navyseal334
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2022
- Posts
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Several GM models have had constraints placed on options for months now. The chip shortage is an obvious culprit but, with the release of new/refreshed trucks in the past couple months, I have to wonder if chips have been reallocated from existing models to the new models in an effort to beef up truck inventory levels ahead of Chevy truck month this month.
Does anyone have any insight/experience into GM's production strategy and whether this has been done in past years (allocate resources away from other model lines towards trucks ahead of truck month)?
Recent articles on GM Authority noting that heated seats/steering wheels are reappearing in non-truck models could lend (potentially coincidental) weight to this hypothesis.
I'm waiting on a 2022 diesel premiere suburban order that has most options on constraint currently. If this theory above holds water, then I'm wondering if we may start to see some easing on the constraint lists now that truck month production is largely out of the way.
Thoughts welcome.
Does anyone have any insight/experience into GM's production strategy and whether this has been done in past years (allocate resources away from other model lines towards trucks ahead of truck month)?
Recent articles on GM Authority noting that heated seats/steering wheels are reappearing in non-truck models could lend (potentially coincidental) weight to this hypothesis.
I'm waiting on a 2022 diesel premiere suburban order that has most options on constraint currently. If this theory above holds water, then I'm wondering if we may start to see some easing on the constraint lists now that truck month production is largely out of the way.
Thoughts welcome.