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14-11-2011, 04:34 PM | #151 | ||
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Diesel would have been a better option for Falcon too, and woudl have saved Ford a packet load on the Ecoboost / Ecolpi gas....
Going by what the Territory does a diesel falcon would have been good for mid to high 5's per hundred... Diesel is where the hype is at, not LPG thats for sure (how many other manufactures build LPG cars??). Just seems silly to me to run the extra capability of LPG when you already had the diesels on the line.
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14-11-2011, 04:35 PM | #152 | |||
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Petrols are going to depreciate quick at that rate, no one will want them.
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14-11-2011, 04:36 PM | #153 | |||
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Quote:
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14-11-2011, 04:36 PM | #154 | |||
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No but it does have a diesel. I don't see diesels really killing the passenger market and the R&D to get one in the Falcon (especially with the I6 still in the engine bay) wouldn't justify the sales.
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14-11-2011, 04:40 PM | #155 | |||
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a large car with 6.5 l/100 km is a dead set shoe in with the great unwashed... The real problem is if it did work, what becomes of I-6 production.... What Ford is trying to do is spread the technologies in areas that are of primary need: 1) Territory needed a diesel five years ago 2) Falcon needed EcoLPI two years ago ( we've done to death hold up due to I-6 death/revival) 3) Ecoboost technology offered to FoA as a way of increasing sales without using diesel. By putting tech in the right vehicles, Ford can ask more for them and still have access to widen the usage later if markets ask for more engine options... Increasing sales...not replacing them. Last edited by jpd80; 14-11-2011 at 04:46 PM. |
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14-11-2011, 04:55 PM | #156 | ||
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Counterpoint,
Where does this leave Holden, how do they respond to Falcon EcoLPI and Ecoboost? |
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14-11-2011, 04:56 PM | #157 | ||
Rob
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there was a graph posted in one of the sales threads and diesel has a very small uptake with private buyers in anything other than suv/4wd.
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14-11-2011, 05:01 PM | #158 | |||
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Weight The fuel economy advantage in small cars isn't enough to drive sales without expensive fuel, large cars are heavy enough to show significant improvement in fuel economy and savings to owners. The difference is that Ford chose to go with EcoLPI for fleets and Ecoboost to cover the majority of sales in the petrol market. Diesel may work but only if fuel prices start rising sharply. I'm seeing a lot of "insurance" in having technologies available to cover a lot of scenarios... |
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14-11-2011, 05:02 PM | #159 | |||
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For ecoboost one would say the cruze and the 3L SIDIDI.
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14-11-2011, 05:14 PM | #160 | ||
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Nah their LPI is still yet to hit the streets apparently.
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14-11-2011, 06:05 PM | #161 | ||||
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Ford LPG is better, sounds like Holden will have better packaging though. Dedicated LPG Commodore is good for Falcon as it will draw buyers in hopefully increasing the LPG market rather than taking away sales. Ford needs competitors with LPG to help with market awareness. http://www.goauto.com.au/mellor/mell...2578D5001E61C2 Quote:
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14-11-2011, 06:22 PM | #162 | ||
Peter Car
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Holdens LPG system is just a single fuel version of the current dual fuel setup, using the crappy old non DI 3.6. They might optimise it a bit for LPG but it will still be pretty gutless.
As for diesels, they only really sell in numbers in SUV's, they don't sell much in passenger vehicles. |
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14-11-2011, 08:22 PM | #163 | |||
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I agree with Ecoboost and EcoLPI, they are both good moves but would like to see a V6 diesel as well, it took Ford so long to get a diesel territory, I'd hate for them to miss getting the drop on Holden with a diesel Falcon...it's just over there in the Territory, so near yet so far... Especially while Holden clings to V8 sales, without them they are imperiled but Ford seeking out fuel efficient engines drought proofs the car against high fuel prices, something that will finish the V8 Commodore.. |
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14-11-2011, 08:43 PM | #164 | ||
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Does anyone have pictures of Falcon's new interior?
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14-11-2011, 10:35 PM | #165 | |||
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14-11-2011, 10:44 PM | #166 | |||
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14-11-2011, 10:44 PM | #167 | |||
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Quote:
Diesels more up market then LPG...
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14-11-2011, 10:51 PM | #168 | |||
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Upmarket because the Euro brands use it? What a stupid world we live in, but did I really have to state the obvious? |
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14-11-2011, 10:52 PM | #169 | |||
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If any passenger car ever suited diesel it would be Falcon. |
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14-11-2011, 11:06 PM | #170 | |||
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A Diesel falcon at 5.5 litres per hundred compared to an Lpilpg at 12.6 per hundred is about $7 extra per 1000 kms to run... In saying that however you could potentially get an extra 538 odd kms out of the diesel with a 68 litre tank with a total distance of aprox 1236 kms, this is a big selling point on the new Territory as when you ammortise the extra cost of diesel to start with and look at the kms travelled over the life of the car it typcially takes 4 years to repay the extra cost of diesel, but due to the convenience people are still opting for the diesel (just like myself). More to this they would have been able to make the diesel cheaper on both the Falcon and Territory due to a bigger spread of capital write down through both cars having the diesel option. Instead of having 750 - 850 V6 diesels coming out a month they would have potentially had 2000 +. They would have also saved a fair amount of coin in not producing ecolpi or ecoboost, 2 motors which they have had to put a considerable amount of R&D into, and 2 motors which will be competing with one another especially in the fleet sector. For a company placed where it is atm you would think they would have thought that through a little more... It sounds like no one was commited to any one option (ecolpi, diesel and ecoboost) so they decided to have a go at all 3, all of which will be detrimental to their Australian operations if you ask me. They may aswell have went back to building wagons and Fairlanes too while they were at it... Downsize the fleet but increase engine variants... A Turbo diesel Falcon ute would have been the bomb too! Holy smokes batman watch out ranger 4x2.
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14-11-2011, 11:25 PM | #171 | |||
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15-11-2011, 12:02 AM | #172 | ||
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As pointed out by reviews, the Territory diesel is not fast. That's pretty much due to the fact it's a diesel. Because it's slow revving, the much lighter Falcon will be no quicker with the diesel than a Territory.
Diesels ARE dirty: no one seems to have any idea what particle emissions are and what they will do to your health, esp. if everyone drives a diesel. ecoboost would be more appealing than diesel, as it offers performance and economy, with lower emissions. Ford's neat little video on ecoboost technology demonstrates its advantages: http://www.ford.com.au/servlet/Satel...ller&site=FOA# In fact, the low-end torque of a diesel is pretty much all hype, as it has strong low-mid range torque, but not as strong down low as ecoboost, or even an XR6T petrol engine. The so called superb bottom end torque only seems so impressive because of the lack of top-end. It's a perception thing. Give me anything but a diesel. Our SY Territory AWD manages close to 10L/100km on the highway which is not far off many diesels similar in size. 14L/100km driving around town is also not bad. It's smoother than a diesel, and offers more performance. It's not thirsty like everyone seems to think. Sure it will drink if you put your boot in, but only because there's more performance on offer: diesel is not able to burn fast, and therefore cannot offer that kind of performance, making it boring.
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15-11-2011, 01:00 AM | #173 | ||||
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15-11-2011, 01:25 AM | #174 | |||
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Assuming that Holden engineers 12:1 compression ratio pistons for that particular engine (the petrol version has a 10.2:1 compression ratio), the best that they will be able to come up with, considering the target fuel consumption figures and the sequential gas injection system (as opposed to liquid phase injection), would be to match the petrol engine's performance. Holden's dedicated LPG engine will have two MAJOR disadvantages - the fuel delivery system and the base engine. The use of liquid phase injection as well as the torquey I6 engine by Ford will put them at a MASSIVE advantage when it comes to future emissions regulation certification and fuel consumption optimisation opportunities.
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15-11-2011, 09:25 AM | #175 | ||||
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the V6 Duratec didn't fit without changes to spring aprons and a bonnet bulge... The V6 diesel territory has been delayed approximately four to five years due to tight budgets, the government actually pitched in $40 million to assist with V6 diesel, EcoLPI and Ecoboost. Quote:
Obviously Ford is wanting to minimize internal competition by accentuating the differences. |
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15-11-2011, 09:53 AM | #176 | ||
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If it came down to a choice of losing badly on dodgy export deals or flooding the market
with taxis and fleet vehicles, then I would rather Ford do the latter and create as many local jobs as possible. Offering 30% discount on great products to fleets has to be a better pass time than trying to appease difficult US buyers who want basically fleet prices anyway... |
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15-11-2011, 10:05 AM | #177 | |||
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The other cool thing would have been EPAS for Falcon which would have meant they could have droped the 5.0 in the XR8... As for Falcon ute verse Ranger diesel they could have potentially said no ranger 4x2 tray backs for Australia, just keeping ranger for Dual cab / 4x4 only which would have meant they could have allocated more dual cabs (the big sellers). I reckon a Falcon diesel would have nearly brought Falcon back to number 1... Simply because diesel has such a strong bearing on peoples mindset... When people think LPG they think dirty old taxi.
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15-11-2011, 10:20 AM | #178 | ||
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I agree a TDi falcon would be a winner, IMO most of the euro's sell well because they are in fact diesel, not particularly because they are "better".
My only worry would be how that effects the I6 production..it must have taken a hit with the Tezz sales so I think they will hold off on TDi falcon until the next platform is sorted. Which is a shame because if the I6 is going to go, then why stuff around, get some sales while its still in vogue. (but I can see how they might want to protect jobs until that time, or until they figure out what else they can make there?)
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15-11-2011, 10:21 AM | #179 | ||
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Not many people know that FoA was in the running for supplying the V6 Duratecs
but the collapse of the Magnesium plant project in Central Queensland robbed them of their supply base and as such the alternative supplier put their cost avove Nth America. What could have been.... |
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15-11-2011, 10:31 AM | #180 | ||
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Whoever said diesels were dirty is wrong. These days with particulate filters they are better than petrol.
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