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04-09-2013, 08:58 AM | #31 | ||
Starter Motor
Join Date: Aug 2013
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It has been an accumulation of circumstances going back decades that has led to the demise in Ford manufacturing in Australia. Here is my take on why.
* Ford dropped the V8 in the mid 80s – those needing a V8 turned to Holden as their only choice. The kids of these parents grew up as Holden fans and Ford lost a whole generation of potential buyers. * Ford has been very much hot and cold on its marketing. When was the last time you saw a decent Falcon TV advert? They celebrated Marcos Ambrose and Russell Ingall when they drove for SBR – why didn’t they celebrate 2 V8 championships won by Jamie Whincup in a Falcon? It was a HUGE mistake to drop the factory sponsorship of the 888 racing team. * With the high Australian dollar, imported cars are much cheaper. * Fuel prices are forcing people to buy smaller cars. * 4WD are growing in demand. Caravans are also getting bigger necessitating the purchase of a large 4WD. You can not solely blame motoring journalists for the demise in Ford manufacturing. I think they have wanted to pull the pin a long time ago. |
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04-09-2013, 09:12 AM | #32 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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04-09-2013, 09:19 AM | #33 | |||
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04-09-2013, 09:59 AM | #34 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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It would seem many of the posters on this thread didn't bother to read the op
The hypothesis of the article was that motoring journalists were too complimentary of the FG when it was released. There was not enough critical analysis on whether it was the right kind of car for the times, and if there was the conclusion would have been that no, it most definitely wasn't/isn't, as the sales charts attest. These observations could have then prompted Ford to make changes to the car or their direction quicker, and save the local operations from closure. But we still have a bunch of strugglers bleating on here about how the journalists killed the Falcon through negative press! For one, they didn't, and secondly, that is not what the OP suggested anyway. For what its worth I dont agree with the article in the op either. Ford Australia's predicament is Ford Australia's fault. The time of the FG's release was a critical juncture, and if Ford had of read the market properly (the true function of marketing) the FG would have been a bit smaller, and not a sedan only proposition. Ford head office would have still worked tirelessly to close the local manufacturing here anyway so its all pie in the sky.... |
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04-09-2013, 04:32 PM | #35 | ||
Ute Forum Moderator
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Melb
Posts: 7,227
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While I will agree there is something to the question posed here, it gets a bit silly.
"The same applied to the comparison with the Commodore. If people were choosing only between those two cars, knowing which was better made sense. But if people were looking at neither the Falcon nor the Commodore, again it was an irrelevant comparison. In this case, because the Falcon and Commodore had seen sales fall to a staggering degree over ten years, journalists should have been making comparisons to cars that were growing in popularity. What, actually, did the Falcon offer a buyer compared with, say, a Mazda 3?" You wonder what nuggets of wisdom a Falcon/Mazda3 comparo would reveal... - The Falcon is bigger - The Mazda uses less fuel - The Mazda is cheaper - The Falcon can tow a boat - If you have older children it might be worth paying more for a bigger car, but if its just you and a cat go for the Mazda3... Yeah, we are all worse off for not having been exposed to such potential revelations... I disagree, the car might have had ok reviews but continually reporting/speculating on the demise of the manufacturing operations was massively unhelpful for sales - and the media keep at it because a) they get half-denials or non-answers that they can 'interpret' and b) they know the story will get ratings/clicks. |
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04-09-2013, 05:11 PM | #36 | ||
Thailand Specials
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Centrefold Lounge
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So can the Mazda 3.
I was at one of the boat ramps, fishing off a pier on the Barwon River about a month ago and I saw a few cars launch their boats there. There was a Falcon wagon, BA/BF there and a Mazda 3 with around the same size boats, 2 seaters with outboard motors on them. The Mazda 3 got back up the ramp no problem, and the Falcon wagon started singling one of its rear wheels. This whole Falcon towing thing is BS, 9/10 of people down the tip are pulling 6x4s with garden waste and other assorted crap which don't need RWD cars, 9/10 horse floats on the roads are being pulled by SUV/4x4s. I've only ever seen TWO electric brake setups done on Aussie sedans, one a Falcon and the other a Commodore, weekly everyone else is having them done on SUVs/4x4s/dual cab utes. Ever since I've been a part of the Ford Forums and a Ford Fanboy, everyone talks about all the low end torque these Inline 6s are supposed to have, yet my EL with full exhaust and CMS stage 3 head and 2a cam, which dyno tuned put out 139KW at the rears, keeps unlocking/locking its torque converter, shifting between 4th/3rd and 2nd trying to maintain 110km/h on the Calder on one of the steep hills heading out of Sunbury on cruise control. It keeps dropping 5km/h then changing back gears and hauling *** to get that 5km/h back, then does the same thing again, then going down the other side of the hill its doing 10km/h+ over what I set it to! Now I don't know if its just those 4sp autos that suck, but my Focus can pull that same hill in 6th at 2000 RPM without a problem and my GMC Sierra does it in 4th at around 1800 RPM and it weighs over 4 tonnes. Its also just not my Falcon, we've got a 3V 5.4 BA Fairmont Ghia at work as our company car and that isn't too damn torquey either. Positive note on the Falcon its so easy to work on, and parts you can buy from the local milk bar. Last edited by Franco Cozzo; 04-09-2013 at 05:25 PM. |
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04-09-2013, 05:23 PM | #37 | ||
Boss 335
Join Date: Jan 2006
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The Australian buying public failed Ford, no matter how hard Ford tries, they are always seen as American, and Holden one of their own. Even then Australian buyers don't care to buy Australian Made anymore, its about buying the cheapest disposable Korean/Chinese/Thai car money can buy these days, while those with money to buy Australian Made knock on the finance company's door to shell out for that base model BMW or Mercedes they couldnt otherwise afford. Patriotism is dead. And the Australian government, don't even get started on them...
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04-09-2013, 05:25 PM | #38 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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04-09-2013, 05:27 PM | #39 | |||
Thailand Specials
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Even when it was stock, it didn't seem to be that much chop in the torque department, the I6 in all its forms doesn't impress me at all in its naturally aspirated guise. Maybe I'm just too used to driving turbo diesel? Ford failed Ford, they burnt WAY too many customers across all their products with their dodgy dealer network, I've had issues with warranty from one dealership on my Focus. I'm a Ford man, just not a Falcon man. |
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04-09-2013, 05:36 PM | #40 | ||
Ute Forum Moderator
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Ok perhaps I should have said caravan, I think the point stands regarding a theoretical road test comparison of a Mazda3 & Falcon. Yes most people don't tow that much, and it isn't normally an issue (unless you have a hybrid or a diesel Rav4), and it makes sense that if you are towing 2 tonnes some 'headroom' or excess capacity is a good thing - one of the many reasons why large car sales have fallen.
Not sure how stating a worked engine doesn't have great bottom-end torque shows anything, I know the hills you mean on the Calder but it has been a long time since I've driven them in a Falcon but I don't recall a downshift to 3rd and definitely not 2nd. I do remember well a trip with a VZ Commodore wagon towing about 1500kg that would downshift whenever the road was not level, glad I wasn't paying for fuel on that trip. |
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04-09-2013, 06:46 PM | #41 | |||
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04-09-2013, 10:04 PM | #42 | ||
Peter Car
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: geelong
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I was trying to make the point that Ford could do nothing to Falcon to stop people wanting to buy dual cabs, small cars and SUV's.
Even if the journos had of complained about the Falcon when the FG was launched Ford would have had no money to fix any of those issues anyway. The journo who wrote this article is so far from reality it isn't funny. |
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04-09-2013, 10:27 PM | #43 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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I have a 5.4 Fairlane. And I'll tell ya you don't know what you're on about. Very torquey engines, and that's with the extra tall gearing. Compare to an LS1 for example. You don't really appreciate the torque an engine puts out until it is under load. In these bigger engine you need to be towing a decent amount of weight to realise, I'm guess you haven't going by your posts. As for turbo diesel. Put the 4.0 infront of any turbo diesel gearing and see who the winner is as far as 'torque' goes. |
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04-09-2013, 10:52 PM | #44 | |||
Cocoloko
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Perth
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since young ones need to be in restraints now till alot older age and wieght. I still believe it all balls down to people having smaller familys, and liesure style vehicles are big now insted of family sedans.
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04-09-2013, 11:16 PM | #45 | ||
Starter Motor
Join Date: Aug 2013
Posts: 6
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What I had said at the end [re-read it ]
* Ford dropped the V8 in the mid 80s – those needing a V8 turned to Holden as their only choice. The kids of these parents grew up as Holden fans and Ford lost a whole generation of potential buyers. So the 30-50 year old bloke that bought a GT recently really remembered the days Ford dropped the V8's in the 80"s before putting pen to paper? Really??? Chances are the parents of the "30-50 year old GT buyer" DIDN'T buy that Commodore in the 80s..... * Ford has been very much hot and cold on its marketing. When was the last time you saw a decent Falcon TV advert? They celebrated Marcos Ambrose and Russell Ingall when they drove for SBR – why didn’t they celebrate 2 V8 championships won by Jamie Whincup in a Falcon? It was a HUGE mistake to drop the factory sponsorship of the 888 racing team. No point advertising Falcon cause everyone knows of the car. The monies needed to be put towards Focus, Kuga etc you know cars that arents household names. They did celebrate Ambrose and Ingall "remember the Devil R and Enforcer falcon. Re-read what I had written - They DID celebrate MA and RI with those models - they did NOT celebrate Jamie Whincup's achievements * With the high Australian dollar, imported cars are much cheaper. * Fuel prices are forcing people to buy smaller cars. * 4WD are growing in demand. Caravans are also getting bigger necessitating the purchase of a large 4WD. You can not solely blame motoring journalists for the demise in Ford manufacturing. I think they have wanted to pull the pin a long time ago. |
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07-09-2013, 11:19 PM | #46 | ||
Cocoloko
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Perth
Posts: 539
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The XF out sold everything in its time anyway...
When the aussie dollar eventualy falls again, we will al be screwed any way as there will be no local manifactured cars, american cars will be out of reach even more so (the high dollar hasnt been passed on to the consumer since it went up from the 60c it was 10 years ago, only the importer...) and our only option will be cheaper chinese or any built in asia vehicles,
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08-09-2013, 12:52 AM | #47 | |||
Regular Member
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I have read nothing but praise for the EcoBoost Falcon and yet sales have still been atrocious. I have seen two on the road.
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08-09-2013, 10:47 AM | #48 | ||
RAGE Engineering
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Location: Melbourne
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Ford was mentally still in the 80's and 90's in the 2000's. The market evolved around them and they didn't. Small cars got bigger, more powerful. You no longer needed a Falcon. Falcon was essentially unchanged in its basic package.
More choice from the market, better service from eager dealers, more tech and features in cheap Korean cars, higher fuel prices all combined to erode Falcon and Commodore. Ford (and Holden) made the mistake of comparing and evaluating their product against each other instead of other cars on the market. Before we knew it, Falcon and Commodore were largely irrelevant. Still great cars, and arguably the best they'd ever been, but the market was full of other equally (and arguably) better cars. The hot sellers today didn't exist when Falcon was on top. A one horse company is eventually going to be ridden out of town unless they are working on the next horse. Ford wasn't. My last theory is one of styling. All of a sudden, cars started looking pretty funky, and Ford was too conservative and although made "nice" looking cars, they just looked old in comparison to a Korean import costing a fraction of the price. It all adds up to the buyers looking elsewhere.
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08-09-2013, 11:00 AM | #49 | |||
RAGE Engineering
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Falcon is a great car for the wrong era. Ford is playing disco at a rave party and wondering why nobody is "getting down".
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08-09-2013, 11:24 AM | #50 | |||
windsorman
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09-09-2013, 12:33 AM | #51 | ||
Regular Member
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My point was that journalists have not failed the car - as you pointed out above, the opposite is probably true.
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09-09-2013, 09:16 AM | #52 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Dit it occur to you that we, the buying public, failed Ford, because the Falcon is a great car and we have changed our buying preferences to SUVs and the like.
Say whatever you like , blame whoever you want to, but peoples needs have changed and we no longer make what the majority want here in Australia. It may take some time but Holden will feel the effect of this too. GT450 |
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09-09-2013, 09:03 PM | #53 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Have towed the same c/trailer with a 4 ltr jeep ,a Xg ute and a Vx commy . The only one that had anything left in reserve on the h/way was the v6 , all 4 sp autos and all in top nick . Off the mark was much the same between them. As far as the OP goes every post is basically correct .Great car , wrong time , poor dealer backup , little or no advertising etc . I'll put my two cents in and add poor resale! Try and get a good trade in price these days , on any aussie 6 . |
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10-09-2013, 06:02 AM | #54 | ||
Solution Was Boost 4?, 6 & 8
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Closed
Thread has moved from the OP's topic to a discussion comparing individual models.
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