I wouldn't either. Kicking ex-CEO Toyoda upstairs for new CEO Sato was a big step to right the ship.True, but I wouldn't count them out. They didn't get to where they are from being stupid.
Ford's new CEO Farley has a lot of work to do. I wish him and his company well. Too much at stake.And at Ford, "Quality Is Job One." LOL what a joke that is. That's coming from a former Ford fan boy. Once my van goes to the scrap heap I'm done with them.
Everyone seems to have a day in mind they “collapsed” - but, talking to the BiL last night - his 2015 F150 eB has been perfect so far …Ford's new CEO Farley has a lot of work to do. I wish him and his company well. Too much at stake.
Not me, my friend. You said that, not me.Ahhh yes, the "Toyota can do no wrong" posse has arrived in a Ford thread, nobody could have seen that coming...
A pure play EV platform will make a better EV.
Just my 2 cents...
In the case of Ford, their F series platform was a winner for ICE PUs for decades. I guess to them it made sense to run with it, and save money. Win win they thought. Where they screwed up is they didn't have the battery tech, range, etc. As a result they turned out a turd, and cutting the price will move the turds faster. If they had the EV tech right I think they'd have a winner, and could have held prices where they were. I wish them well, they have an uphill battle ahead of them. JMO.Love this thread. Everyone seems to have a piece of the puzzle; we are all right, at least a little bit.
We can say both Ford and Toyota seem to be have having a rough go out of the gate in their EV endeavours.
My take is, they tried to use existing platforms and toss in an electric drivetrain with their choice of battery. They chose the easy way instead of the best way. Existing or dual use platforms are, by definition, a compromise.
A pure play EV platform will make a better EV.
Just my 2 cents...
That said, the Rivian is a pure play EV platform and it's 1,000lbs heavier than the Ford, so...Love this thread. Everyone seems to have a piece of the puzzle; we are all right, at least a little bit.
We can say both Ford and Toyota seem to be have having a rough go out of the gate in their EV endeavours.
My take is, they tried to use existing platforms and toss in an electric drivetrain with their choice of battery. They chose the easy way instead of the best way. Existing or dual use platforms are, by definition, a compromise.
A pure play EV platform will make a better EV.
Just my 2 cents...
Agreed. The question is, what is their next move? I like Farley's transparancy. Unlike others, he talks reality, not "we will be ...", etc.In the case of Ford, their F series platform was a winner for ICE PUs for decades. I guess to them it made sense to run with it, and save money. Win win they thought. Where they screwed up is they didn't have the battery tech, range, etc. As a result they turned out a turd, and cutting the price will move the turds faster. If they had the EV tech right I think they'd have a winner, and could have held prices where they were. I wish them well, they have an uphill battle ahead of them. JMO.
Your guess is as good as mine. I can say one thing which applies to me, and probably a lot of other people. When a company burns someone once with a POS product, there's a good chance they'll never do business with that company again. And bad news spreads a lot faster than good news. Farley might have a bigger mess than he anticipates on his hands.Agreed. The question is, what is their next move? I like Farley's transparancy. Unlike others, he talks reality, not "we will be ...", etc.
Ummm, you said:Not me, my friend. You said that, not me.
You won't find anyone who wants to buy locally more than I. Never would I chant, "Toyota uber alles".
That's definitely a "Toyota can do no wrong" overtoneKira said:Look how Toyota progressed through vehicle sizes and capacities. Keep in mind the "feedback flow" they enjoyed; it was paced.
American car companies cobbled together a few hybrids.
As compared to what, the Tundra towing the space shuttle?Maybe I grew up seeing Ford (and other local brands') commercials too much and that sensitized/irritated me.
So your criticism of Ford in 2023 is based on the fact their econobox in the 70's wasn't as good as what was coming from the Japanese marques?Did it ever dawn on you that the big 3-4 were in a position to communicate product plans and never did? It was always next year's cheap excitement. Tell me about your AMC Pacer, Pinto, Vega.....all the while other companies improved things.
This is word salad.A car magazine said in a Super Beetle review, "Everything works positively in these cars". The corresponding mushiness of US cars was unignorable.
While I love the fact that GM and Ford had headlight switches etc. which fit dozens of models each, I gotta ask, what have they done for you lately?
Tesla was losing money for ages, EV's weren't seen as a serious market, or threat, by EVERY major car company, including the one you just lauded for their "paced and progressive" approach, whose first serious foray into the EV space has been less than spectacular.You can't undervalue the head start certain car companies got.
That's not what the growth in the EV spaced was based on though now was it? Uncle Elon started with a luxury car and SUV (S and X) to build the brand, then came out with what's essentially a BMW 3-series equivalent (Model 3) that was more down-market. None of these cars are slow or cheap. The M3 might match the "simple" approach, given everything is done from the screen, but the electronics running it all aren't.Could it be that the simplest electric cars might be best suited to slower, local trips for the near future?
Manufacturers produce what the market wants. The Wagoneer/Grand Wagoneer is selling well. It's literally the antithesis to everything you are endorsing here. The Tesla Model S would not have been successful if it had the acceleration of a Nissan Versa.What do I see? Super E-cars which go 0-60 in 1 second or 7 ton boxes which don't work as imaged in commercials.
Tell me why that isn't a clown act?
If you've followed ANY of the EV testing, you'd realize that a substantial majority of EV's don't get anywhere near their claimed range. In fact, the Lightning is far from being the biggest offender on the list.The huge lie of the Lightening's range is laughable.
Vehicle | Price | Real Range (Miles) | EPA Range (Miles) | Difference | Efficiency (mi/kWh) |
2022 Lucid Air Dream Edition Range | $169,000 | 500 | 520 | -4.0% | 4.30 |
2022 Mercedes EQS 450+ | $102,310 | 395 | 350 | +13.0% | 3.67 |
2022 BMW iX xDrive50 w/20" Wheels | $83,200 | 345 | 324 | +6.5% | 3.25 |
2023 Cadillac Lyriq RWD w/20" Wheels | $62,990 | 330 | 312 | +5.8% | 3.15 |
2021 Tesla Model 3 AWD | $48,990 | 310 | 353 | -12.2% | 4.25 |
2023 Porsche Taycan RWD 93 kWh Battery (New Software) | $81,150* | 305 | 225 | +35.8% | 3.66 |
2021 Tesla Model S Plaid w/21" Arachnid | $134,490 | 300 | 348 | -12.0% | 3.30 |
2021 Porsche Taycan RWD 93 kWh Battery | $85,470* | 293 297 | 225 225 | +30.0% +32.0% | 3.49 3.50 |
2019 Tesla Model 3 AWD | $47,990 | 290 | 322 | -10.0% | 4.25 |
2021 Ford Mustang Mach-E California Route 1 Edition | $50,400 | 287 | 305 | -6.0% | 3.30 |
2023 Ford Mustang Mach-E Premium AWD Extended Range | $66,295 | 285 | 290 | -1.7% | 3.10 |
2020 Porsche Taycan 4S 93 kWh | $103,800* | 278 | 203 | +36.9% | 3.32 |
2020 Tesla Model Y AWD | $49,990 | 276 | 316 | -12.7% | 3.85 |
2022 Ford Lightning Lariat Extended Range | $77,474 | 270 | 320 | -15.6% | 2.10 |
2022 Rivian R1T Large Pack, 20" all-terrain tires | $79,500 | 254 | 314** | -19.1% | 2.03 |
2021 Porsche Taycan 4 Cross Turismo 93 kWh Battery | $93,700 | 252 | 215 | +17.2% | 3.10 |
2021 Porsche Taycan Turbo Cross Turismo 93 kWh Battery | $153,500 | 246 | 204 | +20.6% | 2.92 |
2022 Kia EV6 GT-Line AWD 20" Wheels | $56,400 | 245 | 274 | -10.6 | 3.30 |
2022 BMW i4 M50 w/20" Wheels | $65,900 | 239 | 227 | +5.3% | 2.95 |
2020 Hyundai Kona EV | $37,190 | 238 | 258 | -7.8% | 3.90 |
2021 Volkswagen ID.4 First Edition | $43,995 | 234 | 250 | -6.4% | 3.00 |
2022 Hyundai Ioniq 5 AWD SEL w/19" Wheels | $45,900 | 227 | 256 | -11.3% | 3.10 |
2021 Ford Mustang Mach-E AWD Std Range | $50,300 | 226 | 211 | +7.1% | 3.30 |
2020 Chevrolet Bolt EV | $36,620 | 226 | 259 | -12.7% | 3.40 |
2021 Polestar Polestar 2 | $59,990 | 226 | 233 | -3.1% | 3.12 |
2022 Hyundai Ioniq 5 AWD Limited w/20" Wheels | $54,500 | 195 | 256 | -24.0% | 2.70 |
2022 Jaguar I-Pace EV400 w/22" Wheels | $69,900 | 195 | 234 | -16.7% | 2.37 |
2020 Nissan LEAF SL + | $43,900 | 190 | 215 | -11.6% | 3.40 |
2022 Ford Lightning Pro Standard Range | $39,974 | 214 | 230 | -7.0% | 2.20 |
2019 Audi e-tron | $74,800 | 188 | 204 | -7.9% | 2.30 |
2020 Hyundai Ioniq EV | $33,045 | 171 | 170 | +0.6% | 4.50 |
2019 BMW i3s BEV | $47,650 | 141 | 153 | -7.8% | 3.60 |
2020 BMW i3s REx | $51,500 | 126 | 126 | 0.0% | 3.50 |
2020 MINI Cooper SE | $29,990 | 108 | 110 | -1.8% | 3.70 |
2015 Chevy Spark EV | $25,995 | 63 | 82 | -23.2% | 3.50 |
2018 smart Electric Drive | $28,750 | 51 | 57 | -10.5% | 3.40 |
But if the foundation of your reasoning is a bog of lies (the Lightning is heavier than an aircraft carrier, the lightning range is 4 billion times lower than claimed, let's just roll with that delicious hyperbole), that tends to ring hollow. How can I take seriously a claim made by somebody so eager to misrepresent a product? Which really seems to be based on a deeply personal resentment of the manufacturer's unwillingness to produce the product you think people SHOULD be driving.I still want to buy US made goods but I won't reward cheap advertising with my hard earned dollars. I'll patronize whoever makes a vehicle best suited to my needs and which deals me the least bovex.
Build a truck that looks like a truck because Average Joe is more likely to accept a product that looks like what he's used to? I think that's a pretty reasonable thought process on display there. I like the BMW i4 because it looks like a 4-series, I liked the e-tron because it looked like a normal Audi...etc."We gotta make the Lightening look like a regular F-150 so people will except it", tells you at least some of their priorities were misplaced.
And what do you propose a "sure thing" to be? If you've got all the answers, why aren't you the one in charge at Ford?"Ford's big gamble"...why didn't they design a sure thing? They so smart, no?
Actually his analogy of flat earthers in this case, was a good one. Both they, and many who believe EV's are "green", will never be persuaded to think otherwise. This regardless of how many facts you show them.I've never met this person. Seriously. Even early Prius owners. I've sure heard this eco person exists from people who aren't them. There's sure a decent size group of people that seem to believe that's what this is all about.
Yeah, flat earthers wasn't meant to be condescending either I'm sure. This is how people talk that assume they're better than someone else. It's ****ty behavior. "Oh it's this or that". Sure. It's also lacking social skills. Being a **** and accidentally coming across as a **** is basically the same thing. The second one is lacking social skills. Would it help if I took the approach and completely dissected it and called you ignorant for liking something else than I do? No it wouldn't. I'd only point that out if someone didn't understand something, like say charging times or how something worked that someone wasn't familiar with. But if I picked whatever your drove and called you condescending names and called you a dumb dumb simpleton for being duped into it assuming I knew exactly why you bought the vehicle you drive, I'd be a ****. At the end of the day you don't know why someone chooses something, but it seems to make a whole lot of people feel better to think it wasn't from a place of free will.
the fish & ski boat analogy - a pro in either sport won’t buy oneLove this thread. Everyone seems to have a piece of the puzzle; we are all right, at least a little bit.
We can say both Ford and Toyota seem to be have having a rough go out of the gate in their EV endeavours.
My take is, they tried to use existing platforms and toss in an electric drivetrain with their choice of battery. They chose the easy way instead of the best way. Existing or dual use platforms are, by definition, a compromise.
A pure play EV platform will make a better EV.
Just my 2 cents...
I haven't followed the truck segment too closely. A body on frame design like mosy pickups allows for more flexibility like fitting a heavy battery, but a ground up design, unless it's botched, should be better.That said, the Rivian is a pure play EV platform and it's 1,000lbs heavier than the Ford, so...![]()
Actually his analogy of flat earthers in this case, was a good one. Both they, and many who believe EV's are "green", will never be persuaded to think otherwise. This regardless of how many facts you show them.
They simply WANT to believe that EV's are "green".... Just as flat earthers WANT to believe the earth is flat. Even though there is plenty of reputable proof both are not.
Many people get tired of hearing that over and over. As well as constantly putting up with it. Enough already. His B.S. meter got pegged. And I don't blame him.
And I'm noticing a hell of a lot of asterisks in your posts, but none in mine of his. That alone should tell you something.
They come in all shapes and sizes. And no, I'm not saying he drove an EV.Hold on...wait a minute here.
You're telling me that the earth isn't flat.
Mind blown...what if I fall off the edge...are there guard rails?!
The Rivian is closer in size to a Ranger, despite being significantly heavier than The F-150. It has more power. A decent C&D review here:I haven't followed the truck segment too closely. A body on frame design like mosy pickups allows for more flexibility like fitting a heavy battery, but a ground up design, unless it's botched, should be better.
The Ford has a big advantage; it is known as the work truck since forever. Truck buyers want trucks that look like trucks. The Rivian is different looking by design. I kinda consider it more of a life style vehicle, but that's just me.
Who is selling more? Price comparison? MSRP vs Real Price?
I believe the Rivian has better range and can out tow the Lightning.
My question is, which is the better EV? I don't know but my guess is the Rivian.
Time will tell. Interesting times ahead.