Ford’s next-generation of small, multi-activity vehicles, C-Max and Grand C-Max, will appear in their final production versions at the Geneva Motors Show.
Teasers versions of the vans appeared at the Frankfurt Motor Show last September. (Click here.)
Ford is also announcing technology “enhancements” for the Ford Kuga and Mondeo, plus revealing additional options for the new S-Max and Galaxy at Geneva.
The C-Max range, which goes on sale later this year in Europe, are by U.S. standards mini-minivans, but a stretched version of the five-passenger C-Max, dubbed “Grand,” will eventually find its way to North American shores, along with a revised Focus somewhere around 2012.
This will end one of Ford managements’ truly bonehead decisions – keeping the old generation Focus on sale while it was long past its prime by refusing to collaborate with Ford Europe and Ford Asia-Pacific on the second generation Focus, which has been on sale – successfully – elsewhere for six years now.
The new Grand C-Max provides seven passenger seating in a relatively small compact package. There are sliding rear doors on both sides of the van. And anyone who has ever wrestled with getting a child into a child seat will love this; and even if you do not have younger children – this Chrysler minivan inspired touch – makes loading so much easier.
Better still, to maximize the versatility of the 7-seat layout, engineers have developed a new seat folding mechanism for the three second-row seats. It allows the center seat to fold under one of the two outboard seats, creating an aisle between them – especially nice when the outer seats are occupied by child seats or booster cushions. Owners, therefore, have the option of using the convenient 2+2+2 seating layout, or switching to seven-seats if need be.
This long overdue globalization – going all the way back to the failed Ford 2000 reorganization in the 1990s that didn’t deliver the promised common architectures and powertrains – is the recognition by American executives that their strategy, doggedly pursued under various Revitalization Plans of the past decade, actually resulted in record losses in 2008, as customers defected from the large trucks and SUVs that were at its core.
The revised C-Max interiors have two, five-way toggle switches on the steering wheel, which control the two main vehicle displays: one in the instrument cluster and the second display mounted in a high position in the center console. Ford claims that this “intuitive” control system enables the driver to operate the key vehicle features while keeping both hands on the wheel, and with a minimum of distraction.
In the U.S., The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates the 6,000 people were killed in distracted driving accidents last year and hundreds of thousands more critically injured, but so far, NHTSA has down nothing to stop the increasing amount of electronic content into new models.
I thought that the current European Focus was third generation, not second, and that the one currently on sale here is a “freshened” first generation. Am I mistaken? Still, it’s good that they’re finally going to bring a more up to date one here. Is there any word on where it will be built?
The Focus currently sold in the US is commonly referred to as a “second generation” version. The “first generation C170” (2000-2007) came as 3 and 5-door hatchbacks, a 4-door sedan, and a station wagon. The so-called “second generation” (2008-2010) was a major styling refreshening for the sedan, and adding a 2-door coupe, but deleting the wagon and hatchbacks. The C170 chassis was basically unchanged in the US.
In Europe and elsewhere, the first generation C170 was 1998-2004, and bore some basic styling similarities with the US version. The second generation “C307” ran from 2004-2010, with a freshening in 2008.
The third generation “C346” Focus is commonizing the basic chassis in the US and abroad, with styling tweaks and component variations between regions.
Oh … and the US version of the 2011 C346 Focus is to be built in Wayne, Michigan in the former Michigan Truck assembly plant, which previously assembled full-size Expedition and Navigator SUVs.
I saw these in Italy in 2006, and I was wondering why we didn’t have them here.. Finally, a Ford I will buy….