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Ford Motor Company <[email protected]-ford.com>
Wed, Sep 21, 2022 at 1:30 PM
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He also has all the 45 day Dear John emails Saying they are...
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probably higher than 50% if his profile is correct and it's an ecoboost... unless it's an XL.The old Ouija board predicted: unknown due to allocations, 50/50 chance
Not sure about the six months and not sure if Ford is going to go back to the stock model or if they will primarily do build-to-order. It's a lot less wasted inventory if you overbuild and have to use incentives to move trucks, but at the same time, there is NO stock now.I have a feeling, totally unsupported by fact, that in six months you'll be able to walk onto any dealer lot and buy an ecoboost on the spot - just like the old days. Why? Partly because of the extra shift catching up with orders. Partly because I suspect they'll build more ecoboost models as they try to figure out the hybrid fire thing that has stopped delivery. If you are Ford, build what you can sell now.
Total conjecture. Likely hot air and BS, but it's my take.
This kind of thing is why I can't figure out why every car manufacturer is not putting their full force behind creating small, affordable, efficient trucks. Hello!! Is anyone out there paying attention?Not sure about the six months and not sure if Ford is going to go back to the stock model or if they will primarily do build-to-order. It's a lot less wasted inventory if you overbuild and have to use incentives to move trucks, but at the same time, there is NO stock now.
Agreed about ecoboost.
I very much doubt that we're going to see hybrid stock anytime soon. They'll all get chewed up in retail orders and fleet. Especially fleet. There was a guy with a pool service that somehow bought 6 hybrid Mavs retail, not fleet. He said they were going to save the company more than 200K the first year. That's between purchase price (old trucks were Ridgelines), fuel savings and insurance cost.
That's only six. Imagine the savings for a company with a fleet in the thousands or ten thousands.
Grossly oversimplified.This kind of thing is why I can't figure out why every car manufacturer is not putting their full force behind creating small, affordable, efficient trucks. Hello!! Is anyone out there paying attention?
The Tacoma fits a market that no one really fills, the Ranger is really its only competition.Grossly oversimplified.
It's not quite so easy to create something like a Maverick. If you watch the popular video with the Canadian guy reviewing a Maverick and he owns a Santa Cruz, he points out things that make good truck sense... and it's because Ford knows trucks and Hyundai doesn't.
Subaru was too early to market and failed to connect to truck buyers with the 2003 Baja. Even the hot (at that time) 2.5 turbo couldn't sell those 'trucks'.
I'm not saying that Toyota couldn't chop the back off a RAV-4 and tweak the interior a little to make a good compact unibody truck, but at the same time if they literally just did that, there is no guarantee it would be a hit. Plus Toyota sells a lot of Tacomas. If they build a compact truck and many of the sales cannibalize the Tacoma, are they really ahead?