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04-06-2014, 05:47 AM | #1 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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It's something we take almost as read, that the cars we built were inferior in build quality, finish, and QA/QC. It's certainly stated as axiomatic every time we ask why the Falcon and Territory couldn't be more widely exported.
The anecdotal evidence is there to support it; bits falling off, notorious problems, suicidal ball-joints, rust spots, etc, etc. Toyota's are of course much better built, and that's not to mention European cars. There's no point even arguing, because if dare to suggest otherwise, this thread will be inundated with the tales of Toyota reliability, and the Falcon's ubiquitous crappiness. And lets not even get started on how uneconomical they are. I could offer up my own anecdotal evidence of owning a variety of cars over 30+ years, but obviously I'm Crazy and in the minority. Thing is, I like to look at things from an economic perspective, as I find the market to be a fairly impartial judge. I can't speak to other states, but in WA many years back the restrictions on taxi's were eased to allow a much wider variety of mid to large sized cars. So obviously the entire taxi fleet converted to Mercedes and Volvos. No, wait, that's right they didn't. There was a short-lived flurry of Nissans, Camrys and Magnas, and then the vast majority reverted back to Falcons and Commodes. So here you have an industry where unreliability is lost income, where every cent spent on maintaining their vehicle to the required standard comes straight off the bottom line, and fuel consumption is a MAJOR expense. Obviously it is a somewhat particular market, the cars must be of a certain size (wheelbase) and naturally must be capable of carry at least 4 passengers, however there are PLENTY of cars that fit the bill: Hyundai, Honda, Nissan, Toyota, VW, Kia, Mazda, Subaru, Holden, Peugeot, Citroen, and Opel ALL make cars that satisfy the criteria. Many of them cheaper than a Falcon, most with economical 4 cylinders, and many of them Diesel. The simple fact is that Falcons (and commodes) fitted with LPG, are more economical to operate over an extended lifespan and many hundreds of thousands of kilometres. Ultimately that comes down to reliability and cost of repairs. I'm not suggesting for a moment that everyone should rush out and buy Falcons. Most people don't need to carry 4 adult passengers, and few will do 100,000kms per year. Nor am I suggesting that the taxi industry itself creates a great demand. The WA Industry has about 2,000, and the average lifespan is probably 5+ years. Just making the point that maybe these cars are not the rubbish people claim. |
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04-06-2014, 07:04 AM | #2 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Not Rubbish. We need to make a good small car. More and more people today are going for the smaller cars......... Saves $$$$ to help pay for their kids iPad, iPhone, Laptop, PC, Internet, Cable.
You dont know some bloke called Hulk do ya? |
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04-06-2014, 07:17 AM | #3 | ||
bitch lasagne
Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: Sonova Beach
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If one looks at this question from a purely mechanical perspective, then Falcon is not rubbish. The taxis mentioned are testament to that; many of the cabs on the road are still on their original engine with a million plus kilometres on them.
If one looks at it from a comparative perspective (against the Japanese and European brands), then yes, Falcons of days gone by were rubbish; shoddy assembly, poor refinement and small parts failures (XD-E-F door handle breakages) did contribute. Not only that, the miniscule development budgets and ongoing penny pinching during the course of manufacture contributed heavily to the rubbish perception.
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04-06-2014, 09:00 AM | #4 | |||
Whipper Snappa
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04-06-2014, 09:21 AM | #5 | ||
Thailand Specials
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The car isn't rubbish at all its just that the fit and finish with the hard plastics and the lack of gadgets lets them down.
Ford also has a big perception problems because of people who got burnt badly in the 80s and 90s, who will not consider them again today when it comes time to purchase a new car. |
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04-06-2014, 10:16 AM | #7 | ||
Donating Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
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As a taxi operator of only Falcons for 25 + years I can say that there are many reasons people run Falcons.
Traditional large family car in Aust. Was affordable to run on LPG Cheap to purchase ex rental and govt cars. Plenty of spares at wreckers. Can get parts from Ford within a week usually. Not 3 months like imported. Easy and uncomplicated to fix Many of these reasons have changed in the last 10 years or so with the price increases of petrol/LPG, better reliability of "small imported" cars, the advent of Hybrid systems and of course finally the worldwide death of large family sedan cars. While the quality doesn't match current imported cars the ease of repair, price and availability of spares still makes them a viable proposition for a few more years yet. Even in non metro areas where LPG is not cheap. |
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04-06-2014, 10:23 AM | #8 | ||
Thailand Specials
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Some of the things I think are unacceptable with penny pinching and cost cutting is the high pressure power steering hose on EA - AU, that problem persisted for more than 10 years and has resulted in the early death of MANY alternators.
If they didn't want to fix the issue why couldn't they have put the alternator on top of the power steering pump? |
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04-06-2014, 10:31 AM | #9 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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All I can say is certain things let them down, like rust and seat frames.
The seat frames since BA have been too light and cheap, ask any cab operator if they have had to strengthen the seat and they will tell you they have. They improved paint finish when they put new robots in at the start of FG, but yeah rust is a big worry with these cars.
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04-06-2014, 10:50 AM | #10 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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You could fill a whole page on this thread of consistent big dollar mechanical and electrical failures from Euro and Jap brands in the last 20 years. VW DSG lemons, Honda and Nissan CVT, Jap CRD time bombs, Mitsubishi GDi, BMWs plastics cooling system failures, Mercedes wiring looms, head gaskets, timing chains, anything French, Italian or Land Rover. Stuff that will make the owner out of warranty mortgage the house to foot the repair bill.
All these apparent problems that the Commodore/Falcon suffer are a walk in the park compared to what some owners of the above brands have to deal with. |
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04-06-2014, 11:27 AM | #11 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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04-06-2014, 11:33 AM | #12 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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04-06-2014, 11:51 AM | #13 | ||
Regular Member
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All cars have problems, if you think only falcons have these problems you haven't seen a lot of cars, some a lot worse than what falcons have had. Most of the problems with falcons are due to cost cutting and usually aren't particularly major. I think people might think because the interior is put together a bit average the mechanicals are as well.
If you want to see a real problem look up BMW E46 subframe failures...basically the whole rear floor of the car cracks and breaks
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04-06-2014, 11:59 AM | #14 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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I know many people that will never buy another Falcon because of head gasket failure. I will always drive a Falcon because I can repair it myself, I have a fair idea of how it all works and where it's likely to fail and it serves me well.
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04-06-2014, 01:26 PM | #15 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Jastel is of course, on the money. Looming quickly in the taxi industry though is the Toyota hybrids.
Cabbies that I have spoken to that use them said they are cheaper to operate and have less problems than our good ole Falc's. One said the main issue was broken exterior mirrors being a few hundred bucks vs buying a Falcons mirror from a wreckers for a few quid. Maybe Jastel could eloborate further on the Toyota hybrids as taxis? |
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04-06-2014, 01:48 PM | #16 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: May 2014
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‘Were Australian Fords Rubbish?’
That’s an odd question to ask on an Australian Ford Forum. Simple answer, NO. Ford Australia have always made a reasonable product when you look at it from many factors including price, durability, performance, repair costs, range of variants, market size and build quality. A change in market forces where SUV’s for families and smaller compacts for couples offering good or better alternatives to large 4 door sedans has been the real death rattle for large cars like Falcon. Territory needed to move with the times, a lack of finance for development has left it floundering. |
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04-06-2014, 01:56 PM | #17 | ||
Render unto Caesar
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I think a generalised "rubbish" comment is going a little extreme.
The Falcon and Territory are good cars, not great but not bad. They're built to a budget and do show it. Mine and my families experiences with Falcons over the years have been mixed but I and a few friends hired a Territory and drove MELB -> PERTH -MELB and it performed faultlessly. The issue with the Falcon/Territory is that Ford AU let them slip in quality and in terms of technology. Whilst other car makers (including Ford international) advanced their cars with each iteration including quality, the local two had stagnated. I think people were getting sick of it and have shopped elsewhere and not looked back.
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04-06-2014, 02:24 PM | #18 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Quote:
the original poster has only put Australian fords on the spot, if I recall there where some American cars and trucks, even Japanese and german that made the news world wide for all the wrong reasons, personally I think you have to judge every brand/model on its merits, theres no doubt some models where better than others, but again the strengths and weakness thing. |
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04-06-2014, 04:42 PM | #19 | ||
^^^^^^^^
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No the cars are not rubbish, maybe some of the decisions made by Ford have been though.
Also the taxi thing hurt the Falcon's image and is why Holden stopped chasing that market and went after the Highway Patrol fleet instead. Owning a taxi is hardly aspirational. A Police 'Interceptor' though has much more appeal - cue Mad Max reel.
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04-06-2014, 07:41 PM | #20 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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I recently took the family for a weekend at the Gold Coast. We flew down and back so I organised a rental car for the three days we were there.
We were given the choice of a few different cars, however I chose a nice newish XR6 with 8000 kms on it. What an absolutely beautiful car. Okay, I'm not the fastest driver in the world but this car just amazed me with how nice it was to zoom around in. Absolutely loved it and I would definitely consider one if we were in the market for a new vehicle. The ironic thing was that I hadn't driven a new Falcon for many years and suddenly realised what we're losing with the impending cessation of Ford's Australian manufacturing. I couldn't help but think that some creative marketing to encourage prospective buyers to at least try one of these beautiful cars just may have gone toward turning their fortunes around. Sadly - I guess we'll never know. Russ Last edited by ozpacman; 04-06-2014 at 07:42 PM. Reason: typo |
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04-06-2014, 08:17 PM | #21 | |||
Thailand Specials
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Then the power steering pump let go and dumped a lot of oil from the front under the pulley into the alternator again killing my new alternator... Replaced pump, replaced alternator again, third time lucky? Its well known about the power steering issue on Falcons, if you have an alternator done at an auto electrical shop they won't warrant the work unless you also change that hose regardless of its condition. Old man's Mazda 323, 390,000km, original starter, alternator and clutch. Also stuff like Window regs are craptacular on E series Falcon, who has one of these on the forum with all 4 power windows working properly? My own EL the passenger window will barely pull itself up, and another EL I worked on the drivers side had the same problem. Mines never had a head gasket problem because before I registered it I replaced the gasket with an AU MLS one but it did the heater core on me when I was driving home from work. Its just all these little niggly issues, nothing overly serious. But its still leaving a bad taste in my mouth. I'm just lucky mine is a project car and not a daily so when it decides to play not nice I can let it sit there and think about what its done for 6 months before I fix it lol. Last edited by Franco Cozzo; 04-06-2014 at 08:28 PM. |
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04-06-2014, 08:28 PM | #22 | ||
Donating Member
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Max drove a Ford, not a holden...
I don't have any Toyotas yet. But one common issue I'm hearing on the new hybrid Camry is the batteries are not as good, they last around 200000kms, then you need a new one. If you have to pay a mechanic to fix a car, get an imported car, it will break down less, but be prepared for a BIG bill when it does. If you can do repairs yourself a Ford/Holden can save you money. I don't buy the fact that taxis hurt Ford sales, by that reasoning no one in Germany would own a Mercedes, and no one in Japan (and soon Australia) would own a Toyota. |
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04-06-2014, 08:31 PM | #23 | ||
Thailand Specials
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I've come to the conclusion that every car is a pain in the *** to work on lol.
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04-06-2014, 08:43 PM | #24 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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While all brands have their issues, new cars are generally better than the old cars used to be. Ford buyers make excuses for falcons faults because of some patriotic attachment. Example, take some cars in the top 5 sellers and insert the car name in the following sentence:
" I bought a COROLLA, and the wheel bearings will need replacing within 2 years but its a nice car" " My MAZDA 3 has great handling but I will need to replace the diff within 12 months" " My HYUNDAI I30 has a dash that displays electrical faults as soon as the battery voltage gets low, plus the ball joints are on the way out at 3 years of age" There is now a generation of motorists that do not have the above sentences in their vocabulary, they buy cars, drive them and don't have to put up with old fashioned faults.
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04-06-2014, 09:11 PM | #25 | |||
Now Fordless
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From what I've seen with FG its quite good. Not sure about the VF. |
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04-06-2014, 09:57 PM | #27 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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You only hear of so many faults because Ford and Holden owners are some of the biggest whingers.
I hear of quite a few horror stories where I work and the ones that shock me arnt Ford or Holden related Just recently 5yo Kluger grenades gearbox, 6 months later grenades engine. ($5k + $7k) 4yo Kluger grenades engine ($7k) 4yo Fiat grenades Turbo ($3k) 5yo BMW 335 grenades steering rack ($3k) 5yo Touareg, turbos, gearbox ($15k) Kluger one is a known design fault, rubber oil hose for the VVT splits and dumps all the oil. All of them cop it on the chin and just accept its part of owning a car. When stuff like that happens to a Ford or Holden people just ***** and moan...
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05-06-2014, 12:59 AM | #28 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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My FG has been good so far but if my previous Fords are anything to go by I won't be taking any chances. I will be trading on a brand new Mazda 6 early next year, let someone else deal with the heartache. Hopefully the heat exchanger holds out till then.
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05-06-2014, 06:33 AM | #29 | |||
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Go and buy an E or S Class from the same era and let us know how you get on. |
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05-06-2014, 07:05 AM | #30 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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XA-XB models drove us mad with water and dust leaks when I worked for Ford in the '70s. But then inlet valve problems drove us mad when working for Holden in the late '70s.
Personally I don't believe Australian Fords were rubbish, maybe they could have done more in the way of quality control but then so could most other manufacturers. |
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