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rmc523

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Posts posted by rmc523

  1. On 3/1/2024 at 3:15 PM, jpd80 said:

    Precisely and I think this underscores the value of projects like the skunkworks at Irvine

    developing compact BEVs. Major projects often get bogged down on product envelopes 

    but I feel like that’s of less importance when you’re not try to build something for everyone.

    There are certain valuable niche vehicles/segments that Ford should go after and back itself.

     

    I do wonder if some of the delays with future BEVs has to do with Ford continually discovering 

    better more efficient ways to design and develop products. Maybe done with fewer impediments 

    exactly because it isn’t trying to chain itself with how it currently builds and uses parts suppliers.

    Maybe it’s also an evolution process that Ford explains to itself why many of its current staff

    may not be required  in the near future…

     

     

    The problem is, they'll constantly be finding ways to do it more efficiently.....at some point you need to come out with product and THEN improve it.

     

    It's like if you want the new iPhone, you can always make an argument for "I'll wait for the next one" ....except you do that for a few years and suddenly you have an iphone 7 that barely works when they're on iphone 54......at a certain point you just need to pull the trigger and make improvements from there.

    • Like 2
  2. Nissan, Fisker in advanced talks on investment, partnership - Autoblog

     

    Nissan is in advanced talks to invest in electric vehicle maker Fisker in a deal that could provide the Japanese automaker with access to an electric pickup truck while giving the struggling startup a financial lifeline, according to two people familiar with the negotiations.

    The deal could close this month, said the sources, who asked not to be identified because the talks are ongoing and have not been finalized.

    Terms being discussed include Nissan investing more than $400 million in Fisker's truck platform and building Fisker's planned Alaska pickup starting in 2026 at one of its U.S. assembly plants, one of the sources said. Nissan would build its own electric pickup on the same platform, the source said. Nissan has U.S. assembly plants in Mississippi and Tennessee.

  3. 37 minutes ago, DeluxeStang said:

     

    What's surprising about the maverick is that it's not a complete dumpster fire either. So often with those shortened vehicle development programs, the end product is this rushed abomination with never ending quality issues, and terrible attributes.

     

    That doesn't seem to be the case with maverick, a few years in, and it's shaping up to genuinely be a decent product for the most part. Whatever development process they used, it seems to have worked. Not only did it keep costs down, but it delivered a compelling and desirable product. It's mind numbing to think Ford has essentially abandoned this process, and reverted back to their old ways. 

     

    The key for Maverick was that they leveraged an existing platform and essentially made a new top hat for it.  I fully understand BEVs are a whole different animal and require a re-thinking, but I feel they absolutely could fill in some gaps with the "Maverick" approach in the meantime.

  4. 12 minutes ago, jpd80 said:

     

    As I see it, the big design and styling issue was that the E-Max was based on the C-Max “minivan” instead of Escape.

    The reason that Ford did not use Escape as the starting point was due entirely because it was using out of date data.

    When Hackett and Farley rose to power after Field’s removal, the C-Max is cancelled because the market had already

    shifted to utilities like Escape, so more $$$$ were spent doubling down on the project tinkering with proportions that

    fortunately resulted in a more attractive vehicle but as it turns out few buyers want these days…..

     

    A lot of Ford’s missteps  can be traced back to its long product cycles and equally long product development times,

    evolution of the electric Focus was tortured by using C-Max instead choosing a Focus & Escape combo like Ford

    is developing at Cologne albeit with VW MEB toolkit.

     

    It all gets back to a totally dis functional Ford and it inability to quickly design and deliver important products,

    the one exception is the Maverick, an example of what can be achieved by a smaller more efficient team.

    I shudder to think of what the total development costs were by the time Ford launched the Mach E

     

    What I find crazy is that they were able to very quickly develop/approve Maverick, and that somehow remains the only product to come from that "faster thinking" process - everything else has reverted back to ancient timelines and never-ending delays.

    • Like 3
  5. 1 hour ago, DeluxeStang said:

    It's not going to be exactly the same, but it sounds like the ford three rows look roughly like those original e-max sketches. I wouldn't mind if it looked something like this top right white sketch, that's pretty sharp imo. But with our luck, it's probably gonna end up looking like the blob on the left. Hopefully it doesn't look any worse than this. 

    651306 (1).jpg

     

    That bottom thing is horrid lol.

  6. 41 minutes ago, akirby said:

    I just read an article that said basically what fuzzy said about redoing the original BS design around the same time as the Mach-E redesign.  So I guess it is similar to Mach-e in that regard.  I thought they created the small utility based on the rejected Bronco design.


    I remember the original “E-Max” sketches that came out.  Definitely would’ve been a compliance model

  7. 20 hours ago, joseodiaga4 said:

    According to Borg, Ford has delayed the launch of the 3-Row EV by another 2 years, pushing it out until Late 2027..

    He says that Ford is going back to the drawing board on the battery pack with a complete redesign that brings it inline with the CE1 platform.
    Also, the vehicles may see major redesigns.
    This may also explain why Lincoln abandoned electrification plans at the dealerships and removed the Lincoln Star.

     

    This would be an absurd decision, IF true (given the source and above commentary, it's a good if).

     

    I'm a proponent of making sure a product is right, but when you talk continual shifts in timelines, at a certain point, you'd have to have something out, even if it's not perfect.

  8. 2 hours ago, akirby said:

    I can’t speak for Mexican unions but here the obsession with restricted job duties and time really kill productivity.  I witnessed my buddy have a grievance filed against him by other union members because he stopped to turn on the printer as he was getting coffee because it took 5 minutes to warm up (this was in the early 80s).  So by the time he started working it was ready to go.  They said he was doing work outside scheduled hours.    
     

    I’ve so had several occasions where I was supposed to put in a ticket and wait hours or days for someone to do something I can do myself in 2 minutes such as move a monitor.  Training and skills are necessary for some tasks but when it prevents even the simplest things from being done efficiently it’s a problem.

     

    Granted I'm at a small company, but we all do what needs to be done - move a monitor, offices, drive a forklift.  I get there are lots of layers of bureaucracy in larger companies, but stuff like that seems ridiculous. 

    • Like 1
  9. 5 hours ago, jpd80 said:

    Interestingly, when the Edge was first introduced, it’s starting price was similar to that of Explorer

    and in fact lived comfortably in that space battery Explorer and Escape, like an enlarged Escape.


    IMO, the hatchback styling is exactly why it worked.


    remember too back in 07, explorer was BOF, so they offered completely different ride characteristics too

    • Like 1
  10. 17 hours ago, silvrsvt said:

    Interesting article on GMs issue with its new EVs. Makes you wonder how many Ford is going to run into. 
     

    https://insideevs.com/features/709703/gm-ultium-problems-software-batteries/amp/


    That article made it seem like a lot of their issues had to do with a new process, and a supplier that had a tough time getting the promised production volume for some key battery components....and sounded like they didn't use a supplier that does that for other EV products.  

  11. 21 hours ago, ice-capades said:

     

    GM could do whatever they want with trying to create a Colorado based competitor to the Bronco and it wouldn't make a difference. The new generation Bronco struck a chord with the modern consumer and re-established the Bronco as the worthy successor. A Colorado based Bronco competitor doesn't have the heritage or ability to compete successfully. 

     

    GM does have decades of sales leadership with their large 3-row utilities and Ford's Excursion was killed off by the environmentalists. Ford doesn't compete in my opinion with the C8 Corvette, whether it be the Mustang Dark Horse, a new Shelby or GT3 version. The Corvette and Mustang serve different niche markets, with their own interests and loyalty, with little of the crossover interest and sales that existed years ago. 

     

    GM would probably call it the XYZ-123 and then wonder why people don't get excited about the product.

    • Haha 1
  12. 13 hours ago, tbone said:


    It didn’t really translate well did it.

     

    The problem with it was they just graphed the concept's lights onto the current model and pretended it was cool.

     

     

    The funny thing is, they had that Airflow concept which looked nice, and basically ready for production, and scrapped it to make this concept.

     

    Chrysler Teases New Airflow as 2022 New York Auto Show Concept

    • Like 1
  13. 12 hours ago, jpd80 said:


     

    Thinking about what you said above, Its possible that that the broader strategy looks at various 

    trim levels and bundled options to determine what is really needed - obligation of the 

    various bundled features adds a lot of complication, maybe that can be rolled into

    trim versions to lock in defined supplier amounts and further streamline the process?

     

    Sure beats the heck out of customer surveys, lots of data that’s factual, not subjective /customer feelings.

     

     

     

    I'd imagine they probably have data that says some high percentages that purchase "option package 1" also get "option package 2", so why not bundle them into one single package instead.

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