S550Boss
Well-Known Member
And Chrysler is having it's best overall sales since 2007. 100k is pretty good for such a dated and large product, one they are years away from replacing with an all-new product (that story is an Italian soap opera in itself).
Big question is how big this particular market actually is, and how many sales could Ford take out of it? And where is it going, in terms of size and volume? The Taurus and Impala are considered part of this same market, and where in the future is this market is going? Note that both offer AWD, as does Chrysler, so an AWD option is a requirement that would have to be met by the theoretical RWD-based Ford product (and that's far cheaper to engineer with a FWD-based platform).
But one part of this conversation was Australia, where the large car market died. And it's died in nearly every other market too (excepting Middle East, where large cars have been selling). It's long dead in Europe, except for ultra-rich niches. So going forward, given the 54.4 CAFE and further CO2 standards, will the North American market see such large cars as mass market (high production numbers), or niche (upmarket, limited, expensive, low production numbers).
And, complicating it, how much does an SRT really help sell the rest of the line? I can see the value of SRT there, where the SRT Charger (offered for niche enthusiasts) helps sell pedestrian Chargers (and makes for a nice margin). I can't see that in the case of the SHO, where enthusiasts see it as morbidly obese, and what little sells just sells as an optioned-up Taurus. And in the case of the Chevy SS, there is only a single model so there is no analogy here.
Certainly Ford and GM have done market research here... and just as certainly we'll never see the numbers generated by that.
Big question is how big this particular market actually is, and how many sales could Ford take out of it? And where is it going, in terms of size and volume? The Taurus and Impala are considered part of this same market, and where in the future is this market is going? Note that both offer AWD, as does Chrysler, so an AWD option is a requirement that would have to be met by the theoretical RWD-based Ford product (and that's far cheaper to engineer with a FWD-based platform).
But one part of this conversation was Australia, where the large car market died. And it's died in nearly every other market too (excepting Middle East, where large cars have been selling). It's long dead in Europe, except for ultra-rich niches. So going forward, given the 54.4 CAFE and further CO2 standards, will the North American market see such large cars as mass market (high production numbers), or niche (upmarket, limited, expensive, low production numbers).
And, complicating it, how much does an SRT really help sell the rest of the line? I can see the value of SRT there, where the SRT Charger (offered for niche enthusiasts) helps sell pedestrian Chargers (and makes for a nice margin). I can't see that in the case of the SHO, where enthusiasts see it as morbidly obese, and what little sells just sells as an optioned-up Taurus. And in the case of the Chevy SS, there is only a single model so there is no analogy here.
Certainly Ford and GM have done market research here... and just as certainly we'll never see the numbers generated by that.
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