You Test It: Be Among First People Behind the Wheel of All-New F-150

You Test It: Ford Offers Opportunity to Be Among First People Behind the Wheel of All-New F-150

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DEARBORN – Ford, America’s truck leader, is looking for truck buyers to take an all-new F-150 through some of the toughest testing it might ever encounter – their own.

Ford is launching the “You Test” campaign, in which actual Ford F-150 drivers and fans could win the opportunity to sit behind the wheel of the all-new 2015 F-150 before nearly anyone else in the world. By visiting BuiltToughTest.com, customers can tell Ford how they would test the toughness of the new F-150 pickup – maybe through a grueling off-road challenge, or even through the daily routine of a demanding job site.

“We prove every day our trucks are Built Ford Tough – now we’re asking truck customers to help us prove it too,” said Eric Peterson, Ford F-150 marketing manager. “We’re looking for people who know how to punish a truck. Built Ford Tough isn’t just a tagline; it’s the philosophy that drives us every day to make the best trucks out there, and it’s what has made F-Series the No. 1 truck for nearly 40 years.”

Up to five winners will be selected to spend up to a week behind the wheel of a new F-150 while video crews document the truck undergoing the real-world testing. The videos will be posted to YouTube.com/FordTrucks.

Entries must be received by May 31, 2014. Winners will be announced before Sept. 1, 2014. No purchase necessary. Complete terms and conditions are available at BuiltToughTest.com.

The all-new F-150 is the toughest F-150 ever, with a high-strength steel frame and a high-strength, military-grade, aluminum-alloy body. The new F-150 will undergo more than 10 million miles of toughness and durability testing before it reaches showrooms later this year.

F-150 is also the preferred light-duty pickup among workers in some of the toughest vocations. According to Polk registration data of light-duty pickups, 53 percent of these truck drivers in the heavy construction industry, 56 percent in the heavy hauling industry and 60 percent in the energy/utility industry drive F-150 pickups.

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. A PURCHASE OR PAYMENT OF ANY KIND WILL NOT INCREASE YOUR CHANCES OF BEING SELECTED.
SPONSOR: Ford Motor Company, 16800 Executive Drive, Dearborn, MI 48126. ADMINISTRATOR: Exposure Marketing & Promotion, Inc., 1000 North Opdyke Rd, Auburn Hills, MI 48326.
 
ELIGIBILITY: The Promotion is open only to legal residents of the 50 United States and District of Columbia or Canada (excluding Quebec) who are 18 (or age of majority in jurisdiction of residence, whichever is older) or over and who have a valid driver’s license, as of date of entry (“Entrant”). Employees, directors and officers and their immediate families of Sponsor, Administrator, any other entities involved in the implementation and execution of the Promotion (collectively the “Promotion Entities”), as well as employees/officers/directors (& EMPLOYEE’S) of competitors of Ford Motor Company, are not eligible. Promotion is void in Puerto Rico and other US Commonwealths, Territories and jurisdictions (including overseas military installations), in Quebec and where prohibited.
 
AGREEMENT TO THE OFFICIAL RULES: By participating, Entrant agrees to these Official Rules and the decisions of the Sponsor and the Administrator, which are final and binding.
 
To view complete Terms & Conditions, visit: BuiltToughTest.com.

Aluminum Revolution: Ford Introduces a New F-150

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(DEARBORN, Mich.) — Ford pickups have been doing the country’s work for 66 years. They’ve hauled grain, towed logs and plowed snow. They’ve cleared debris after tornadoes and pulled floats in the Rose Bowl parade.

They’ve shouldered those loads with parts forged from steel. Until now.

On Monday, Ford unveils a new F-150 with a body built almost entirely out of aluminum. The lighter material shaves as much as 700 pounds off the 5,000-pound truck, a revolutionary change for a vehicle known for its heft and an industry still heavily reliant on steel. The change is Ford’s response to small-business owners’ desire for a more fuel-efficient and nimble truck — and stricter government requirements on fuel economy. And it sprang from a challenge by Ford’s CEO to move beyond the traditional design for a full-size pickup.

“You’re either moving ahead and you’re improving and you’re making it more valuable and more useful to the customer or you’re not,” Chief Executive Alan Mulally told The Associated Press in a recent interview.

Ninety-seven percent of the body of the 2015 F-150 is aluminum, the most extensive use of aluminum ever in a truck. And this isn’t just any truck. F-Series trucks — which include the F-150 and heavier duty models like the F-250 — have been the best-selling vehicles in the U.S. for the last 32 years; last year, Ford sold an F-Series every 41 seconds.

The key question for Ford, and the people who sell its trucks, is: Will customers embrace such a radical change? Dealers who have seen the new F-150 say they expect to encounter some skepticism, but the change had to be made.

“We’re aggressive, stretching the envelope,” said Sam Pack, owner of four Ford dealerships in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. “I think you have to do that. If you don’t, then you get into that predicament of being a ‘me too’ vehicle.”

Still, it’s a big risk. Ford makes an estimated $10,000 profit on every F-Series truck it sells, making trucks a $7.6 billion profit center in the U.S. alone last year. And the company has had some quality issues with recent vehicle launches, adding to dealers’ worries. The 2013 Escape small SUV has been the subject of seven recalls.

The 2015 F-150 goes on sale late this year. While aluminum is more expensive that steel, Ford truck marketing chief Doug Scott says the F-Series will stay within the current price range. F-Series trucks now range from a starting price of $24,445 for a base model to $50,405 for a top-of-the-line Limited.

It’s difficult to calculate how much more aluminum costs, since there are different grades of aluminum and steel. Pete Reyes, the F-150′s chief engineer, said Ford expects to make up the premium by reducing its recycling costs, since there will be less metal to recycle, and by slimming down the engine and other components, since they won’t have to move so much weight.

Aluminum was used on cars even before the first F-Series went on sale in 1948. It’s widely used on sporty, low-volume cars now, like the Tesla Model S electric sedan and the Land Rover Evoque. U.S. Postal Service trucks are also made of aluminum.

Ford has spent decades researching the metal. Twenty years ago, the company built a fleet of 20 all-aluminum experimental sedans. Later, it used aluminum on exotic cars from Aston-Martin and Jaguar, brands it used to own. But up to now, Ford limited the aluminum on its trucks to the hoods and used steel for the rest.

New government fuel economy requirements, which mandate that automakers’ cars and trucks get a combined 54.5 miles per gallon by 2025, are speeding the switch to aluminum. Chrysler’s Ram is currently the most fuel-efficient pickup, getting 25 mpg on the highway. The current F-150 gets as much as 23 mpg. Ford won’t say what the new truck’s fuel economy will be, but says it will trump the competition.

That could be an especially important incentive for landscapers, carpenters and other small business owners focused on their bottom line.

“I think that’s going to outweigh the aluminum part of it,” said Brian Jarrett, a Ford dealer in Winter Haven, Fla., who hasn’t yet seen the new truck.

Improvements in aluminum are also driving the change. Three years ago, for example, Alcoa Inc. — one of Ford’s suppliers for the F-150 — figured out a way to pretreat aluminum so it would be more durable when parts are bonded together. Carmakers can now use three or four rivets to piece together parts that would have needed 10 rivets before, Alcoa spokesman Kevin Lowery said.

And Ford is able to take more risks. When the F-150 was last redesigned, in the mid-2000s, Ford was losing billions each year and resources were spread thin. But by 2010, when the company gave the green light to an all-aluminum truck, Ford was making money again. CEO Alan Mulally, a former Boeing Co. executive who joined Ford in 2006, encouraged his team to think bigger. After all, it was Mulally who led early development of Boeing’s Dreamliner, which replaced aluminum with even lighter-weight plastics to be more efficient and fly further.

“Everything becomes more efficient once you take the weight out,” Mulally says. He expects aluminum to be used across Ford’s model lineup in the future.

Ford is convinced truck buyers will accept the change. The company says the new truck will tow more and haul more, since the engine doesn’t have to account for so much weight. It can also accelerate and stop more quickly. Aluminum doesn’t rust, Ford says, and it’s more resistant to dents.

Reyes says the company planted prototype F-150s with three companies — in mining, construction and power — for two years without revealing they were aluminum. The companies didn’t notice a difference.

Mulally says Ford’s customers have already shown a willingness to adopt new technology. Forty percent of the F-Series trucks sold last year had Ford’s more efficient EcoBoost engines, for example, which were introduced just three years ago. And Mulally says owners trust Ford.

Ford will still have a tough time wresting customers from the competition, mainly Chevrolet, GMC and Ram, says Jesse Toprak, an independent auto industry consultant in Los Angeles.

“Movement between brands in the full-size truck segment is extremely minimal,” Toprak says. “It’s the strongest loyalty of any segment.”

Still, about 20 percent of pickup buyers traditionally are open to jumping from brand to brand based on features or price, Toprak said. The company with the newest, most advanced truck has the advantage in getting those customers, plus those who are new to the market, Toprak says.

Some steel remains on the truck. The frame beneath it is built primarily of high-strength steel, which Ford says will make it tougher and stiffer than the current frame. There’s also steel in the front dashboard, because Ford thought steel was better at dampening nose from the engine.

In all, a four-door F-150 has 660 pounds of aluminum, or nearly double the average use of aluminum per vehicle used now, according to Drive Aluminum, an aluminum industry Web site. If the Ford truck is a success, use of aluminum could expand rapidly at the expense of steel.

“People are beginning to truly understand the value that aluminum can bring to the table,” Lowery said.

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Ford is expecting some issues with the design or the manufacturing as it makes the change, Mulally said. But the company is working hard to troubleshoot.

“I think the attitude is, expect the unexpected and expect to deal with it,” he says. “Sometimes I think our core competency is scrambling. That’s not unique to Ford.”

Mulally, who grew up driving an F-150 on his family’s farm in Kansas, particularly likes the new truck’s front windows, which dip down 2 inches for better visibility.

“That’s just an unbelievable innovation. You’re sitting up there and you need to know where you are,” he says. “I think that is absolutely a laser focus on what the customer wants and values.”

Amazing Self-Parking Car

The Amazing Self-Parking Car

Ford is developing a new automated parking technology that could enable drivers to park with only the push of a button from inside or outside of their car. The technology, called Fully Assisted Parking Aid, is currently in the prototype phase and controls steering, gear selection, and forward and reverse motion to allow push-button parking.

Tremor Pickup

Sporty 2014 Ford F-150 Tremor Pickup debuts in Dearborn

The new 2014 Ford F-150 Tremor rolled out bringing back a sporty pickup to Ford’s lineup. Sporting a 365 horsepower EcoBoost that makes 420 lbs-feet of torque, Ford added a 4.10 rear-end with an electronic locking rear diff. The 2014 Ford F-150 Tremor is set up for roasting rear tires (although, it’s offered in 4-wheel drive too) Ford is bringing back the street truck!

A Happy New Fiesta Owner

I was a loyal Saturn customer for over a decade and was dreading my next car buying trip until I found Randy here at Mullinax. Randy made the entire experience quick and painless. It was as stress free as car buying could be and I love my new Fiesta. I will gladly recommend him to anybody looking for a vehicle. – “Google+ Review”

The start of an empire.

Image“While working as an engineer for the Edison Illuminating Company in Detroit, Henry Ford (1863-1947) built his first gasoline-powered horseless carriage, the Quadricycle, in the shed behind his home. In 1903, he established the Ford Motor Company, and five years later the company rolled out the first Model T. In order to meet overwhelming demand for the revolutionary vehicle, Ford introduced revolutionary new mass-production methods, including large production plants, the use of standardized, interchangeable parts and, in 1913, the world’s first moving assembly line for cars. Enormously influential in the industrial world, Ford was also outspoken in the political realm. Ford drew controversy for his pacifist stance during the early years of World War I and earned widespread criticism for his anti-Semitic views and writings.” – History.com

Our new car

Thank you so much for working with us on such short notice. We love our Expedition. The entire purchase process from the first phone call to pulling away from the dealership with the new car was perfect. We’ve never had such a good experience buying a car. When the time comes, we’ll certainly come your way for another car.

Thank you again for making buying our car so easy.