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Old 06-15-2007, 09:41 AM
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Re: THE INTERCEPTOR

Pretty cool. Lot of neat design details I like.
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Old 06-15-2007, 11:50 AM
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Re: THE INTERCEPTOR

Build it and they will come!
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Old 06-15-2007, 11:53 AM
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Re: THE INTERCEPTOR

If you build it they will come!
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Old 06-15-2007, 01:10 PM
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Cool THE INTERCEPTOR

If Ford want my vote..............Hell YES Build it. I want 1


American Dream: We drive the Interceptor, the full-size sedan that could save Ford
Mission: Possible.
A modern rear-drive sedan from Ford? Here's how - and why.


By Angus MacKenzie
Photography by Wesley Allison
Press the electrically triggered chrome door handle and the door pops open. The sculpted one-piece leather seats are as stiff as the suspension, and you slide onto them as into a Barcelona chair. A 21st-century "shaker" looms in your view, and the rest of the hood is long and upright...you're overlooking a similar expanse of sheetmetal as in a Chrysler 300. Hit the electronic ignition button on the headliner just aft of the header, and the 5.4-liter V-8 fires up with a rumble.



The clutch is a bit heavier than a Mustang GT's, but it releases smoothly and progressively. This big sedan is easy to drive-if you're into low-riders. It bounces along the smooth test road like a candy-colored 1964 Impala on the haunches of its hydraulics. It feels like one good bump could launch it into the air. You shift cleanly into second gear, but that's all she'll show today.

Interceptor. It's just another Ford concept car. A nice piece of eye candy designed to take your attention away from the real horror story playing out in Dearborn amid collapsing sales, massive losses, and a demoralized workforce. Don't you believe it: Even as you read this, Dearborn insiders are sweating the details on a secret plan to radically change the way FoMoCo develops new cars and trucks. And the Interceptor reveals a key part of that plan.

Two things make the Interceptor important: the way it looks and the way it drives. Especially the way it drives. Ignore the fact the Interceptor rolls on a cobbled-together Mustang platform with a nonexistent show-car suspension. It's the thinking behind the car that matters. And the thinking is this: Ford wants an all-new rear-drive sedan for North America by 2011 or 2012.



Not that long ago, rear drive was on life support at Ford. The company had axed the slow-selling Lincoln LS sedan and Ford Thunderbird, both built on the expensive DEW98 platform shared with the Jaguar S-Type, and announced the plants building the Lincoln Town Car, Mercury Grand, Marquis, and Ford Crown Victoria would be closed in 2010. Under this scenario (Motor Trend, August 2006), the Mustang would be the only rear-drive Ford car on sale in America by 2011.

Now, under new CEO Alan Mulally, Ford is rethinking rear drive for North America. Insiders say Mulally has looked at what GM has done to reinvent Cadillac, seen the buzz it's generated around new rear-drive cars like the Chevy Camaro, Pontiac G8, and the Chinese-market Buick Park Avenue (all based on the Australian-developed Zeta rear-drive architecture), and asked: "Why can't we do that?"



It's more than just an obvious question. It also addresses a major dilemma for two key Ford products, the Mustang and Ford Australia's Falcon. The Mustang has been a runaway hit for Ford, but by 2011 the platform will have been in production for seven years, and its live rear axle is no match for the sophisticated independent rearends under the newer Camaro and Dodge Challenger. Down in Australia, the Falcon, Ford's rear-drive rival to GM's Holden Commodore, is getting a major overhaul for 2008, but its platform dates back to 1998.

Neither platform has the volume (2006 sales totaled 160,000 Mustangs and 50,000 Falcons and variants) to justify an all-new replacement each. So Mulally has asked for a plan to bring Ford's rear-drive cars together onto a single, global vehicle architecture. That means Mustang and Falcon. And it also means potential replacements for the Lincoln Town Car, Mercury Grand Marquis, and Ford Crown Victoria. Which is where Interceptor comes in.
By 2010, the Panther platform that underpins the Crown Vic, Grand Marquis, and Town Car will be 31 years old. To put that in perspective, even the legendary Model T lasted only 19 years. The Panther cars are cheap to make and, despite their ancient chassis and ergonomics, sell in reasonable volumes-combined sales totaled almost 157,000 units in 2006. They make good money for Ford, but all three are hopelessly outdated cars with little appeal to private buyers. They survive on taxi, police, and livery vehicle fleet sales, and even that market is trending down: 2006 sales were 10 percent lower than 2005, for example.



Throwing replacements for the three Panther cars into the mix changes the economies of scale significantly. Even allowing for natural shrinkage in Mustang sales and fewer sales of the Panther trio's replacements (which would be more expensive and aimed at private buyers rather than low-margin government and fleets), you're still looking at a global rear-drive architecture with a potential volume of over 200,000 units a year.

As you read this, Ford staffers are racing to meet a July deadline set by Mulally. The global rear-drive architecture plan is just one part of a radical rethink of Ford's entire product development process. At stake is nothing less than Ford's survival as an automaker into the next decade: Having taken out an unprecedented $23.4 billion in loans to fund badly needed new models, Mulally and his team are literally betting the farm on this.

Interceptor. Ford North American design chief Peter Horbury's team actually never called the car by that name while working on it in Dearborn, where the computer model was done by Swede Andreas Nilsson, and California, where the model was turned into a full-size clay under the watchful eye of Freeman Thomas, the man behind such icon cars as the VW Beetle, Audi TT, and Chrysler 300C. "Galaxie was the name we used in the studio when we were working on this," says Horbury. Check those taillights. Yup, '66 Galaxie.



The Interceptor isn't a retro car, but it clearly draws on design themes that for the British-born Horbury defined the great American sedan at its very best. "A lot of cars have lines that swoop upward and backward," says Horbury with a sweep of a hand. "We did it the other way around here. On Woodward Avenue in August [in the Dream Cruise] you see these fabulous '50s and '60s American cars, and they all have that graceful line that flows down toward the rear, rather like a yacht sailing by."

Look closely at the Interceptor and you'll see that, although there's a slight wedge in the beltline, the shoulderline falls gently away toward the tail.

There's a lot of subtle, almost subliminal design in the Interceptor. The front end is anything but subtle, however, clearly referencing the massive Super Chief pickup concept Horbury unveiled at the 2006 Detroit show. "It's a statement to say this is the Super Chief of cars," says Horbury.

He insists the way the Interceptor looks "isn't a million miles away from what's possible." Those showcar wheels would come down to real-world 18- or 20-inch items, and the roofline-currently the same height as a Mustang's-would be raised to ensure adequate headroom for all passengers.

Big sedans will never be the huge-selling heartland cars they were in the 1950s and 1960s; that territory today belongs to midsize, four- and six-cylinder front-drivers like the Toyota Camry, Honda Accord, Chevy Malibu, and Ford Fusion. And George W. Bush's call for CAFE to hit 35 mpg by 2017 threatens to marginalize them even further (although, as European automakers have proved, it's possible to get 30 mpg or more out of a big car right now if you stick a high-torque diesel V-6 or V-8 under the hood).



But if the reactions to cars like the Chrysler 300C, Pontiac G8, and Chinese-market Buick Park Avenue are any indication, plenty of Americans still like the idea of a roomy, stylish, and affordable rear-drive sedan. These cars recall the quintessential American automotive experience, an experience lost when American cars downsized and went front drive in the 1980s, leaving personal-use pickup trucks to take up the slack.

Ford, the company that put America on wheels, the company that gave us the Model T, the Mustang, and the F-150, shouldn't walk away from its heritage. Build the Interceptor, Alan. Call it the Galaxie. Build an upscale Mercury version, and a Lincoln flagship, too. Find a way to make them fuel-efficient; make them hybrids or diesels if you have to. But build them.




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Old 06-15-2007, 01:14 PM
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Re: THE INTERCEPTOR

Part 2:


Ford Interceptor concept: Mustang-based sedan in Ford's Detroit show plan


When rumors began swirling that Ford had begun development of a four-door Mustang, the automaker immediately jumped up and down and said it was not going there, ever. Mustang would remain a 2+2 coupe, now and forever, was the response from Dearborn.

But that hasn't stopped Ford from using a stretched Mustang chassis as the basis for its new four-door Interceptor concept for the Detroit show.

Underneath the Interceptor's clamshell "shaker" hood rests a 400 horsepower, 5.0-liter Ford Racing V-8 Cammer engine, running on E-85 ethanol - an upgraded version of the 4.6-liter V-8 in the production Mustang GT. Like the Mustang, the Interceptor Concept is rear-wheel drive and uses a six-speed gearbox.

"The Ford Interceptor concept has the soul of Mustang but combines 'Built Ford Tough' attitude with the sporty elegance of '60s Ford sedans," said Ford's Peter Horbury, executive director, Design, The Americas, in a recent press release. "This concept celebrates the best of American muscle." Oh, it's only the soul of the Mustang, guess that clears that up.

Design elements include a three-bar front grille, flush mounted door handles, a minimalistic interior with opposing speedometer and tachometer needles, and what Ford calls a "squircle" (professionally square circles) theme for both interior and exterior. Hidden audio and climate controls are incorporated inside the Interceptor along with headrests mounted on the roof rather than the seat.

Stay tuned to MotorTrend.com for more on the Interceptor as well as all of the latest from the Detroit show as it happens during the show press days, Jan. 7-9.




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Old 06-15-2007, 01:18 PM
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Re: THE INTERCEPTOR

Part 3:
More pictures to drool over


(We need a smiley that drools)








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Old 06-17-2007, 09:41 PM
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Re: THE INTERCEPTOR

Looks really good to me!
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Old 06-17-2007, 11:29 PM
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Re: THE INTERCEPTOR

I really hope this becomes a reality. I know the benefits of front drive but, still prefer rear wheel drive. For daily drivers i settle for good used Ford product because of no new options. I won't buy Chryslers for any price.....so i deal with used choices. I prefer to not buy foreign also. I'm sure there's others like me as well. Currently new choice (for as sedan atleast) is only Crown Vic/Grd Marq or Town Car...nice cars but, in need of some new style. With dated styling i buy them a few yrs old...why by new, they still look the same....if i had modern choice i would buy new. I really hope they get this plan together. Thanks for the info.
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Old 06-18-2007, 02:23 PM
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Re: THE INTERCEPTOR

Just a question. Nothing serious. But if I started this post then how did 3 replys get put ahead of my post?????????





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Old 06-20-2007, 09:17 PM
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Re: THE INTERCEPTOR

Beautiful looking car. I hope they build it.
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