followed by Nissan, which accounted for 12% of total production.

As of March 21, the number of cars outside Japan has already been reduced by about 10,000 cars. As more and more automakers and parts manufacturers are obstructed by the shortage of parts, the output reduction is expected to increase dramatically.

The impact of the earthquake in Japan on the global auto industry began to appear. At present, European and American mainstream car manufacturers have announced that they have had to suspend production at some factories due to the disruption of Japanese parts supply.

General Motors has stopped production at its three plants worldwide due to a shortage of components. The production shutdown plants are located in the United States, Germany, and Spain. The production of GM Korea plants will also slow down for the same reason. Ford Motor's plant in Russia was also forced to stop production.

Volvo’s plants in Sweden and Belgium have stopped production due to the lack of automotive electronics parts from Japan. These accessories are used for navigation and sound systems. About 10% of Volvo's automotive parts come from Japan.

In addition, a supplier of PSA Peugeot Citroën in Japan for an automotive electronic component was damaged during the earthquake, which forced it to slow down the production of diesel engines from the 23rd.

Although most of the Japanese brands sold in the United States are produced in the United States, models such as energy-saving and hybrid vehicles are imported from Japan. Due to the earthquake stoppage, most Japanese imported cars, such as the Toyota Prius sold in the United States [review picture forum], have only a two-month inventory. A website inspection showed that the price of this model was increased by 169 US dollars compared with the prices of a week ago. Subaru, which relied solely on imports, had only 30 days of inventory, and prices rose more rapidly.

DIN Lapped Flange

Across the pond, you will find the Deutsches Institute fur Normung (DIN) flange specification, consisting of a variety of European styles which have been unified into one code for the purpose of commonality. Designation as a DIN Flange by the German Institute of Standardization assures the user of design quality the way an ASME flange would here in America. Although much less common than ANSI/ASME steel flanges in the United States, many of our international customers request flanges to these specifications for a variety of applications such as imported steel vessels, cargo ships, and other infrastructure which may consist of metric pipes/valves and European designed equipment.

The subset flanges under the DIN standard consist of the same style of flanges in the United States, including the most commonly used slip on flanges, weld neck, flanges, and blind flanges. Adapter flanges can be custom made to end user requirements for the mating of American flanges to international ones, however we find it is a much more common and easy solution to provide DIN flanges to mate to existing equipment.

The most common metric type flanges fall under the following categories:

DIN 2501 through 2503 for flat ring flanges

DIN 2512 through 2519 for alternate face flanges

DIN 2627 through 2633 for weld neck flanges

DIN 2641 through 2642 for lap joint flanges

DIN 2565 through 2569 for threaded/companion flanges

DIN 2527 for blind flanges

Lapped Flange,Cs Lapped Flange,Din Lapped Flange,Pn6 Lapped Flange

Hebei Welkin Pipe Fitting Manufacturing Co., Ltd , https://www.welkinpipeline.com

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