Volvo’s Tough Tech Truck

Volvo’s Tough Tech Truck

<img width="150" src="http://www.automotive-fleet.com/fc_images/articles/m-volvo-vnr-jack-test-1.jpg" border="0" alt="

A bold grill and striking swept-back fenders give the new Volvo VNR tractor a bold, big-truck vibe with real-world aerodynamic and visibility benefits. Photo: Jack Roberts

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A bold grill and striking swept-back fenders give the new Volvo VNR tractor a bold, big-truck vibe with real-world aerodynamic and visibility benefits. Photo: Jack Roberts

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With all the industry buzz today focused on autonomous tech and futuristic designs, trucks still need to work hard in tough surroundings. That's a theme clearly on display with Volvo's new VNR tractor. The truck targets the rapidly evolving regional-haul business model, but this is not a radical design by any means. Rather, the truck is more of a distillation of everything Volvo has learned over decades of vehicle design, combined with the latest in ergonomics, connectivity, and advanced technology. The result is a highly capable urban delivery system that is optimized for uptime, productivity, and safety.

I just completed a route through the center of Winston-Salem, N.C., in a new VNR to see for myself how Volvo is approaching the increasing demands of inner-city delivery demands. The truck itself is loaded with new technology. But the new tech isn't overwhelming or even all that evident while you're driving. It's more accurate to say Volvo engineers have scaled the technology in a way that consistently compliments or aids a driver, as opposed to demanding their attention or attempting to do tasks for them.

Volvo engineers started with the basics. The VNR features outstanding sight lines anywhere a driver looks. Normally, when I talk about sight lines, I'm referring to exterior views to the front, sides and rear of a truck. But Volvo has taken this a step further with the introduction of a new, tilt-neck steering wheel.

It's a pretty slick system all the way around. Depress a foot pedal at the base of the steering column all the way to the floor and the wheel assembly easily pivots up or down, as well as in or out, ...Read the rest of this story

Economic Watch: Manufacturing Firms, Construction Down as Personal Spending Jumps

Results from two surveys of the nation's purchasing executives indicate manufacturing activity in the U.S. during May was nearly unchanged from the month before. Meanwhile, separate reports show construction spending eased, but consumer spending increased, resulting in hopes that the current quarter will be stronger for the overall economy than the previous one.

The Institute for Supply Management's Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) registered 54.9%, up 0.1 of a percentage point from the month before, but slightly less than a consensus estimate from analysts of 55%.

This marked the 9th straight month of growth and the 96th consecutive month the manufacturing economy has expanded with a reading above 50%, according to the supply management organization.

The New Orders Index registered 59.5%, an increase of 2 percentage points from the April reading while the Production Index registered 57.1%, a decline of 1.5 percentage points from April. Of the 18 manufacturing industries, 15 reported growth in May.

While the overall May reading doesn't look that strong “the details are very healthy,” said analysts at Econoday, with new orders coming in at a very strong rate while production was also strong with gains in import orders and employment, all indicating a “steady and impressive” report.

A similar survey from financial information services provider IHS Markit shows manufacturing activity in May fell slightly to an eight-month low.

Its final May U.S. Manufacturing Purchasing Manager's Index fell to 52.7, the weakest reading since September, but above the 50 no-change value. A preliminary reading for May, released just over a week ago, had the index slightly lower at 52.5.

This latest reading pointed to a further growth slowdown from the 22-month high recorded in January of 55. Weaker new business growth and softer job creation helped to offset a marginally stronger upturn in production volumes, according to the report.

May data indicated that manufacturing ...Read the rest of this story