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16-07-2016, 09:46 PM | #61 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 573
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So it wasn't the button plan that wrecked ford australia, nor the 350+ types of vehicle introduced into Australia to make it the most competitive market on the planet with the lowest tariffs ?
Of course it was that 3.9 litre... While we're speaking lemons, anyone remember the Capri - saw one running the other day! They're as rare as the camira on the road |
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16-07-2016, 11:12 PM | #63 | ||
BUILT FORD TUFF
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Mackay QLD
Posts: 1,919
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I had an AU2 Forte and it was the best Falcon I ever owned from a reliability and fuel economy point of view. It ran on the smell of an oily rag.
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2015 FGX XR6 Turbo |
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17-07-2016, 03:05 AM | #64 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Perth, Northern Suburbs
Posts: 5,033
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They didn't so much "rush" it, as much as they completely bungled it, actually delivered key components far too late and underdone. The new OHC engine, 4sp auto, and 5spd manual were supposed to debut in the XF2, in time for ULP. They managed 1 of the 3. It them became a race to see who could debut first, the EA or the horrible abomination that was the VN. The first gen OHC (3.9) was rubbish, the 4spd wasn't available until later, and despite numerous promises the saggy front-end wasn't really fixed until several models later. Had FA debuted the EB2 as the EA, things would have been a lot different. But perhaps the worst legacy of Bill Dix was that he not only wholeheartedly supported the Button Plan, but he told the government to cut tariffs MORE At the time, FA was the only profitable producer in Australia. He believed that FA could survive whilst the tariff reductions and Button plan targets killed off the competition. |
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17-07-2016, 03:16 AM | #65 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Perth, Northern Suburbs
Posts: 5,033
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Problem is that much of the damage done under Dix simply couldn't be reversed, and the bungled EA26 program, put FA so far behind that they never really recovered. |
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17-07-2016, 07:15 AM | #66 | ||
Powered By EcoBoost
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Central Qld.
Posts: 3,505
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I'm not a big person, so in the early 80s medium sized cars (Cortinas & torana) were more suitable for me, on occasions driving my brothers XA hardtop while was a thrill, it was difficult for me to feel comfortable driving the car with limited vision (me being short).
XD & XE were better for vision but they lacked standard power steering or the power steering available on them was not all that good. For me the XF series 2 was a big change from previous Falcons, the power steering (standard) was much improved, you could raise the seat height (important back then for height limited people)it felt like I could drive these vehicles with the confidence of a medium sized car. I couldn't afford the XF at the time but when I was up for a change and had the coin to do so a 2nd hand EA Falcon was available for me, These cars had some better improvements over the XF, more so for me was the style and it looked quite current at the time of purchase, I purchased a 1988 EA in 1994 just as the ED Falcons were coming to an end and the EF was coming out. Mine was the 3 speed auto and used as the family hack and did so very reliably for me. Next was the AU series 2, again did the same job as the EA with school runs, kids sport, shopping and family road trip holidays. all done with hardly any issues. |
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17-07-2016, 07:55 AM | #67 | ||
Solution Was Boost 4?, 6 & 8
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 23,624
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My BF F6 was my favorite Falcon I owned, 10 sec passes from a factory drive-line won me.
If I had a choice the 2 door XA to XC series would be the Falcon I would most like to own.
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17-07-2016, 08:18 AM | #68 | ||
If it ain't broke........
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Sunshine Coast Qld
Posts: 18,875
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Visitors welcome Relatives by appointment only |
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17-07-2016, 10:37 AM | #70 | ||
Parts bin special
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Narre Warren, Vic
Posts: 8,276
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It's always hard to go past the BA when it comes to the best era of the Falcon. It was tough being a Ford fan during the AU era. It was being slaughtered in the marketplace and on the racetrack. There's no doubting that the AU was an excellent car, but it's styling really hurt it's sales hard. The fact that the Windsor 5.0i V8 was basically a bit undercooked compared to the Chevy 5.7 didn't help the situation either. Sure they did improve things during the AU series (T3 TS50 being the high point) but it was the BA that saved the Falcon (well, for another decade at least)
Thanks to the late Geoff Polites, the Falcon received what had to be the most significant "facelift" you could ever hope for! The new front and rear styling as well as the squared off windscreens really worked with the carryover doors. The new interior looked great and featured nice touches such as coloured LED lighting and autos receiving the sports-shift. Compared to the VY which just got a new dash and console, the BA interior was miles ahead. Even though there was nothing wrong with the AU mechanicals, the BA also stepped it up big time. New suspension, a new twin-cam 4.0i 6, and of course the arrival of the mighty XR6 Turbo. The new Boss V8 was also a big power boost over the old Windsor. The introduction of FPV and the return of the GT model were exciting times as well. The original drip-feed launch created a lot of interest in the new car and the advertising was brilliant. When the original BA V8 Supercar was unveiled, I was completely gob-smacked. It looked incredible, and thankfully at the hands of Marcos Ambrose, it went just as well as it looked. While Bathurst still evaded us for a few more years, it was the BA that broke the drought in 06' (and the upgraded BF model continued this in 07' and 08'). Of course, the BA was also followed by the Territory, which further added to the success. Sure, neither the BA or Territory were perfect (ie. diff bushes and ball-joints) but they were a strong case of the Falcon not going down without a fight!
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Weekender 1964 US Falcon Futura convertible - Rangoon Red 260 Windsor V8, 4 speed manual, LHD, Electronic ignition, Mustang wheels https://fordforums.com.au/showthread.php?t=11470868 Daily 2014 SZII Territory diesel - basic runabout Previous Cars 1990 EAII Fairmont Ghia - Tickford engine, 5 speed, SVO wheels, bodykit, much more 2000 AUII Fairmont - XR wheels, Ghia interior 2010 FG XR50T ute - XR8 bonnet, Streetfighter intake |
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17-07-2016, 10:44 AM | #71 | ||
Banned
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: PERTH. WA
Posts: 4,697
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When they released the xr6 turbo,i thought the world was a much better place!
Pretty awesome thing for its time,then came the f6 typhoon,omg how much better can it get! I guess next in line would be when the efi 5.0 got fitted to the eb after no v8 since the xe,awesome! |
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17-07-2016, 01:10 PM | #72 | ||
Moderator Ford Coupe Club
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Vic
Posts: 3,905
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For me, the '60's were pretty cool but the '70's were the best decade. Had the XA-XC Coupe, what more could be said?? Also the greatest day for Ford in its motor racing history in this country.
The '80's started OK then turned to shyte. Ford dropped the V8, bland ville descended, men's fashion turned effeminate and music went all poofy. The '90's had a resurgence when the V8 returned. The 2000's got better with the advent of FPV and the return of the GT. The current decade we all know it's all over. Been a helluva ride but if I could teleport myself back to the '70's I'd do it in a heartbeat!!!
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Mitsubishi ASX Auto, White - Daily Commuter XC Fairmont Coupe, 351 4spd, Graphite Grey - The Antidote http://www.fordcoupeclub.org "If you don't know where you're going, any road will take you there" George Harrison 2001. |
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17-07-2016, 03:19 PM | #73 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 2,215
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Quote:
I found the old falcon 6 was much better to drive first thing on a cold morning then the bloody Holden red 6 was, but the Ford X flow was just as good as the old log head 6 on a cold morning taking off. I remember a dude with a new HX 202 auto rev the hell out of it every morning to reverse out of his steep driveway, it was like stabbing the peddle to5000RPM time and time again, my mum would do the same to her HJ 202 auto but not as much as that bloke did, but our driveway was flat, it's a great trick for destroying the big ends. I ended up driving it and it tosses a rod out the side of the block and $330 later another 202 from the wreckers and then fitting it. The Holden Gemini had that shutter switch as well I think, I don't remember anyone putting it on winter in QLD maybe in the temp like snow one could put it on winter. |
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18-07-2016, 09:27 PM | #74 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Jun 2013
Posts: 319
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All good cars throughout the years but the best is the last one
We can not buy another new Aussie Falcon after 2016 so all those who have grabbed one hold onto it as the latest and greatest Falcon from Australia |
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19-07-2016, 09:06 PM | #75 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Catland
Posts: 3,869
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For me it was the Tickford years. A few things happened, my Holden loving family got to compare EBII and VR side by side and the Ford was far more solid, comfortable, capable as a basic product. We discovered its engineering was far more in depth.
Also, with Tickford, you suddenly had a dedicated tuning house tailoring the cars to enthusiast drivers, a bit like how BMW likes to market itself. You had engineers in Geelong and the UK warming the motors, local suspension tuning set by Aussies for Australian conditions, and a brief to make them fantastic road cars for this country. Which they were. It was bespoke customisation, and the first time it was done on mainstream Aussie Fords outside of a dealer group or race team. You could argue that these 90's Tickford Falcons have more dedicated brilliant engineering in them than anything wearing the 'GS' badge from the 1970s (and I love this era and grew up driving XWs). Although I loved the AU as well, the next 'best years' had to be BA and Territory, especially the latter. We will not see a vehicle with its SUV ride/handling capabilities south of 90 grand when its gone, again testament to Ford's Aussie engineering. |
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19-07-2016, 09:32 PM | #76 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Sep 2015
Location: Dunedin, New Zealand
Posts: 572
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Ford and Holden failed because of the materialistic, superficial attitude of the population. Everyone wants to show off and prove their wealth to everyone, and that means buying designer clothes, the latest iPhones (which really aren't that great, trust me. I know so many people who HAVE to own the latest iPhone, so they upgrade every year) and unfortunately cars became a part of this. Fords and Holdens were the default, average cars which everyone had grown up knowing. They lost their "WOW" factor a long time ago. Take my dads car and mine for example. Dad drives a slow and somewhat tired '98 Volvo S40. I drive a '05 Fairlane in effectively immaculate condition. Dad's car is valued (by insurance) at 2.5k, mine is valued at 14.3k. But mention to someone that dad owns a Volvo and their impressed, even though it's old. Mention to them I own a Ford and they just think "bogan"...
Ford and Holden made truly amazing cars, and the reason they failed is cause they sold too well. They became so common that the generation who grow up in the back seats of them don't see them as having any show value anymore. I remember a friend telling me another mate's Audi was faster than my ford because it's got "Sports mode" to which I counter "uh.. Ford's have Performance Mode too" and get the reply "but that's Ford Performance, Audi is better". Under what grounds lol? I've got twice the horsepower and RWD compared to FWD, but apparently the Audi badge is worth 2 cylinders, 2 litres and a drivetrain swap That is the state of the consumer market these days. If the Falcons or Commodores were sold by BMW and Mercedes, they'd be flying off the shelves faster than the factories can make them.
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Project/Fun Car - BA MkII Fairlane Ghia
Daily Driver - Volvo V50 2.4 "If in doubt, flat out" - Colin McRae "Horsepower is how fast you hit the wall. Torque is how far you take the wall with you" "Cheap, fast and reliable. Pick Two" |
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19-07-2016, 09:56 PM | #77 | |||
Kicking back
Join Date: Dec 2013
Location: Western sydney
Posts: 8,755
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19-07-2016, 10:16 PM | #78 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Sep 2015
Location: Dunedin, New Zealand
Posts: 572
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Quote:
My point was that the issue with selling Ford and Holden are their badged, pure and simple. The rest let's just put down as misinformed rambling.
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Project/Fun Car - BA MkII Fairlane Ghia
Daily Driver - Volvo V50 2.4 "If in doubt, flat out" - Colin McRae "Horsepower is how fast you hit the wall. Torque is how far you take the wall with you" "Cheap, fast and reliable. Pick Two" Last edited by Qwerty321; 19-07-2016 at 10:40 PM. |
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19-07-2016, 11:51 PM | #79 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 2,215
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People nowadays are all about the BS air bags and trendy tec all that type of rubbish. I think it maybe a faze trend the nation is going through, you see people bagging the trends of their years gone by and they think they are just so with it nowadays what fools, in the next 10 years they will be bagging what they did today. Trendy is BS, a woman can look great in what ever she wears well and the trend means bugger all. In 10 or 20 years people will look back and think, boy them V8 Holden's and Falcons were the ducks nuts ! what happened to the real men who drove real cars man (dowg ). do you want me to tell you truly why, just quietly their an't many real men about nowadays. Political Correctness came about and destroyed all of them and turned them into lily livered candy puffs who can't think for themselves. not to mention mug book rules there lives. |
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20-07-2016, 05:35 PM | #80 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Kalgoorlie
Posts: 712
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BA XR series, the AU forte was ugly as sin, front and rear, the BA XR was such an upgrade, but for me I absolutely love AU series 2 and 3 XR and T series models
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20-07-2016, 06:32 PM | #81 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: May 2016
Posts: 1,832
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1960s falcons the style the simplicity its very hard for me to say whats the best easier to say what the worst would be and that can be very subjective.
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