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Quoted: Wonder why they chose the Maverick to bring back. Why not the Pinto, Tarus, or Model T. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: The Ford Maverick has been lambasted as not being a truck. Many said nobody would buy the sissy version of muh' truck. Many said it would not sell because of how its not a "true" truck. Well....it stops taking orders today because they cannot meet demand. So this brings up the question, will others try to capitalize by rushing in on a market that they missed? Sure there have been failures (Subaru Baja), and limited success(Honda Ridgeline/Hyundai Santa Cruz), but that leaves other manufacturers wanting to copy the Ford Maverick formula more closely to miss out on a sales shift from compact and small sedans to another utility based form factor similar to the reason of a shift to CUVs/crossovers. So who and what would you like to see from other companies? Toyota? Dodge? GM? Nissan/Mitsubishi? VW? Wonder why they chose the Maverick to bring back. Why not the Pinto, Tarus, or Model T. Model T sounds way too old. Pinto is now associated with beans. Taurus was too recent of a failure and maybe they want to keep it for something else later on? |
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Quoted: Honda and Hyundai already build/market a competing 'sissy truck'... Ford is just playing catch-up with their POS. View Quote Quote from original post: So this brings up the question, will others try to capitalize by rushing in on a market that they missed? Sure there have been failures (Subaru Baja), and limited success(Honda Ridgeline/Hyundai Santa Cruz), but that leaves other manufacturers wanting to copy the Ford Maverick formula more closely to miss out on a sales shift from compact and small sedans to another utility based form factor similar to the reason of a shift to CUVs/crossovers. |
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Quoted: Model T sounds way too old. Pinto is now associated with beans. Taurus was too recent of a failure and maybe they want to keep it for something else later on? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: The Ford Maverick has been lambasted as not being a truck. Many said nobody would buy the sissy version of muh' truck. Many said it would not sell because of how its not a "true" truck. Well....it stops taking orders today because they cannot meet demand. So this brings up the question, will others try to capitalize by rushing in on a market that they missed? Sure there have been failures (Subaru Baja), and limited success(Honda Ridgeline/Hyundai Santa Cruz), but that leaves other manufacturers wanting to copy the Ford Maverick formula more closely to miss out on a sales shift from compact and small sedans to another utility based form factor similar to the reason of a shift to CUVs/crossovers. So who and what would you like to see from other companies? Toyota? Dodge? GM? Nissan/Mitsubishi? VW? Wonder why they chose the Maverick to bring back. Why not the Pinto, Tarus, or Model T. Model T sounds way too old. Pinto is now associated with beans. Taurus was too recent of a failure and maybe they want to keep it for something else later on? They should have gone back to the Ford Courier, which was the spiritual predecessor of the Ranger. |
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Quoted: Cost of building the crew cab vs a std cab is likely less than 500$. Interior space is far more valuable to the average American than an 8 ft bed. More so when there isnt 4ft between wheel wells. A std tranny transaxle would be another cost since very few would sell. Ford would be better off building the late 80s type Ranger with a conventional drive train. Build it slightly wider with a longer bed to maintain proportions. 5spd tranny & transfer case behind the 4cyl Ecoboost from the Mustang would be a great drive train. Keep it low with skinny tires and it would rule in snow/ice. View Quote Crew cab is structurally necessary for the unibody design, like the huge C-pillar on Ridgelines. Prior to the Maverick, the big rumor was a Transit/Transit Connect based design. Would have been interesting and allowed for more configurations. |
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More manufacturers will jump into the market. Ford tapped into a market prime - the economy down and average Joe's isn't going to jump into a 50k + truck right now.
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I want one. If they did a standard cab longer bed on the same wheelbase I'd have a hard time not pulling the trigger. Seems to be the general consensus that you need the crew cab for structural integrity so we'll probably never see one. I think Courier would be a better fit namewise. I heard one rumor that there was a Courier in the works and some people speculated that it might be based on the transit connect. Most likely all bullshit but you never know.
Quoted: Honda and Hyundai already build/market a competing 'sissy truck'... Ford is just playing catch-up with their POS. View Quote I guess your idea of competiting is a bit different than mine. The Honda starts at $17K over the Maverick. The Santa Cruz is closer but I really thing they messed up making it more car like than truck like and I don't think it will do as well as the Maverick. |
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I think the sales of this is gonna push Honda to make a hybrid motor variant of their truck. Why they haven't already is beyond me.
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Quoted: More manufacturers will jump into the market. Ford tapped into a market prime - the economy down and average Joe's isn't going to jump into a 50k + truck right now. View Quote yes and with good enough mpg it will replace a lot of cars. Really thinking about replacing my wifes honda with this. |
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Quoted: I did, I bought a 1995 F150 XL , 300CI, 5 spd manual, brand new, in 1995, for $12,000 + tax out the door. Still have it, everything original and runs well. Never missed any of the high dollar frills. It gets me where I want to go, pulls, my boat, and been paid for since 1998. Oh, it does have A/C. I would buy another just like it tomorrow for $20k, but this is my last truck. View Quote Adjusted for inflation you would pay 22K today. However a new F150 XL starts at 30K. Not bad when you consider the amount of advancement in that time. |
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Quoted: It's a great idea. Vehicles are getting bigger. Sedans, SUV's, etc. Plenty of homeowners need a truck bu don't need a full 1/2 ton. The midsize trucks are almost the same size and cost as 1/2 tons as well. The same thing with delivery companies and some retail that offers delivery. They need some thing simple, cheap, and relatively fuel efficient to keep their fleet up. View Quote The vehicle your referring to already exists in the Ford Transit connect. |
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Quoted: I think the sales of this is gonna push Honda to make a hybrid motor variant of their truck. Why they haven't already is beyond me. View Quote It might push them to make a CRV or HRV variant with truck characteristics with less cost. The Pilot base is too much of a price ask. An HRV based one would be where it needs to be, but I bet Honda is retarded and are worried that it will eat into Civic sales where they sink a ton of R&D into. |
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Quoted: Crew cab is structurally necessary for the unibody design, like the huge C-pillar on Ridgelines. Prior to the Maverick, the big rumor was a Transit/Transit Connect based design. Would have been interesting and allowed for more configurations. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Cost of building the crew cab vs a std cab is likely less than 500$. Interior space is far more valuable to the average American than an 8 ft bed. More so when there isnt 4ft between wheel wells. A std tranny transaxle would be another cost since very few would sell. Ford would be better off building the late 80s type Ranger with a conventional drive train. Build it slightly wider with a longer bed to maintain proportions. 5spd tranny & transfer case behind the 4cyl Ecoboost from the Mustang would be a great drive train. Keep it low with skinny tires and it would rule in snow/ice. Crew cab is structurally necessary for the unibody design, like the huge C-pillar on Ridgelines. Prior to the Maverick, the big rumor was a Transit/Transit Connect based design. Would have been interesting and allowed for more configurations. |
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I think Ford will sell the shit out of the Maverick, because of the price.
The Ranger is a nice truck but it's too close to the F150 and too expensive. If you need a single cab you either get a Ranger or a F150. A single cab Maverick would be too expensive for Ford to engineer and to recoup the costs for the limited amount of sales. Just look at the Jeep Wrangler I see more 4 door than 2 door Wranglers on the road now. |
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Quoted: Nah son, this... https://cdn.motor1.com/images/mgl/npo81/s1/modern-dodge-ramcharger-rendering.jpg View Quote Looks great, but never would happen because it would eat into Jeep sales. Could happen if Chevy decided to make a modern K5 Blazer instead of the crossover turd Blazer that appropriated it's name. For some reason Chevy hasn't entered in the "off-road and trail" market like Stellantis, and recently, Ford. |
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I hope they all do. Just for the entertainment value alone.
The insecure wailing of "real men" here triggered by a truck slightly smaller than what they own would be epic! |
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Quoted: This was supposed to happen when the Gladiator came out sharing the same factory, but I haven't heard anything since. Jeep is probably complaining like Ram was that it will eat into sales. If Ram were to offer a regular cab or a slight extended cab with either no rear doors or the hidden suicide doors like older compacts I'd be in for one. As long as it doesn't look like shit, similar to the last generation of Dakota. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Would love to see the Dodge Dakota brought back. This was supposed to happen when the Gladiator came out sharing the same factory, but I haven't heard anything since. Jeep is probably complaining like Ram was that it will eat into sales. If Ram were to offer a regular cab or a slight extended cab with either no rear doors or the hidden suicide doors like older compacts I'd be in for one. As long as it doesn't look like shit, similar to the last generation of Dakota. I had 3 Dakotas and now have a Gladiator. The size is just perfect for me. I was looking forward to the new Dakota but who knows. I think the issue for Stellantis is the Daks were unique when they were the only true midsize truck out there. Now they’d be just one in a sea of options. And a latecomer at that because they suspended the platform. |
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Quoted: Tell me you get jealous because of how your wife looks at men driving real trucks without telling me you get jealous because of how your wife looks at men driving real trucks. View Quote This sounds like it comes from the mind of a teenager who rarely interacts with an actual woman. |
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I'm confident that Ford will be the only one making the Ford Maverick.
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Maybe this will finally get Toyota to introduce the Hylux in the US.
I doubt it though, it would cannibalize Taco sales hard. |
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Quoted: Maybe this will finally get Toyota to introduce the Hylux in the US. I doubt it though, it would cannibalize Taco sales hard. View Quote Hilux would be subject to the 25% import "chicken tax". Toyota would have to manufacture it in the US to even have a chance at being competitive. It's a completely different platform than anything they sell in the US so they'd have to dedicate a new assembly line. Even if they could get the Hilux to pass US regulations I doubt they'd make money at it. A low spec Taco would be much easier to test the market with. |
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I ordered one last week, didn't know they existed prior to that. We've been needing a new vehicle, wife said a Taco is too big but I think we needed something truckish but smaller than our full sized work truck. After test driving we were both sold. To her it looks like a truck, not a car-truck like everything else out there. She says the Hyundai Santa Cruz is hideous, and the Honda Ridgeline is not even in the same price category. I'm not small and and the backseat is super comfy to me and it makes our old 4.0 Ranger seem like a snail in the power department.
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Volkswagen already did Attached File
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Quoted: Volkswagen already didhttps://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/148262/Screenshot_20220202-124459_Chrome_jpg-2264081.JPG View Quote Those could be had with a diesel, stick, and roll up windows. Almost Arf’s dream truck except they were fwd. |
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It would be idiotic for them to not follow suit. Trucks have gotten too big and too expensive. The Maverick is the first domestic truck that has actually interested me in years.
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