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		How a cheap component could help kill off combustion cars
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		 [May 31, 2022]  By 
		Nick Carey and Christina Amann 
 LONDON/BERLIN (Reuters) - The humble wire 
		harness, a cheap component that bundles cables together, has become an 
		unlikely scourge of the auto industry. Some predict it could hasten the 
		downfall of combustion cars.
 
 Supplies of the auto part were choked by the war in Ukraine, which is 
		home to a significant chunk of the world's production, with wire 
		harnesses made there fitted in hundreds of thousands of new vehicles 
		every year.
 
 These low-tech and low-margin parts - made from wire, plastic and rubber 
		with lots of low-cost manual labour - may not command the kudos of 
		microchips and motors, yet cars can't be built without them.
 
 The supply crunch could accelerate the plans of some legacy auto firms 
		to switch to a new generation of lighter, machine-made harnesses 
		designed for electric vehicles, according to interviews with more than a 
		dozen industry players and experts.
 
 "This is just one more rationale for the industry to make the transition 
		to electric quicker," said Sam Fiorani, head of production forecasting 
		firm AutoForecast Solutions.
 
 
		
		 
		Gasoline cars still account for the bulk of new car sales globally; EVs 
		doubled to 4 million last year, but still only comprised 6% of vehicle 
		sales, according to data from JATO Dynamics.
 
 Nissan CEO Makoto Uchida told Reuters that supply-chain disruptions such 
		as the Ukraine crisis had prompted his company to talk to suppliers 
		about shifting away from the cheap-labour wire harness model.
 
 In the immediate term, though, automakers and suppliers have shifted 
		harness production to other lower-cost countries.
 
 Mercedes-Benz was able to fly in harnesses from Mexico to plug a brief 
		supply gap, according to a person familiar with its operations. Some 
		Japanese suppliers are adding capacity in Morocco, while others have 
		sought new production lines in countries including Tunisia, Poland, 
		Serbia and Romania.
 
 THE TESLA MODEL
 
 Harnesses for fossil-fuel cars bundle together cables stretching up to 5 
		km (3.1 miles) in the average vehicle, connecting everything from seat 
		heaters to windows. They are labour-intensive to make, and almost every 
		model's is unique, so shifting production is hard to do quickly.
 
 The supply disruptions in Ukraine were a rude awakening for the auto 
		industry. Carmakers and suppliers said that early in the war, plants 
		remained open only thanks to the determination of workers there, who 
		kept a reduced flow of parts moving in the face of power cuts, air-raid 
		warnings and curfews.
 
 Adrian Hallmark, CEO of Bentley, said the British luxury carmaker had 
		initially feared losing 30-40% of its car production for 2022 due to a 
		harness shortage.
 
 "The Ukraine crisis threatened to close our factory fully for several 
		months, much longer than we did for COVID."
 
 Hallmark said finding alternative production sources was complicated by 
		the fact the conventional harnesses themselves had 10 different parts 
		from 10 different suppliers in Ukraine.
 
 
		
		 
		He added that the supply problems had sharpened Bentley's focus and 
		investment on developing a simple harness for EVs that will be run by a 
		central computer. The carmaker, a division of Volkswagen, plans a 
		fully-electric lineup by 2030.
 
 "The Tesla model, which is a completely different concept of wiring, we 
		couldn't change to that overnight," Hallmark added. "It's a fundamental 
		change in the way that we design cars."
 
 The new generation of wire harnesses, used by electric natives like 
		Tesla, can be made in sections on automated production lines and are 
		lighter, a key factor because reducing an EV's weight is crucial for 
		extending range.
 
		
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			Employees work at a wire harness and cable assembly manufacturing 
			company that exports to the U.S., in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, April 
			27, 2017. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez/File Photo 
            
			
			 
Many of the executives and experts interviewed said fossil-fuel cars, which face 
looming bans in Europe and China, would not be around long enough to justify 
redesigns to allow them to use next-generation harnesses. 
 "I wouldn't put a penny into internal combustion engines now," said 
Michigan-based auto consultant Sandy Munro, who estimates EVs will make up half 
of global new car sales by 2028.
 
 "The future is coming up awful fast."
 
 'CHANGE OF PARADIGM'
 
 Walter Glück, head of Leoni's harness business, said the supplier was working 
with carmakers on new, automated solutions for wire harnesses in EVs.
 
Leoni is focusing on zonal or modular harnesses, which would be split into six 
to eight parts, short enough for automation in assembly and reducing complexity.
 "It's a change of paradigm," Glück said. "If you want to reduce production time 
in your car factory, a modular wire harness helps."
 
 Among automakers, BMW is also looking at using modular wire harnesses, requiring 
fewer semiconductors and less cable, which would save space and make them 
lighter, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.
 
 The person, who declined to be named as they not authorized to speak publicly, 
said the new harnesses would also make it easier to upgrade vehicles wirelessly 
- an area Tesla now dominates.
 
CelLink, a Californian-based startup, has developed an entirely automated, flat 
and easy-to-install "flex harness", and raised $250 million earlier this year 
from companies including BMW and auto suppliers Lear Corp and Robert Bosch.
 CEO Kevin Coakley would not identify customers but said CelLink's harnesses had 
been installed in close to a million EVs.
 
 Only Tesla has that scale, but the carmaker did not respond to a request for 
comment.
 
 
 
Coakley said CelLink's new $125 million factory under construction in Texas will 
have 25 automated production lines which will be able switch different designs 
in around 10 minutes because the components are produced from digital files.
 
 The company is working on EVs with a number of carmakers and looking at building 
another plant in Europe, he said.
 
 While the lead time for changing a conventional wire harness can be up to 26 
weeks, Coakley said his company could ship redesigned products in two weeks.
 
 That kind speed is what legacy carmakers are looking for as they go electric, 
said Dan Ratliff, a principal at Detroit-based venture capital firm Fontinalis 
Partners, which was founded by Ford Chairman Bill Ford and has invested in 
CelLink.
 
 For decades, the industry has not needed to move fast to rethink a part like the 
wire harness, but Tesla has changed that, Ratliff added.
 
 "On the EV side, it's just go, go, go."
 
 (Reporting by Nick Carey in London and Christina Amann in Berlin; Additional 
reporting by Satoshi Sugiyama in Tokyo; Editing by Pravin Char)
 
				 
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