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Lionel

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Posts posted by Lionel

  1. Fun!!

     

    Thanks for digging up those snippets. I've long had a soft spot for Peugeots, which is probably because of their headlights and their quirky/expensive kitchen gadgets.

     

    I had no idea the Trabants were not made of metal, although, in retrospect, it doesn't seem surprising.

     

    The frame was I think, but the panels were recycled surplus cotton waste from the Soviet union, combined with resins and dyes. When the wall broke, they got floor shift and a VW Polo 4-stroke engine, but after decades of being forced to drive them, I guess they wanted West German cars instead...

  2. Hi guys, thought I'd start this thread to speculate.

     

    Do we think these two will still be related? Moray Callum has said One Ford has done its job and cars will be more region specific, but a large car in Europe would need to be amortised I would think.

     

    I'm guessing it will also form the basis for the autonomous ride-sharing car, since the majority of these are currently Fusions.

     

    I'm also guessing the car will be several hundred kilos/ pounds lighter. The Fusion Lightweight would be a good indication- carbon fibre engine cradle and certain parts should be suitable for mass-manufacturuing by then. I think it would need this to compete with lighter Malibu and significantly lighter Insignia in Europe.

     

    This means a weight range of 2700lbs to maybe even 3200 for the Sport. I'm assuming they'll keep the Sport drivetrain, since V6's are still very popular in America, probably shift to a 9-speed automatic though.

     

    I predict the base engine will be the 1.5 3-cylinder Ecoboost seen in the latest Fiesta ST, giving it a weight advantage over Malibu 1.5T. Stop-start, cyl deactivation and a 3-cylinder engine for the hybrid will help the car meet 2025 CAFE targets.

     

    In Europe these will be far more aggressive. So I'd expect 1.0EB will be retained, and a 48V mild-hybrid added to petrol and diesel. Does anyone know if the 2.0 PowerBlue diesel engine is modular? Currently the 1.6 diesel used in Focus/Fiesta and Mondeo in Europe is PSA unit- I don't expect this to continue now they've purchased Ford's arch-rival...

     

    The Euro-centric hatch will take on more styling flair, so that an 'active' crossover verison would look like an X6 or Mercedes GLE Coupe. I expect a floating roofline etc. Sedan will be a US and China only proposition as it is today.

     

    Not sure about platform- 2018 Focus is expected to be carryover, so maybe an all-new one? I expect USA would call the shots here.

    I know it's early days but anyone else have some information to share?

    • Like 1
  3. I sure enjoy the technical engine info that many people post on this forum. Even if you don't know what your talking about, it sure sounds good and I'll never know the difference. Perhaps some day I'll have a full understanding of all the technical aspects of these engines if I keep learning from this forum, so keep it up.

    tbone, try this site- it's how I leaned everything I know about cars and the reason why I am now a journalist. http://www.autozine.org/technical_school/tech_index.html:-)

  4. Since the 3.5 Ecoboost from the 2017 GT is available, and there isn't likely a Taurus SHO successor, wouldn't it be great if Ford created a new performance sedan combining the two? With teh Focus RS' GKN differential it would be a great handler, too. Especially since we just lost a performance sedan icon down under, too (sob :'( )

     

    http://performancedrive.com.au/top-10-engine-conversion-ideas-production-cars-vol-2-1617/

     

     

    post-48594-0-89899500-1484553028_thumb.jpg

  5. Our's, of course but I find the Argentinian one appeals to my idiosyncratic side. It's still a Falcon in essence, and I didn't discover it until rather late into my fascination with Fords/Cars- that was an interesting day translating Spanish web pages lol.

     

    I have drawn up a (I draw cars too) platform basis for 3 different Falcons; A US one, an Aussie one and a spartan Argentinian one, incorporating elements which made the original special to begin with ( big interior volume compared to smaller external, clean, sleek styling and simplicity ) then adding attributes which made them popular in their respective markets, or in the US case what that market now goes for.

    Sometimes I have too much time on my hands, but it's always been an enjoyable hobby.

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