Old Fords never die!

Blogger

Mark Osborne
Mark Osborne
Mark Osborne is currently the Senior News Editor for Photovoltaics International and PV-Tech website. He has launched multiple technology titles in print and online covering manufacturing in the automotive, shipping, semiconductor and solar sectors in a publishing career spanning three decades. Mark started blogging in 2005, the first technology editor to do so and has worked online since 1996. A veteran manufacturing technology journalist and editor, Mark has been responsible for a series of innovative formats for delivering technical content to an engineering-based audience.

An old automotive saying that well-built vehicles by Ford Motor Co. keep on going many years after competitors’ models have been scrapped can now be applied to old Ford assembly plants! 

PowerLight, a subsidiary of SunPower Corporation, which in turn is majority owned by Cypress Semiconductor, is to use 175,000 square feet in the historic (listed) Ford Assembly Plant in Richmond, California, originally built in 1930!

We have noted recently that other solar wafer/module producers have been seen to be acquiring dormant fabs both in Germany and North America, but PowerLight’s use of a 1930s automotive assembly line puts a new spin on the old Ford motorhead phrase.

Note: The plant (see below) was designed by Albert Kahn, an industrial architect who built many facilities for Ford, among others, and pioneered natural lighting workplaces. Strange, then, that glass frontage buildings using dark tints are all the current rage, boosting artificial light and unnecessary energy usage. I am sure the irony has not been lost on PowerLight!

Newsletter

Preview Latest Subscribe
We won't share your details - promise!

Publications

  • Photovoltaics International 16th Edition

    Photovoltaics International 16th Edition

    This sixteenth edition of Photovoltaics International marks four years of production of the quarterly journal. As always, our focus is on efficiency and quality improvement and cost reduction in manufacturing. As 2012 rolls along, companies are falling by the wayside due to supply and demand issues, ASP declines and drastic governmental subsidy cuts. A clear picture of 2012 is offered through papers from the likes of TÜV Rheinland, Fraunhofer ISE, SEMI PV Group and EPIA, amongst others.

  • Photovoltaics International Lite, Volume 05 - 2011

    Photovoltaics International Lite, Volume 05 - 2011

    This digital interactive Lite sees Tom Cheyney follow Agua Caliente’s progress on becoming one of first truly utility-scale PV power farms, where 40–50MW (AC) will be commissioned by the end of the year. We also feature one of the world’s largest silicon thin-film PV power plants, Avenal; a report on warnings of the collapse of module prices from Solarbuzz and PI-Berlin presents tips on PV module testing. A print version of this edition will be distributed at Solar Power International 2011 in Dallas, Texas.

  • Manufacturing The Solar Future: The 2012 Production Annual

    Manufacturing The Solar Future: The 2012 Production Annual

    Manufacturing the Solar Future 2012, the second in the Photovoltaics International PV Production Annual series, delivers the next installment of in-depth technical manufacturing information on PV production processes.

Partners

Acknowledgements

Solar Media