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Old 25-07-2009, 11:30 AM   #1
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Originally Posted by Barry_v
4cyl and Diesel falcons... cars for people that have given up on life.
LOL.....Give me a direct injection LPG V8 ...or give me Death!
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Old 25-07-2009, 11:37 AM   #2
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Originally Posted by Barry_v
4cyl and Diesel falcons... cars for people that have given up on life.
Barry_v for Prime Minister....!
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Old 25-07-2009, 11:42 AM   #3
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Barry_v for Prime Minister....!

.....of the Soviet Union.
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Old 25-07-2009, 10:34 AM   #4
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It's an odd decision. I have no doubt that the 2.0l engine will put out some power, the numbers being stated put it in the realms of Mitsi EVO and Subi STi. Those types of engine are impressive, however I just can't see them as practicle in a large car. Those types of engines are very highly strung, require heaps of servicing (5000kM service intervals usually) and plain don't offer the kind of effortless no fuss everyday driving experience the type of person who buys a Falcon expects. Fords 'green' engine choice has to be a diesel. A diesel will offer that kind of driving experience. Don't bag diesels. Modern diesels a bloody fantastic engines.

Great to see the IL6 keeps on, and I predict the majority of Falcons sold will have the IL6. The biggest purchaser of the Falcon 4 will be government and government agency fleet buyers. The fleet dept. buyers won't be the ones driving them. The people driving them will wish they had the 6. Reasale on 4cyl Falcons will be a disaster.

Hopefully the 4 cyl Falcon is an export strategy in which case it's success or otherwise in Australia is less relevent provided it works for the export markets. But then if were talking Europe then again diesel's the way to go. So still very confused by Fords direction here.

This also creates a headache for some of the authorities with their 'no turbo' laws for young drivers.

Whilst I am perplexed by Fords announcement, I hope it works. There's a lot riding on it including the jobs of some of my friends and family.
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Old 25-07-2009, 11:47 AM   #5
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Knocking the four cylinder ecoboost and diesel engines is pointless when the I6 is still available alongside, if you don't like them, don't buy them, simple.

The fact they will open a whole new new market of new age tree huggers to Ford and make our brand of choice more profitable is beside the point eh....
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Old 25-07-2009, 12:33 PM   #6
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Originally Posted by Falcon Coupe
Knocking the four cylinder ecoboost and diesel engines is pointless when the I6 is still available alongside, if you don't like them, don't buy them, simple.

The fact they will open a whole new new market of new age tree huggers to Ford and make our brand of choice more profitable is beside the point eh....
Actualy I am a Christian tree hugger....and personaly I reckon that a direct injection LPG V8 is an exciting prospect....especially in a World that is doomed to perish in the end despite mans best efforts.

We get to have fun during our limited stay here with out damaging the envoirment as much as we would have with Petrol....(Crikey imagine what it would be like if everybody was still using leaded petrol, does anybody remember the blue haze that hung over Adelaide in the early 70s) on a planet predestined to be thrown in the lake of fire in the end anyway.

I am very excited about the prospect of the direct injection LPG V8 indeed, with out any qualms towards the envoirment....

Cheers all
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Old 25-07-2009, 12:52 PM   #7
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Originally Posted by Thankfull
Actualy I am a Christian tree hugger....and personaly I reckon that a direct injection LPG V8 is an exciting prospect....especially in a World that is doomed to perish in the end despite mans best efforts.

We get to have fun during our limited stay here with out damaging the envoirment as much as we would have with Petrol....(Crikey imagine what it would be like if everybody was still using leaded petrol, does anybody remember the blue haze that hung over Adelaide in the early 70s) on a planet predestined to be thrown in the lake of fire in the end anyway.

I am very excited about the prospect of the direct injection LPG V8 indeed, with out any qualms towards the envoirment....

Cheers all

Whilst I'm also looking forward to the new generation of direct injection LPG i would not see it fixing environmental problems, more like slowing them down.

LPG being derived from petrol means the passive environmental impact still exists, robbing Peter to pay Paul so to speak.
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Old 25-07-2009, 01:31 PM   #8
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Falcon Coupe
Knocking the four cylinder ecoboost and diesel engines is pointless when the I6 is still available alongside, if you don't like them, don't buy them, simple.

The fact they will open a whole new new market of new age tree huggers to Ford and make our brand of choice more profitable is beside the point eh....
Agreed, i didnt realise Ford had so many demo 4cyl and diesel Falcons hanging around for all the "experts" to test drive to form these opinions.....



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Old 25-07-2009, 01:43 PM   #9
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 4Vman
Agreed, i didnt realise Ford had so many demo 4cyl and diesel Falcons hanging around for all the "experts" to test drive to form these opinions.....

Norm that’s not the point and you know it.

Having to add a turbo to a small displacement engine to give performance in a large car application then adding DI to give it increased economy is a long way for a short cut. I know you know how turbo’s work.

Given the recent spate of manufacturers proclamations about technologies that just don’t deliver is it any wonder people are sceptical about developments like this. You have been a life member of that list.

In all but one situation the introduction of Li and diesel in the Territory seems to have the bases covered. It starts to get into the point where the proposed products are eating into themselves and not conquest markets.

Ford must have seen something that makes them think it can justify the investment. They don't sign off lightly but at least the people that are sceptical are honest to say they aren't a buyer for this product. Not sure the fans can claim the same. If I am wrong then Ford is on a winner, but until then I would have rather have seen increased investment on the economy side of the excellent engine we have.
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Old 25-07-2009, 01:55 PM   #10
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Originally Posted by HSE2
Norm that’s not the point and you know it.

Having to add a turbo to a small displacement engine to give performance in a large car application then adding DI to give it increased economy is a long way for a short cut. I know you know how turbo’s work.

Given the recent spate of manufacturers proclamations about technologies that just don’t deliver is it any wonder people are sceptical about developments like this. You have been a life member of that list.

In all but one situation that introduction of Li and diesel in the Territory seems to have the bases covered. It starts to get into the point where the proposed products are eating into themselves and not conquest markets.

Ford must have seen something that makes them think it can justify the investment. They don't sign off lightly but at least the people that are sceptical are honest to say they aren't a buyer for this product. Not sure the fans can claim the same. If I am wrong then Ford is on a winner, but until then I would have rather have seen increased investment on the economy side of the excellent engine we have.
That's true, and im skeptical of technology that promises so much and delivers basically nothing.. (e.g: DOD)..

Im not convinced a 4cyl falcon will work, but the jury's out in my mind till we see some actual results. As long as there are other power options then all's good.

I also believe we were short changed with FPV's development dollars being stretched too far in too many (wrong) directions, so when you think in those terms you have to ask yourself is this the best way to spend 230mill?
As you say maybe more money on what we have would be better? maybe they have "other" plans that procure that investment....

I'll wait till more details emerge before going too strongly on that one yet....



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Old 25-07-2009, 04:08 PM   #11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 4Vman
That's true, and im skeptical of technology that promises so much and delivers basically nothing.. (e.g: DOD)..

Im not convinced a 4cyl falcon will work, but the jury's out in my mind till we see some actual results. As long as there are other power options then all's good.

I also believe we were short changed with FPV's development dollars being stretched too far in too many (wrong) directions, so when you think in those terms you have to ask yourself is this the best way to spend 230mill?
As you say maybe more money on what we have would be better? maybe they have "other" plans that procure that investment....

I'll wait till more details emerge before going too strongly on that one yet....

Work, as in what way? An I4T doesn't have to have performance comparable to a V6/I6....I believe Fords (marketing) strategy is clever by taking Toyota head on. Toyota's have a reputation of being reliable and cheap to run (both are probably untrue) so by Ford introducing a I4T which may use less fuel than a Camry is a smart move imo.
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Old 25-07-2009, 01:57 PM   #12
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I’m surprised that no one has considered the 4-Cylinder talk is simply a bait and switch tactic to hide the fact that Focus won’t be built in Australia. In two years time they’ll probably announce the 4-Cylinder wasn’t viable and they’ve come up with some other scheme to fleece the Government and keep Ford AU operational.

In reality is this Falcon derivate required if they’ve already got the Mondeo on the market? What advantages does it offer?
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Old 25-07-2009, 02:06 PM   #13
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Boss315
I’m surprised that no one has considered the 4-Cylinder talk is simply a bait and switch tactic to hide the fact that Focus won’t be built in Australia. In two years time they’ll probably announce the 4-Cylinder wasn’t viable and they’ve come up with some other scheme to fleece the Government and keep Ford AU operational.

That could very well happen. I am waiting to be corrected on this, but from memory the focus added near nothing to our manufacturing base. It’s just not a huge loss. When Ford says no jobs are going to be lost I believe it to be so becasue there was very little local content in the car.

My point here is that we don’t expect people to own something to be the prerequisite of making an informed opinion. The point you raise is a good one. That is not being anti Ford, it’s raising a valid question given the recent automotive history.

Car companies essentially can’t work with any degree of confidence into the future like they used to. That 6 year cycle has really come in. It makes it hard and to have to constantly justify each movement in public.

The people that go in guns blazing with full support come across as fan boys, the people that are more circumspect come across as anti Ford. The truth is neither. We all want the same thing. I wish the way forward was clearer for all but I am not going to get it.
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Old 25-07-2009, 06:53 PM   #14
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Quote:
Originally Posted by HSE2
The people that go in guns blazing with full support come across as fan boys,
Ford has not done a great deal since the release of the FG, to see a commitment to what seems a sound plan for the immediate future should be supported by all fans, we are not losing anything that won't be replaced by something better.
I fail to see this making one a "fan boy".




Quote:
Originally Posted by HSE2
the people that are more circumspect come across as anti Ford. The truth is neither.

Whilst unproven at this stage the positives of looking "green" to the new "global warming" religion sweeping the world has to be a good thing, comments to the contrary before any test results are forthcoming is merely a glass half empty attitude.
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Old 25-07-2009, 07:07 PM   #15
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Falcon Coupe
Ford has not done a great deal since the release of the FG, to see a commitment to what seems a sound plan for the immediate future should be supported by all fans, we are not losing anything that won't be replaced by something better.
I fail to see this making one a "fan boy".
.
When anybody makes the assertion that a 4 cylinder Falcon will bring back market share to a segment- unfounded- where the manufacturers has clearly stated it is in decline, it is as stated to people that are saying hang on a minute.

The no loss situation only works if the products on offer aren’t of a cannibal nature. The suggestion is that they could be.
No one has suggested that it isn't supported by all fans just some are saying hang on a minute lets think about the task ahead. Ford has already made these claims about the V6 and they proved to be well short of the mark. It’s not without foundation.



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Whilst unproven at this stage the positives of looking "green" to the new "global warming" religion sweeping the world has to be a good thing, comments to the contrary before any test results are forthcoming is merely a glass half empty attitude.

Whilst still an opinion worthy of respect. As clearly stated both sides have merit and both have fault.

Pointing out that we already have a very good "green" product and if afforded similar development is not a half glass empty attitude.
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Old 27-07-2009, 11:39 AM   #16
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Quote:
Originally Posted by HSE2
That could very well happen. I am waiting to be corrected on this, but from memory the focus added near nothing to our manufacturing base. It’s just not a huge loss. When Ford says no jobs are going to be lost I believe it to be so becasue there was very little local content in the car.

My point here is that we don’t expect people to own something to be the prerequisite of making an informed opinion. The point you raise is a good one. That is not being anti Ford, it’s raising a valid question given the recent automotive history.

Car companies essentially can’t work with any degree of confidence into the future like they used to. That 6 year cycle has really come in. It makes it hard and to have to constantly justify each movement in public.

The people that go in guns blazing with full support come across as fan boys, the people that are more circumspect come across as anti Ford. The truth is neither. We all want the same thing. I wish the way forward was clearer for all but I am not going to get it.
Hi HSE2

The Focus was far from a CKD project. There was significant local engineering requirements to make it work. Let's not forget that it was to get exported to other countries, and these being cheaper markets too. To make that work, they were required to engineer and source appropriately costed parts, local and elsewhere. The investment was huge. The project began to look pretty bad sometime ago, but the investigation of all aspects was still being looked into until very recently, so they did give it thorough investigation.

edit: forgot to mention another important point... the plants here are far from being hi-tech, flexible and complex. This also goes against the requirements of being able to make manufacturing efficiencies and savings. This is my exporting for Ford has been difficult to get over the line. Massive investment is required in the plants here to make it work.

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Old 27-07-2009, 11:43 AM   #17
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Quote:
Originally Posted by HSE2
Car companies essentially can’t work with any degree of confidence into the future like they used to. That 6 year cycle has really come in. It makes it hard and to have to constantly justify each movement in public.

The people that go in guns blazing with full support come across as fan boys, the people that are more circumspect come across as anti Ford. The truth is neither. We all want the same thing. I wish the way forward was clearer for all but I am not going to get it.
That's the biggest concern when I speak with engineers. There is no long term vision or commitment from management. Whether it be from Ford AUS, Ford US and Europe, the long term plan ends at about 4-5 years.
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Old 27-07-2009, 11:29 AM   #18
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Boss315
I’m surprised that no one has considered the 4-Cylinder talk is simply a bait and switch tactic to hide the fact that Focus won’t be built in Australia. In two years time they’ll probably announce the 4-Cylinder wasn’t viable and they’ve come up with some other scheme to fleece the Government and keep Ford AU operational.

In reality is this Falcon derivate required if they’ve already got the Mondeo on the market? What advantages does it offer?
No - That's not how it is at all.

4cyl has been on their agenda for a long time. 12-18 months in fact.

The Diesel/ecoBoost I4T was always on the table and in development. The announcement was all about letting Focus go, nothing more.
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Old 25-07-2009, 02:15 PM   #19
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Car companies are rapidly becoming like politicians at election time, you can't believe too much of what they say about the future because it can change in a heart beat...
The "4cyl falcon" may well be a smoke screen...



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Old 25-07-2009, 02:51 PM   #20
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 4Vman
Car companies are rapidly becoming like politicians at election time, you can't believe too much of what they say about the future because it can change in a heart beat...
The "4cyl falcon" may well be a smoke screen...
Possible. But, one would imagine, that if Ford Australia has gotten a Federal Government grant for the I4T, there would be some contractual arrangement in place with the Feds to actually delivery something. (Remember that there was no funding for the Focus.)

Also, recall that various State Governments have a love affair with 4-cylinders, because it appears to be more environmentally friendly. One would think that Ford Australia could reassert its “Buy Australia” play for the Falcon because it does have 4-cylinders.

While I would never say never, the I4T does seem to be real goer.
But, there should be no doubts about the diesel and the LPG options. I would image that Marin Burela would consider giving his leftie for diesel Territory a few months back.
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Old 25-07-2009, 04:33 PM   #21
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Everybody is talking up the fuel economy of this 4T engine but i see it differently. Just look at the the mazda 2.3L T DI engine fitted to the Wagon CX5??? This car weighs roughly the same as the Falc 1700 odd kgs and is rated at 11.5 L/100kms. I'm sure i've also read that this engine requires Premium juice and in the real world, your lucky to get near 14L/100km.

I agree with with 4Vman who said 'The "4cyl falcon" may well be a smoke screen...' just like Holden has DoD on their v8's. But how long will it take the consumers to work out they've just bought a dud technology. It may get Fleet sales up, but is this what we want, do we want more reduction on 2nd hand vehicle prices.

I hope for Ford Aus sake that these stratagies work and it leads to an increase in sales but i can't yet see the real world benefits of such an engine.....But lets wait till she's released.
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Old 25-07-2009, 04:46 PM   #22
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4 cylinder turbo falcon....not sure I like that idea. Imagine the insurace costs and the fact that noone under 25 can drive them
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Old 25-07-2009, 04:57 PM   #23
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The cost of Oil also has to be a consideration....Australia is a small player in the World market.
I was watching a show on Foxtel a little while back on the Automotive industry in China....awesome!

All the car companies are selling cars in China, and there are two Chinese manufacturers in the game as well.
One of them is punching out 240,000 vehicles a year, and only 4% of Chinas 1 Billion population owns a car.

The potential for just one Nation like China to draw on the remainder of our Worlds Oil reserves, could see Australians forced into using LPG because Australia cannot afford the cost of importing Oil in the same quantities as they are now....and Australia has big gas fields, and we sell a lot of LPG to China as well.

After seeing what is happening in China within the car industry, I am in no way surprised to see Ford building direct injection LPG engines for cars in Australia from next year, in Geelong according to the last news report I saw....

Cheers all
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Old 25-07-2009, 06:07 PM   #24
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The 2.0 EcoBoost is 205kw/380Nm with unnoticeable turbo lag. The torque curve is flat from 1600rpm-5500 rpm just like the 3.5 EB engine in the Taurus SHO. The 2.0 EB will be used in the 2010 or 2011 Explorer, and possibly will replace the already-dead 4.2 Triton V6 in the F150. And people think this won't be powerful enough for a Falcon?
People need to understand, this will feel like it has more low-end torque than the 4.0 N/A I-6, because it does kick in lower in the rev range.
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Old 25-07-2009, 07:00 PM   #25
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I found this article quite interesting.

http://ninemsn.carpoint.com.au/news/...onrunner-15971

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Falcon four a non-runner

Ford has based the future of the Falcon on computer simulations

Ford Asia-Pacific's chief vehicle engineer, Rob Connor, today admitted that Falcon's future is still based on computer simulations.

Where most would assume the Australian arm of the Blue Oval would have tested four-cylinder-engined mules of Falcon, the decision to add a four-cylinder line to the Aussie large rear-wheel drive icon, has been based purely on unreal-world calculations.

"It's all computer simulations, so pretty much every aspect of how the car's going to drive, what the acceleration's going to be like, fuel economy... How loud it's going to be... is all simulated up front..." said Connor.

Ford in the US has published figures of 205kW of power and 380Nm of torque for the new engine, so it appears that the new engine has the legs -- on paper.

"We're about two weeks away from being able to have a drive… I'm looking forward to that…" said Connor, when asked what progress had been made with real-world testing.

Whilst it's common now to undertake extensive virtual testing of crash structures and the like, it is nonetheless still unusual that such a ground-breaking decision would be announced ahead of engineering evaluation vehicles even turning a wheel
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Old 25-07-2009, 07:20 PM   #26
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Fair enough, you make some good points HSE2, lets hope it all works out for the better on release.

Don't get me wrong, I'm no fan of the whole green thing. My preference is as much performance possible while being cheap to run eg: lpg injected V8/I6T.

If Ford manage to steal some bland Toyota sales away we can hope the profit may go towards more development of the fan boy type models.
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Old 26-07-2009, 09:52 PM   #27
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When you look at what is happening globaly...the Chinese economy is growing into a monster....an...oil...consuming monster.

Remember all those thousands of Chinese you would see riding push bikes in the back ground, when viewing news reports about China on TV in years gone by....yea well they are now thousands upon thousands of Chinese driving motor cars now...with only a few push bikes to be seen now...and its happening all over China.

That emerging Chinese middle class....they all want to own their own car as well...just like us, only there are millions and millions, more of them, than there are of us.

Somebody at Ford did their home work....by the middle of this Century we could very well see all localy produced cars made for the Australian market running on LPG. (Australia has big Gas Fields)

Unless ofcourse you want to buy an expensive 4 cylinder import that runs on petrol or diesel, which by then could be so expensive per litre, that it is beyond the budget of most working class Australians..........
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Old 27-07-2009, 09:00 AM   #28
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I had no idea a diesel falcon would have so much support. perhaps you guys should go set up a protest down at ford hq to get the diesel into the falcon.
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Old 27-07-2009, 11:14 AM   #29
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there was a review of the new bmw 330td in the weekends paper 200ish kw @ 6000 rpm and 520nm= low 6 sec quarters.

personally,i think european engines are markably better than most local engines.
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Old 27-07-2009, 12:19 PM   #30
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I think many here are also forgetting the real driver behind the ecoBoost I4T. Emissions.

Another bit of info... this engine is the first of the ecoBoost line of engines to enjoy Twin iVCT... ;)
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