Archive for the 'Fusion' Category

01
Mar
10

New Ford Cabin Air Filters Help Provide Relief

By Ford Motor Company

For the millions of people who suffer from airborne allergies, Ford is making a small change that could produce huge benefits. Beginning with the 2010 Ford Fusion, Mercury Milan and Lincoln MKZ, more efficient, upgraded allergen filters have been installed in the vehicles’ climate control systems. The particulate filters remove pollen, mold spores and road dust from outside air. The result is a cleaner, fresher cabin for occupants.

Ford is planning to use the high-quality cabin filters in a host of new vehicles, including the Ford Fiesta, which goes on sale in North America this year.

DETAILS
According to the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology, the costs of treating hay fever and similar nasal allergies have skyrocketed, reaching more than $11 billion annually – mostly for prescription medications.

For the 30 to 40 percent of people estimated to suffer from allergies, improvements in air quality can make a big difference in their symptoms, and consequently their health care expenses.

Ford’s new cabin air filter removes the most troublesome airborne allergens, such as pollen and mold spores.

The cabin filter used in North America is similar to the one that has helped certify Ford vehicles in Europe as being allergy-friendly by the independent testing organization TÜV Rhineland. Ford is the only automaker in Europe with the official TÜV allergy-friendly certification.

13
Jan
10

Ford Fusion Hybrid, Transit Connect win Car and Truck of the Year awards

Shawn Wright
Automotive News | January 11, 2010 – 8:00 am EST


DETROIT — The Ford Fusion Hybrid was named the North American Car of the Year today, while Ford’s Transit Connect picked up Truck of the Year accolades in a poll of journalists. It is only the third time in 17 years that a single manufacturer has won both titles. “We’ve been focusing very relentlessly on our strategy around making sure our vehicles are world-class in the areas of fuel economy, safety, quality and smart technology,” Mark Fields, Ford’s president of the Americas, said after the morning ceremony. “We’re just so glad we’re being recognized for that, both by the journalists but also, more importantly, by the customers.”

In 2009, Ford posted its first full-year gain in U.S. market share in 15 years.The automaker sold 15,559 Fusion Hybrids last year. The Fusion Hybrid topped the two other car finalists, the Buick LaCrosse and Volkswagen Golf. It’s just the second time a Ford car has taken the award. The Focus won in 2000. The Transit Connect, a small cargo truck, came out on top over the Chevrolet Equinox and Subaru Outback crossovers.

“The Transit Connect is what we call a white-space vehicle — there’s nothing like it on the road,” Fields said. “When you see this on the road, your first reaction is, ‘What is that?’ ”
As of mid-December, more than 600,000 Transit Connects have been sold over seven years in 55 countries. Ford has sold 8,834 Transit Connects since it entered the U.S. market in July.
U.S.-based automakers have taken home the car trophy nine times. European companies have won four times, Japanese three and South Korea’s Hyundai once.
In the truck category, domestics have claimed the crown 11 times, followed by four for Japanese makes and two for Europeans.

Ford has dominated the domestics, winning the award five times. The F-150 pickup won in 2009, 2004 and 1996. The Ford Escape Hybrid crossover took home Truck of the Year in 2005, as did the Ford Expedition SUV in 1997. Last year, the Hyundai Genesis won Car of the Year and the F-150 Truck of the Year.

It was the second time a Ford hybrid vehicle took the award. More than 50 vehicles were considered this year. Automotive News is represented on the 49-member voting panel by Executive Editor Edward Lapham. “This is such a motivator for our team to be recognized by the Car and Truck of the Year jury,” Fields said. “These are the most demanding journalists, and we were in a set of very, very tough competitions. … I think it just shows that we’re headed in the right direction.”

28
Dec
09

Ford sees bump in hybrid sales

Ford Motor’s hybrid sales are up 67 percent this year, despite an overall industry slump of 11 percent, the company reported.

The carmaker sold 31,000 hybrid cars through November this year–which was higher than its previous sales record set in 2007. The company said Wednesday that it pinned part of the increase on the release of the Ford Fusion Hybrid and Mercury Milan Hybrid. Both vehicles get 41 mpg in the city and 36 mpg on the highway, Ford said. The Fusion Hybrid, which was released in March, represents 45 percent of all Ford hybrid sales for 2009.

Ford’s goal is to make 10 percent to 25 percent of its fleet “electrified” by 2020. That’s the equivalent of 800,000 to 2 million cars. “Electrified” covers hybrids, plug-in hybrids, and battery-electric vehicles.

16
Nov
09

Ford Fusion has record year

BRYCE G. HOFFMAN
The Detroit News

Sales of the Ford Fusion have topped 151,000 units this year, making it the best-selling car from a domestic manufacturer.

Ford Motor Co. today said its popular midsized sedan already has set a new annual sales record — passing its previous high of 149,552 units set in 2007.

“It’s extraordinary that a car could set a sales record in an environment where overall industry sales are down 26 percent from a year ago,” said Ford sales analyst George Pipas.

In the first 10 months of this year, Fusion sales were 15 percent higher than they were during the same period in 2008, making it one of the top 10 best-selling vehicles in the country.

Fusion sales received a big boost from the new Fusion Hybrid, which now accounts for nearly 20 percent of all Fusion retail sales. And Ford said more than 60 percent of those buying the hybrid model are converts from other brands — primarily Toyota and Honda.

It also has been helped by stellar ratings from influential publications like Consumer Reports, which says its quality is now superior to competing models from Japan’s leading carmakers.

The Fusion was introduced in 2005 as a 2006 model. It is produced in Hermosillo, Mexico.

14
Sep
09

Motor Mouth: New Ford Fusion wins admiring attention

In the parking lot of Salem Cooperative Bank on Saturday morning, as I approached the 2010 Ford Fusion I test-drove last week, a gentleman engagingly asked me what I thought about the car. He assumed I owned it, and he was curious because he liked the new Fusion himself. He drove a Saab, and his wife owned a Toyota. But he had noticed the restyled and updated Fusion sedan that Ford brought out early this year.

He liked the artfully creased, solidly sculpted body. Fusion wears a new nose this year, set off by a big, jutting chin, rakish headlamps and a wide, gleaming grille formed by three fat louvers – a design that’s become a noteworthy Ford signature. Ann Regan, dealer principal at family-owned Regan Ford in Haverhill, tells me that the redesigned nose of the 2010 Fusion has helped attract people to the car. I witnessed that fact in the parking lot on Saturday.

Fusion is a medium-sized, five-passenger, front- and all-wheel-drive sedan that starts at $19,995 and runs to $27,995 for a hybrid-drive version that earns an exemplary fuel-economy rating of 41 mile-per-gallon in city driving, 36 mpg on the highway.

My friendly interrogator at the Salem, N.H., bank wanted to know how quietly and smoothly the Fusion rode. Was it adequately powered, he wondered. He asked if it was comfortable, and if I liked the interior.

I drove a generously equipped Fusion SEL, which is the dressiest of the five variations available, including the hybrid. My test model came with a four-cylinder engine that puts out 175 horsepower and returns a fuel-economy rating of 22 mpg city, 31 mpg highway. You can also buy Fusion with all-wheel drive and a choice of V6 engines: a 3.0-liter V6 that gets 18/25 mpg with all-wheel drive, and a more powerful, 3.5-liter V6 in the Fusion Sport that rates 17/24 mpg.

Even with the smallest of Fusion’s three conventionally utilized gasoline engines (the Fusion Hybrid also uses a gas engine, but in combination with electric drive), my evaluation model seemed well powered and smoothly responsive. The news cheered my new friend.

I also gave positive reports about the other attributes on the bank patron’s list. But more than my favorable responses, the best news for Ford is that the gentleman cared enough to accost me and ask about the car. It demonstrated that drivers are noticing the dashing new model. Getting noticed is crucial for mid-size sedans, because the automotive segment is so hotly contested. Getting noticed can also be difficult, because the segment contains some popular and successful models, with the Toyota Camry and Honda Accord first among them.

From what I experienced in a seven-day evaluation, the Fusion deserves a line on the shopping lists of people looking at the best in mid-size sedans.

So I’m happy that Ford succeeded in catching people’s eye with a handsome design that coaxes them to look more closely at the car.

“If customers don’t get excited about the exterior, they’ll never come look at all the great features we have, or even come into the showroom,” Ford design manager Solomon Song summarized in a press release.

But in Haverhill, Ann Regan pointed out that the hybrid version has become another good conversation starter for the car.

“Someone came in just this morning and said, I can’t believe that Ford has a vehicle that gets 41 miles per gallon,” Regan noted last week. “It’s been an eye-opener, and it’s been very rewarding.”

Regan explained that hybrid-drive cars don’t suit every driver. But the high-mileage version helps sell other Fusion versions, she said.

“Waking people up and letting them know that there’s a 41 mile-per-gallon vehicle sold by Ford opens the door,” Regan said. “When they see the car, it opens the door a little bit more.” Experiencing the Fusion in test drives, evaluating features and characteristics of the new model, often cinches a sale, said the dealer.

“Then they just have to decide on the engine they want,” whether four- or six-cylinder, or hybrid, Regan said.

Another boost comes from technical features available in the car, she noted.

In addition to Ford’s Sync network that connects the vehicle with external information and entertainment sources like MP3 music players and cellular communicators, the model I drove featured the company’s Blind Spot Information System (BLIS). It flashes clearly discernible alerts when surrounding vehicles pass into the obscured areas around the rear quarters. I’m not usually wowed by new technical wonders, but I found Fusion’s Blis reassuring and legitimately helpful during an after-dark commute on Interstate 93.

Regan stated that the Ford Motor Co. overall — beyond just the Fusion — is acquiring a reputation as a technology leader. The company is also winning high scores in vehicle dependability and reliability ratings. Such developments are helping to drive more people to hers and other Ford dealerships, she said.

I’ll add patriotism as another strong motive. In the last year, Ford has shown itself to be a tough, well principled American company willing to struggle to uphold our national values. As a result, of the three global car makers with corporate headquarters in America, only Ford remains independent from government ownership. For the many Americans who value liberty, independence and self-reliance, I’ll repeat an encouragement I’ve written before: bravo, Ford. And bravo to people like the citizen I met on Saturday, who pay attention.

Jeffrey Zygmont has written about automobiles since 1982. Based in Salem, N.H., he writes books and articles about innovation, technology and culture. He can be contacted through the Web site www.jeffreyzygmont.com

source: Motor Mouth
Jeffrey Zygmont




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