To quote Gunny Whitlock, never forget the seven P's...Your comparison is a little bit lacking of proportional perspective and context.
First, 1966 was the THIRD FULL YEAR of production for the Mustang, not the first THREE MONTHS of a new product launch as in the case of the Maverick.
By 1966, Ford had THREE plants building the Mustang in Dearborn MI, San Jose CA, and Metuchen NJ - thus they had the capacity to build that many cars.
This year we also have this little thing called a PANDEMIC. This has cause a global shortage on manpower, supplies, parts, material and has cause production of literally everything to be at a 50-60% level.
People ....get some perspective.
Sounds interesting but unlikely. Do you have a link to a reliable source we could look at?By the time the Maverick is a collector's car, people will not be allowed to own individual transportation... You don't think that's true? read what's going on in England right now.
Huh, if posts like mine are so exhausting, why do you take the time to read them and then respond? It posts such as mine are so terrible, prove it by ignoring the post and not responding....I wonder how many computer chips that 1966 Mustang required? Also you are not in "month 6" unless you're counting months where production wasn't even started. Production started mid-September. You knew this ahead of time. You're in month 3.
These posts are exhausting.
As someone else said - if Ford is doing a terrible job, tell them so with your dollars and buy something else.
True that but we aren't in the same world today.121,538 is the number for the 1964 1/2 Mustang. So that works out to a bit over 20,000 a month from startup. Compare that to a bit over 5,000 a month on the Maverick.
https://www.motorious.com/articles/features-3/uk-eliminating-car-ownership/Sounds interesting but unlikely. Do you have a link to a reliable source we could look at?
Great post. But some just like to hear themselves complain, I guess. The Maverick is a "want", not a necessity - but it's hard to tell that with the way some of these folks act about it. America, and particularly Ford buyers, are probably going to have to get over this instant gratification culture. They want this build-to-order thing to be the new norm even post-pandemic.True that but we aren't in the same world today.
Ford had likely 30-35% of the automotive market in the 1960s and had the demand associated with it. Today there are at least a dozen more brands and hundreds upon hundreds more choices buyers have diluting the market such that today's manufacturer's even at their most robust don't allocate capacity they way they did back then.
The Mustang launched into a market that was the best of times, solid, growing and nothing in its path in the way of challenges. Ford had the ability and reasons for that product to plan that much capacity.
Today, a new product launch like Maverick is a much more expensive and risky thing. Because Ford or any American manufacturer isn't the powerhouse they were in the 1960s, they dont have the infrastructure to just have an empty factory at the ready to crank out 20k copies of anything at a moment's notice. It just doesn't work that way today.
And again.....we are in a pandemic. People need to get that through their heads. ALL MANUFACTURING is down not because they don't have their shit together. It's because the entire global network of supply and transportation is jacked. Period. To miss this single point at some level has to be a willful choice or just blindness.
Oh yeah, that Loon who also produced this glittering jewel of ignorance: https://www.motorious.com/articles/features-3/2021-disappointing-car-reveal/
Also, the fear mongering appears to be based on this comment:Oh yeah, that Loon who also produced this glittering jewel of ignorance: https://www.motorious.com/articles/features-3/2021-disappointing-car-reveal/
Do you have anything from The Onion?
Not exactly banning private car ownership....she said it was necessary to ditch the "20th-century thinking centred [sic] around private vehicle ownership and towards greater flexibility, with personal choice and low carbon shared transport."
That article is some crankery. I like cars as much as the next guy, but public transport is elitist? Lmao, good one. The UK has much denser urban areas than generally anywhere in North America. Public transportation is vital for cutting emissions, congestion, safety, etc.
Very well stated salient points. However, Ford and other auto companies did screw up by canceling their chip orders. They also dropped the ball by using chips straight out of the 90s produced at antique wafer fabs that are not profitable. My tossing in the production numbers was more to stir the pot than anything.. (I like popcorn...) And it worked, the same old curmudgeons just had to step up and say their thing... And I'm not referring to your response because again your reasoning is well thought out and factual.True that but we aren't in the same world today.
And again.....we are in a pandemic. People need to get that through their heads. ALL MANUFACTURING is down not because they don't have their shit together. It's because the entire global network of supply and transportation is jacked. Period. To miss this single point at some level has to be a willful choice or just blindness.