Posts Tagged ‘Ford Focus & General Car Chat’

Are there any focus clubs or groups or whatever that meet anywhere around or within reasonable distance to harrison, ohio? id like to start meetin up when you have your get together’s was just curious as to what was around. if anyone can point me in the right direction that would be greatly appreciated thank you

 clubs/groups?
 clubs/groups?

 clubs/groups?

IMG 0687 Goodbye Focus... Hello...... (insert vehicle name here)

IMG 0686 1 Goodbye Focus... Hello...... (insert vehicle name here)

IMG 0688 Goodbye Focus... Hello...... (insert vehicle name here)

Well, my 2010 ford focus ses is gone.

this is my new ride.
2010 f150 xlt 4×4
I want to buy a boat in the spring… so i needed a truck.
Any one on any good f150 sites???

thanks
ill still be lurking around on this site… just like i still lurk on other sites, from when i owned different vehicles.

 Goodbye Focus... Hello...... (insert vehicle name here)
 Goodbye Focus... Hello...... (insert vehicle name here)

 Goodbye Focus... Hello...... (insert vehicle name here)

FocusTestingSpain Ford Focus Passes Hot Weather Test
The next generation Ford Focus has been tested in some of the most extreme locations on the planet. It’s been thrashed over frozen lakes, hammered across the hottest deserts and driven overloaded up and down high Alpine passes to ensure impeccable reliability and dependability wherever it is sold.

While many of these tests focus on how such climate extremes affect the performance of the vehicle, the comfort of the driver and passengers in these tough conditions is equally important.

Ford’s climate control test team travels the world to ensure that the car’s EATC (Electronic Automatic Temperature Control) system can handle anything a customer can throw at it. From Finland to Spain, Italy to Arizona, the system needs to be able to cool the occupants down quickly and comfortably in scorching sun and warm them up just as rapidly when the temperature drops.

In next generation Focus, which is launched later this year, the EATC system cools occupants more comfortably and efficiently than ever before. The fans are quieter and are capable of moving cool air through the cabin more quickly. The team’s task is to fine-tune this system to ensure it is as comfortable, effective and efficient as possible, while ensuring it meets the varying needs of customers around the world.

One of the team’s regular testing locations is Antequera in Southern Spain. Known as the crossroads of Andalucia, the medieval town is set on a plain some 600 metres above sea level. Outside of summer, it is a rich, fertile area popular with history buffs who flock to the town to see some of Europe’s oldest and most important dolmens, or burial sites.

But in the height of summer, the area around Antequera is one of the hottest places in continental Western Europe, with temperatures regularly rising above 40 degrees Celsius. It is a parched, barren landscape, perfect for putting the next-generation Focus to the test.

Ford systems engineer Klaus Schuermanns is here for two weeks, driving up to 500km a day, six days a week. "We have two versions of the next generation Focus here," he explains. "We are doing a subjective and an objective evaluation of the EATC system in both cars so that we can finalise calibrations. We take all the data from the EATC and then we compare that with what we actually feel inside the car, as well as with objective data from the cabin, such as the breathing level temperature. We then make adjustments to fine tune the system."

"We have visited this area five or six times with different development programmes because it gives us everything we need. The weather conditions are consistently very good, there is very little wind, it’s easy to get here from Germany and there are also some mountains near here where we can climb and experience temperature changes of 10 to 15 degrees."

Today, the team is testing two camouflaged vehicles – a four-door version for the North American market and a five-door European-spec Focus. Klaus is at the wheel of the European model, while his colleagues sit in the passenger seats studying a laptop displaying the findings of more than 200 sensors placed around the car.

These sensors record a myriad of data, including ambient temperature, AC pressures, engine speed, and sunlight. Chrome-nickel thermo couples are attached to the windows, the seats, the radio, and all around the drivers and passengers, monitoring the temperature throughout the cabin.

One of the main challenges for the team is that customers in North America have different preferences to their European counterparts, so the two test vehicles have different calibrations. North American customers generally like to feel a strong cooling effect while the European customer preference is for the cabin to be cooled slightly less and to not actually feel the chilled air. This is where the team’s experience in subjectively evaluating the system comes in. The sensors can monitor actual data, but the more subjective, human experience of how the cabin feels as it cools is just as important.

While other test teams have to push the car hard on mountain roads, testing the vehicle to its limits, Klaus and his colleagues have a rather more sedate challenge: "Highway driving is the best way to test the climate system. It is not the most interesting road, and after driving several hundred kilometres on the same road for days at a time, it can get a bit boring, but we are not testing the driving dynamics of the car; we need a straight road and a constant speed, so we can concentrate on how the climate system is performing."

After 250km of motorway driving, the two cars pull over outside a small, deserted roadside café. At this time of year, few locals venture outside in the middle of the day, while tourists wisely flock to the beaches and the cooling sea breezes of the Costa del Sol, 100km to the south. Bypassing the shade offered by two large olive trees, the engineers park the vehicles side by side in direct sunlight.

"This is the pull down test," explains Klaus." It’s very important. The vehicles are soaked in the sun for about an hour, until the temperature in the cabin reaches about 60 degrees Celsius. Then we get inside and we drive 30km or so and we see how long it takes to get back down to the chosen comfort point, and we monitor how this process feels inside the car. The first few minutes are really quite uncomfortable, but it’s a great AC system so after just a few minutes it is much more bearable.

Other tests carried out by the engineers include an altitude test and a control curve, where the team changes the temperature settings in the car and then monitors how it feels as the system copes with the changes. As they drive, Klaus and his colleagues are able to directly make changes to the EATC calibration. They have a de-brief every evening to discuss their findings and plan the next day’s testing.

With the vehicles’ cabins cooled back down to a comfortable temperature, it’s time to head back to the motorway for another 150km or so of driving at a constant speed. As the day draws to a close and we near the hotel, a third Focus is pulling away. Klaus explains that they like to test the vehicles at night to take the effects of the sun out of the equation. For Klaus, though, another day’s testing has come to an end.

"Sitting in the car all day is tough, but that is the only thing I don’t enjoy about this job," he enthuses. "We get a lot of people trying to take pictures as we drive along and people are always asking us about the car. But the most important thing for us is that the AC system, which in this all-new Focus is great. That makes our job much easier, not to mention more comfortable."

 Ford Focus Passes Hot Weather Test
 Ford Focus Passes Hot Weather Test

 Ford Focus Passes Hot Weather Test

A couple video’s showing some of the new features in the EU C-Max, but thought some might be interested here to see this new vehicle in the flesh and on the road.
Also to note is in the 1st vid the C-Max is spec’d with the highend Sony IP and in the 2nd vid the C-Max is spec’d with the cell phone like IP found in the Fiesta.

I really like how good this next gen C-Max looks, cannot wait to see it in the showroom.

YouTube Video
ERROR: If you can see this, then YouTube is down or you don’t have Flash installed.
YouTube Video
ERROR: If you can see this, then YouTube is down or you don’t have Flash installed.

[8D]

 2011 Ford C Max in the flesh
 2011 Ford C Max in the flesh

 2011 Ford C Max in the flesh

been gettin mix opinions. feel free to post some links up for me. Thanks.

 What colour rims on a White 10 Focus
 What colour rims on a White 10 Focus

 What colour rims on a White 10 Focus

FordInterceptorUtlty 15 Fords all new Police Interceptor
FordInterceptorUtlty 01 Fords all new Police Interceptor
FordInterceptorSedan 02 Fords all new Police Interceptor
FordInterceptorUtlty 29 Fords all new Police Interceptor
PoliceInterceptCon 03 Fords all new Police Interceptor

YouTube Video
ERROR: If you can see this, then YouTube is down or you don’t have Flash installed.

Ford Motor Company today revealed its newest pursuit-rated vehicle – Ford’s first-ever specially designed Police Interceptor utility built for the rigors of police work.

The new vehicle is designed to complement Ford’s all-new Police Interceptor sedan, which was introduced earlier this year. Combined, the two vehicles provide law enforcement agencies the ultimate in versatility and choice, something no other police vehicle on the road today can match.

“We understand today’s police departments require adaptability,” said Mark Fields, Ford’s president of The Americas. “Ford is committed to remaining the nation’s largest provider of police vehicles, and we’re offering law enforcement officials a complete portfolio of options that are purpose-built, capable and delivered with the safety, technology and performance they need to excel at their jobs.”

Ford, the police vehicle market leader for 15 years, developed both Police Interceptors to allow departments to maximize versatility without sacrificing quality. Both vehicles will debut simultaneously and be offered without interruption when production of the Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor ends in late 2011.

 Fords all new Police Interceptor
 Fords all new Police Interceptor

 Fords all new Police Interceptor

Dont know if this should be in this section or not? I did a search and couldnt find what I was lookin for. Anyway, are the radiators the same for all the automatic focuses? I am in the process of rebuilding my 06 and the one peg on the bottom is broke off. Thinkin I will replace it since I have the front ent tore off it now.
So Im just wondering what yrs are the same.
Thanks for any help.[thumb]

 Radiator question
 Radiator question

 Radiator question

Seems like a good deal to me. Of course I don’t have the money to spend right now.
http://providence.craigslist.org/pts/1925044380.html

 Why do I find stuff like this when Im broke
 Why do I find stuff like this when Im broke

 Why do I find stuff like this when Im broke

My car was hit when it was parked in the wheel, so long story short, front sub frame is bent!
Insurance that is paying for the repairs wants to replace it with the used one out of 05 focus, the same year as mine.
Not only me, but dealership it is being repeated at is saying that this is unacceptable.

Insurance(State Farm) is refusing to pay for the new one.

I’m trying to talk to my insurance to see if they can help.

Anybody has any experience on how to convince them to pay for the new part?
Thanks!

 Need help dealing with insurance
 Need help dealing with insurance

 Need help dealing with insurance

01 fiesta 630 Video: 2011 Ford Fiesta nabs IIHS Top Safety Pick, Autoblog watches[CENTER][I][B]2011 Ford Fiesta gets IIHS Top Safety Pick

We have mountains of respect for the men and women who work at the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. After being invited to the institute’s Charlottesville, Virginia facility for a front-row seat to the 2011 Ford Fiesta’s frontal-offset test, we can honestly say that if we had their job, we’d have a hard time getting into just any old car ever again. While the Blue Oval’s new sub-compact passed its battery of evaluations with flying colors (being the first and only minicar to earn a Top Safety Pick nod since the institute added a rollover test), we were also treated to a tour of some of the more poorly engineered models from the recent past.

Manufacturers have made an impressive amount progress on the safety front in the last decade, thanks largely to a close partnership with the IIHS. The institute has worked to revise crash tests to more accurately reflect the composition of vehicles on the road. One of its primary functions is to identify crashes where people die in otherwise well-rated vehicles and to adjust crash tests accordingly. While the public identifies the institute with bouncing perfectly good cars off of chunks of aluminum and concrete, the truth is that crash testing is only a small part of the IIHS mission. Of course, it’s also the most fun part. Follow the jump to take a look at a video of the Fiesta’s frontal-offset test.

 Video: 2011 Ford Fiesta nabs IIHS Top Safety Pick, Autoblog watches
 Video: 2011 Ford Fiesta nabs IIHS Top Safety Pick, Autoblog watches

 Video: 2011 Ford Fiesta nabs IIHS Top Safety Pick, Autoblog watches

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