Ford (Australia) News

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Ford (Australia) News

Postby Bipolar » July 27th, 2011, 2:04 pm

Nice to see some good headlines for a change. Hopefully their marketing team have their shit together this year.


http://www.carsguide.com.au/site/news-a ... eststories

Cars Guide wrote:Peter Barnwell road tests and reviews the Ford Falcon EcoLPi at its Australian launch.

Ford Falcon sales are in deep doo doo slumping to unprecedented lows. But the Blue Oval is fighting back with some new, thought provoking products that deserve to win back customers.

There's a turbo four-cylinder Falcon coming sometime in the future and next week sees the arrival of the EcoLPi model, a six-cylinder car that has great potential for the company.

One of the biggest problems facing Falcon and Commodore for that matter, is a private buyer drift away from large cars to small sedans and compact SUVs. This is driven as much by weekly running costs as it is by practicalities. Pragmatic buyers are voting with their wallets, which plays right into Ford's hands with the Falcon EcoLPi.

LPi Technology

Because it uses LPG fuel, injected into the engine in liquid form not as a gas, weekly fuel costs would be nearly half that of petrol - based on 70 cents a litre for LPG and more than $1.40 a litre for petrol. It's a big saving at a time when household budgets are under extreme pressure from all quarters.

EcoLPi ushers in new technology that means owners don't have to put up with reduced performance using LPG as has been the case in the past. On the contrary, the EcoLPi Falcon delivers better overall performance than its petrol stablemate - noticeably better.

Fuel use is up by about 20 per cent on the petrol figure, but when you are paying half price for the fuel, what does it matter? EcoLPi stands for Liquid Phase injection of liquid propane gas - LPG. It's the most advanced LPG technology currently available and has been under development at Ford since 2007.

EcoLPi produces 27 per cent more power and 10 per cent more torque than the previous E-Gas LPG system. The system doesn't compromise passenger space and comfort but with the optional full size spare, a sizeable part of boot space is lost. Buyers can choose from a tyre mobility kit (pump and goo), a space saver or (optional) full size spare.

The new injection system follows a similar fuel induction configuration to the petrol six cylinder engine courtesy of a new injector-based, high-pressure fuel rail that delivers liquid-state LPG fuel directly into the intake port. This is a more precise and controlled system that boosts engine efficiency.

The system also adapts to LPG of varying quality to deliver the same performance. EcoLPi adds $2500 to price, before applying the government rebate of $2000.

Performance

The EcoLPi generates maximum torque at lower engine speed and is now geared lower for better response. It's been durability tested over 550,000km locally including hot and cold start performance.

What's it like to drive?

Better than the petrol Falcon by a significant margin, much better than the petrol Commodore too - both engines. We now have to rethink our personal car preference to include this impressive, cheap to run Falcon.

FORD FALCON EcoLPi

Models: XT, G6, XR6, G6E (sedan); XL and R6 (ute)
Engine: 4.0-litre six-cylinder
Fuel: LPG only
Power: 198kW
Torque: 409Nm
Transmission: Six speed auto
Economy: 12.5-litres/100km
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Re: Ford (Australia) News

Postby Bipolar » July 27th, 2011, 2:07 pm

http://www.carsguide.com.au/site/news-a ... eststories

Cars Guide wrote:FORD'S Falcon FG is among the safest used vehicles on the road, a major study has found.

The FG is one of 19 vehicles recommended in the RACQ's annual Used Car Safety Ratings. But the list is dominated by small imported cars. Five made the Safe Pick list: Honda Civic, Peugeot 307, Volvo S40/V40, Volkswagen's Golf/Bora and the Golf/Jetta stablemates.

"This shatters the myth that big cars are safe," RACQ executive manager vehicle technologies Steve Spalding says. "Some (large cars) don't have a particularly high rating, while some of the smaller stuff can outperform them. What it means is you can pick a safe car that is still small and economical to run."

No light cars made the Safe Pick list. "That is a consequence of their light weight. In a two-vehicle crash they come off worst because of the disparity in weight," he said.

The Monash University Accident Research Centre analysed records from more than four million vehicles in police-reported road crashes and more than a million injured road users in Australia and New Zealand between 1987 and 2009.

It found a wide variation in the level of crash protection in the 10 categories of vehicles studied. The risk of injury or death is 8.2 times higher in the worst rated vehicle, the 1996 Daihatsu Mira, than in the best vehicle, the 2008-09 Falcon FG.

The average risk of death or serious injury to the driver of a 2009 car in a crash is about 30 per cent less than for the driver of a 1996 car.

"When you're choosing a vehicle, don't just think about your own safety," Spalding says. "Think about the safety of other drivers and road users such as cyclists and pedestrians."

SAFE PICKS

Small cars:

Honda Civic (06-09), Peugeot 307 (01-09), Volvo S40/V40 (97-04), VW Golf/Bora (99-04), VW Golf/Jetta (04-09)

Medium cars:

BMW 5 Series E39 (96-03), Mazda6 (02-07), Honda Accord (03-07), Saab 900/9-3 (94-02), Saab 9000 (86-97)

Large cars:

Falcon FG (08-09), Toyota Camry (06-09)

Compact SUVs:

Honda CR-V (02-06), Subaru Forester (02-08)

Medium SUVs:

Mitsubishi Pajero NM/NP/NS (00-06)

Large 4WDs:

Jeep Grand Cherokee WJ/WG (99-05)

Utes:

Mitsubishi Triton ML/MN (06-09), Ford/Mazda Ranger/BT-50 (06-09)

Vans:

Ford Transit (01-07)
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Re: Ford (Australia) News

Postby Troutman » July 27th, 2011, 3:25 pm : Bipolar Likes this post

RACQ are talking a load of rubbish as usual. Large car safety is no myth. The only thing those stats prove is that a lot of P plater dickheads drive Commodores and kill themselves (and others), not that large cars are less safe.

Want to talk real facts? Here's what happens when an S Class collides with a Smart.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=02eghIfyHP0

Or more realistically, how about a Camry colliding with a Yaris.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uHiYSAenanM

For the best of all worlds, you want a car with good safety performance AND to drive it responsibly. If any idiot buys a Triton over a VE ute (for example) on grounds of RACQ's interpretation of safety, that would be Darwinism at its finest.
'98 Crown Victoria + '07 Caprice
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