TWO former GM Holden engineers with wide international
experience have been appointed to develop the Ford Super Duty
pick-up truck for full-volume right-hand drive production by
Australia's leading independent American vehicle importer Performax
International.
Mary Lorenzo and Oliver Spiess have begun work on the mechanical
and interior conversion designs that will be needed to build up to
300 RHD Super Duty F-250 and F-350 pick-ups in series production
from next year.
Performax International, which already manufactures around 320
American cars and pick-ups in RHD a year at its factory in Gympie,
north of the Queensland Sunshine Coast, recently won Federal
Government approval for full-volume (unlimited) production of the
Ford Super Duty.
The Ford will join the Chevrolet Silverado, Toyota Tundra and
Dodge RAM pick-ups, which are already in limited-volume production
at Performax.
Ms Lorenzo and Mr Spiess have worked with vehicle makers and
component suppliers in Germany, the United States and Spain, as
well as Australia.
In Australia during two stints at GM Holden, Ms Lorenzo
contributed to the interior engineering of the Holden Commodore and
Pontiac G8. She worked as a design engineer on the Holden Cruze and
earlier was employed by seat supplier Air International (now
Futuris), with project engineering responsibility for Holden, Ford
and Mitsubishi seating.
Mr Spiess joined Performax from Ford Australia, where he worked
on safety systems for the Ford Ranger ute. Previously, at Holden,
he undertook similar work on the Colorado and other projects.
Throughout a career of more than 20 years he has worked
extensively on safety, occupant restraint systems and product
development. He was responsible for vehicle safety systems on GM's
global rear-drive platform, used by the Commodore, Chev Camaro and
other derivatives.
Mr Spiess's experience in ensuring vehicles achieved safety
compliance in diverse markets around the world will be valuable in
bring the F-250 and F-350 to market in Australia.
"Mary and I will take our experience from large-scale
manufacturing systems and apply them to the Performax International
operation," he said.
"Performax is a small company that has done a brilliant job over
the past 20 years and which now wants to move forward with
significant production volume of the Ford Super Duty.
"We will focus on three areas - compliance, designing the
vehicle for right-hand drive and production systems to ensure
consistent quality and conformity, including spare parts."
Ms Lorenzo said she had started work on developing new parts for
the F-250 and F-350, after completing an initial assessment of the
project.
"Oliver and I are delighted to be on board for this exciting
project. A relatively small company is a new environment for us,
but we're confident we can bring the benefit of our experience to
help produce an outstanding new vehicle for the Australian market,"
she said.
Performax International General Manager Glenn Soper said the
appointment of two such experienced mechanical engineers from the
mainstream vehicle manufacturing sector showed his company's
determination to build the best quality products to factory
standards.
"The Ford Super Duty project is aimed to eventually double
production volume at Performax International to around 600 vehicles
a year and to achieve this we need to install the latest factory
systems," he said.
"Performax is placed to not only consolidate itself as the
industry leader in Australia but also to seek new opportunities
internationally.
"The F-250 and F-350 project has been a long time coming, but we
know there is enormous interest in these products from business and
private users in Australia.
"When we're in full production later next year, we will be able
to offer customers an unrivalled line-up of the latest American
pick-ups ready for Australian roads - the Ford Super Duty, Chev
Silverado, Toyota Tundra and Dodge RAM."
Performax International has almost 25 years' experience
importing and re-engineering American vehicles to full Australian
Design Rule compliance, with work completed to ISO 9001 Quality
Assurance standards.
Hi-tech practices such as computer-aided design, 3D-printed
parts prototyping and injection moulding ensure right-hand drive
vehicles are manufactured factory-original engineering, fit and
finish quality.
Performax vehicles are available at dealerships around
Australia.
Further information, contact:
Glenn Soper
General Manager
Performax International

Phone 07 5482 7833
Mob. (0407) 010 451

gm@performaxint.com.au
www.performaxint.com.au