
Over the past several years, rumors of a pending "invasion" of the US  consumer market by cheaply priced (and cheaply made) Chinese cars have  surfaced from time to time

First, it was Chery Automotive, a company sued by General Motors for  having a name too close to Chevy, the nickname for GM's iconic Chevrolet  brand. A company set up by Malcolm Bricklin who brought the ill-famed  Yugo to our shores in the 1980s was planning to bring these same Chery  cars stateside as recently as 2006, but that venture has failed and Mr.  Bricklin is in a legal wrangle with his Chinese partners

Next, it was Brilliance Auto who talked about shipping their cars to the  US only to be publicly embarrassed when their flagship Brilliance BS6  (I kid you not, that is the name of this model) failed an important  European crash test. Results of that test were posted to YouTube and and  can still be found there today. Yes, that is the car's windshield that  worked its way loose and went flying...get out of the way

Lastly, just about every other manufacturer of Chinese cars has also  promised to import their cars to the US including several with  unpronounceable and clearly unforgettable names. Great Wall Motor (GWM)  is one of the easier names to remember, but their cars were kicked out  of Italy recently after a judge ruled that one of its models was a  replica of the Fiat Panda, a charge that GWM denies

This year's auto show in Detroit (North American International Auto Show  or NAIAS) featured a handful of models from select Chinese companies,  but none have promised what Brilliance Auto plans to do in 2009: put  their cars on display and start selling them the same year in the US
 
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