APRA To Hold 2005 European Symposium in Amsterdam - aftermarketNews

APRA To Hold 2005 European Symposium in Amsterdam

The Automotive Parts Remanufacturers Association (APRA) will hold its European Symposium on June 19-20 at the RAI Exhibition Centre in Amsterdam. The Symposium will be held during ReMaTec 2005 - the business forum for automotive/truck remanufacturing, rebuilding and distribution.

CHANTILLY, VA — The Automotive Parts Remanufacturers Association (APRA) will hold its European Symposium on June 19-20 at the RAI Exhibition Centre in Amsterdam. The Symposium will be held during ReMaTec 2005 – the business forum for automotive/truck remanufacturing, rebuilding and distribution.

On Sunday, June 19th from 9 – 10:30 am, Ron Boston of Boston Compressors will moderate a session of experts on remanufacturing air conditioning compressors. Appearing on the program are Mike Snyder of Thermo Lab LLC on testing variable compressors, Klaus Zenk of Santech Industries discussing electronic control valves and Mike Sunday of Sunair Products covering trends of variable compressors on European cars.

On Monday, June 20th from 9 – 10:30 am, Rolf Steinhilper of the Bayreuth University in Germany will hold a workshop on “Good as New – Identification of Problems and Problem Solving Strategies for Optimized Cleaning Results in Parts Remanufacturing.” Joining him on the program are Stefanie Wrobel of Bayreuth University and Klaus Feiber of Spyro-Delta.

In the afternoon of June 20th from 1:30 – 3 pm APRA’s European Director Fernand Weiland will hold a Forum on Remanufacturing Mechatronics and Electronics with Bodo Ruthenberg of Cignet Electronics (Jarville, France) a speaker from Robert Bosch (Karlsruhe, Germany).

For registration and complete details on the European Symposium, go to: www.apra.org.

For hotel accommodations for ReMaTec 2005 visit: www.rematec2005.com.

_______________________________________

Click here to view the rest of today’s headlines.

You May Also Like

Missouri AG Joins 24 States in Opposing Biden’s EV Plan

Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey is the latest to assert that Biden’s plan to shift to EVs is “misguided.”

Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey joined a 24-state coalition in challenging the Biden Administration’s proposed plan to forcibly phase out gas-powered vehicles and restructure the automobile industry around electric vehicles (EVs).

“I will always fight to combat government overreach, and that includes pushing back against Joe Biden's attack on gas-powered vehicles,” said Bailey. “The Biden Administration is looking to singlehandedly bankrupt working Americans and threaten our national security with its latest radical climate plan, and my office isn’t standing for it.”

CA Agency To Review Connected Vehicle Privacy Practices

The state’s Privacy Protection Agency will examine data privacy practices from connected vehicle manufacturers.

NHTSA Proposes Increasing CAFE Standards to 58 MPG

NHTSA’s proposal includes a 2% improvement in fuel efficiency for passenger cars starting with model year 2027.

Fuel economy
CAR Coalition Praises Bipartisan Focus on Right to Repair

On Tuesday, a House Judiciary Subcommittee held a hearing on right to repair.

Hanvey: ‘OEM Right to Repair MOU an Inadequate Solution’

Bill Hanvey, Auto Care Association president, outlines what needs to be done to ensure equal access to vehicle data.

bill hanvey right to repair

Other Posts

Auto Care: Right-to-Repair Pact Confuses Lawmakers, Drivers

Auto Care Association said it was not consulted about the agreement and does not support it.

MEMA Aftermarket Suppliers Responds to Right-to-Repair Pact

MEMA Aftermarket Suppliers said a pact between independent repairers and automakers “falls short” on repair protections.

Right to repair 2
NHTSA Better Have ‘Good Answers’ for Right to Repair Rebuff

The Berkshire Eagle, which endorsed the data-access measure in 2020, is skeptical of NHTSA’s cybersecurity concerns.

Editorial: Mass. Lawmakers Could End Right to Repair Impasse

A Boston Globe editorial suggests that the state Legislature “might be able to break the stalemate.”