- Oct 9, 1999
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Full-size sport-utilities can ring up $8,000 profit or more on each sale. In an industry where discounts averaging nearly $2,000 per vehicle are eating up profits, the Detroit automakers would be on life support without their high-margin trucks.
'Extravaganza' has a nice ring to it.Ford is far from choosing a name for the new vehicle. But an industry analyst who asked not to be named said it might be wise to lose the Excursion name because of the bad publicity it has received.
said Ford had ruled out only one thing: It will not build a Lincoln luxury version of the new jumbo sport-utility, despite GM's plan to sell its 2003 Cadillac Escalade ESV by January.
Originally posted by: Sluggo
This is the exact reason it wont stop :
Full-size sport-utilities can ring up $8,000 profit or more on each sale. In an industry where discounts averaging nearly $2,000 per vehicle are eating up profits, the Detroit automakers would be on life support without their high-margin trucks.
You have high demand vehicles that rake in huge profits, why would anyone stop making them?
Originally posted by: PsychoAndy
Originally posted by: Sluggo
This is the exact reason it wont stop :
Full-size sport-utilities can ring up $8,000 profit or more on each sale. In an industry where discounts averaging nearly $2,000 per vehicle are eating up profits, the Detroit automakers would be on life support without their high-margin trucks.
You have high demand vehicles that rake in huge profits, why would anyone stop making them?
I dont recall the link, but Ford was rumored to make well over $5,000 per excursion sale. If thats the case, they could have put their PSD under the hood as standard equipment, instead of the $4,000 option and shut the sierra club up with 18-20 MPG.
But noooo. They have to suffer from a rectal cranial inversion and stick with a V-10.
-PAB
Originally posted by: Sluggo
Originally posted by: PsychoAndy
Originally posted by: Sluggo
This is the exact reason it wont stop :
Full-size sport-utilities can ring up $8,000 profit or more on each sale. In an industry where discounts averaging nearly $2,000 per vehicle are eating up profits, the Detroit automakers would be on life support without their high-margin trucks.
You have high demand vehicles that rake in huge profits, why would anyone stop making them?
I dont recall the link, but Ford was rumored to make well over $5,000 per excursion sale. If thats the case, they could have put their PSD under the hood as standard equipment, instead of the $4,000 option and shut the sierra club up with 18-20 MPG.
But noooo. They have to suffer from a rectal cranial inversion and stick with a V-10.
-PAB
I heard (of course that in no way makes it true) that Ford made 10k on each and every Excursion that rolled off the line. Even though the diesel was an option, I thought that most Excursions actually sold with the PSD not the V-10.
Originally posted by: PsychoAndy
Originally posted by: Sluggo
Originally posted by: PsychoAndy
Originally posted by: Sluggo
This is the exact reason it wont stop :
Full-size sport-utilities can ring up $8,000 profit or more on each sale. In an industry where discounts averaging nearly $2,000 per vehicle are eating up profits, the Detroit automakers would be on life support without their high-margin trucks.
You have high demand vehicles that rake in huge profits, why would anyone stop making them?
I dont recall the link, but Ford was rumored to make well over $5,000 per excursion sale. If thats the case, they could have put their PSD under the hood as standard equipment, instead of the $4,000 option and shut the sierra club up with 18-20 MPG.
But noooo. They have to suffer from a rectal cranial inversion and stick with a V-10.
-PAB
I heard (of course that in no way makes it true) that Ford made 10k on each and every Excursion that rolled off the line. Even though the diesel was an option, I thought that most Excursions actually sold with the PSD not the V-10.
Theres a lot of people who cannot justify spending $4k up front to effectively cut their fuel consumption in half. I'm not sure where or if there is a database out there, but I am fairly confident a majority of sales would be gas powerplants. Think of it in economic terms, particularly the price effect. Its always going to be easier to sell at $40,000 truck than a $44,000 truck.
-PAB
Originally posted by: Cyberian
'Extravaganza' has a nice ring to it.Ford is far from choosing a name for the new vehicle. But an industry analyst who asked not to be named said it might be wise to lose the Excursion name because of the bad publicity it has received.
Originally posted by: Sluggo
Originally posted by: PsychoAndy
Originally posted by: Sluggo
Originally posted by: PsychoAndy
Originally posted by: Sluggo
This is the exact reason it wont stop :
Full-size sport-utilities can ring up $8,000 profit or more on each sale. In an industry where discounts averaging nearly $2,000 per vehicle are eating up profits, the Detroit automakers would be on life support without their high-margin trucks.
You have high demand vehicles that rake in huge profits, why would anyone stop making them?
I dont recall the link, but Ford was rumored to make well over $5,000 per excursion sale. If thats the case, they could have put their PSD under the hood as standard equipment, instead of the $4,000 option and shut the sierra club up with 18-20 MPG.
But noooo. They have to suffer from a rectal cranial inversion and stick with a V-10.
-PAB
I heard (of course that in no way makes it true) that Ford made 10k on each and every Excursion that rolled off the line. Even though the diesel was an option, I thought that most Excursions actually sold with the PSD not the V-10.
Theres a lot of people who cannot justify spending $4k up front to effectively cut their fuel consumption in half. I'm not sure where or if there is a database out there, but I am fairly confident a majority of sales would be gas powerplants. Think of it in economic terms, particularly the price effect. Its always going to be easier to sell at $40,000 truck than a $44,000 truck.
-PAB
Guess you were correct, I found this :
The base engine on two-wheel-drive models is the 5.4-liter V-8, here delivering 255 bhp and 350 pound-feet of torque. Most Excursions will be powered by the 6.8-liter V-10, with 310 bhp and 425 pound-feet of torque. It's standard on 4x4s and optional on 4x2s. Of course, no big-truck engine lineup would be complete without a turbo-diesel, and Ford will offer its 7.3-liter Power Stroke diesel, making 235 horsepower and a ground-shaking 500 pound-fee of torque. Ford expects fully twenty percent of buyers to choose the diesel, despite having to pay more than $4000 for it.
