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Preface: This is meant to be a "fun, thought-provoking" thread to pass time while we all wait for our trucks. 
There are some eerily similar details between the development of the new Maverick and the Ford Pinto produced through 1980.
For those of us who have been around a while, recall that the Pinto (codenamed Lee's Car) went from sketch pad to showroom in a remarkable 24 months. It also set the standard for lightweight cars among domestic manufacturers at the time. It was first to market ahead of AMC's Gremlin and Chevrolet's Vega. Lastly, it carried a shockingly low price. Sound familiar?
It did not take long for the Pinto's shortcomings to become apparent. The explosive fuel tanks were the main problem which has been well documented over the years.
This might beg the question: Could the Maverick be the next Pinto? Having been developed in just 22 months, relatively lightweight in its construction, and sold at a low price, this could put hundreds of thousands of these vehicles on roadways in a very short period of time. Could a major design error could match or exceed the 500+ lives lost to the Pinto?
While manufacturing processes have no doubt gotten much better and modern safety systems are nothing short of amazing in most cases, it all starts with the engineering and requires strict quality control at all levels.
What do you think about these stark similarities?
There are some eerily similar details between the development of the new Maverick and the Ford Pinto produced through 1980.
For those of us who have been around a while, recall that the Pinto (codenamed Lee's Car) went from sketch pad to showroom in a remarkable 24 months. It also set the standard for lightweight cars among domestic manufacturers at the time. It was first to market ahead of AMC's Gremlin and Chevrolet's Vega. Lastly, it carried a shockingly low price. Sound familiar?
It did not take long for the Pinto's shortcomings to become apparent. The explosive fuel tanks were the main problem which has been well documented over the years.
This might beg the question: Could the Maverick be the next Pinto? Having been developed in just 22 months, relatively lightweight in its construction, and sold at a low price, this could put hundreds of thousands of these vehicles on roadways in a very short period of time. Could a major design error could match or exceed the 500+ lives lost to the Pinto?
While manufacturing processes have no doubt gotten much better and modern safety systems are nothing short of amazing in most cases, it all starts with the engineering and requires strict quality control at all levels.
What do you think about these stark similarities?
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