RE: Front Wheel Drive Jag

RE: Front Wheel Drive Jag

Wednesday 12th December 2001

Front Wheel Drive Jag

Good value or brand dilution?


Author
Discussion

McNab

Original Poster:

1,627 posts

275 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
Oh for God's sake.
Foolish, foolish Ford.

daveh

12 posts

285 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
Ford may be foolish. But... there are people out there who will buy them, foolish though they may also be.

Stephen White

100 posts

283 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
Dave H. has hit the nail right on the head: if the (sole) point is to sell more and more cars, then why not push fake Jags? Mercedes has definately cut a lot of corners in the last decade, in the pursuit of wider markets - to the detriment of the cars! In this case,Ford has a particularly dicey situation on their hands: if sales of stinking SUVs ever collapse, they're instantly deep in the red, so pimping their prestige brands starts to look more and more sensible...

alexah

3 posts

285 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
Why not? Jaguar/Ford had to look at the cost side to keep the marque alive. Jag should be happy that someone bought their business and tries everything to keep up the old memories. Only the car enthusiasts will recognise the fron-wheely thing.

Greetings from GerMoney
alexah

marki

15,763 posts

271 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
This is just diluting the Jaguar brand once more , can you imagine BMW or Merc making a front wheel drive car , sad for the brand , a 2 lt Jag ,,,,,,,,

mel

10,168 posts

276 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
Wouldn't they have been better off working on a really clean diesel engine with decent power similar to the new Golf PDI 150 and Peugeot Coupe that would have tied the "company car" market up much better and would have surely made it the "reps car of choice" Ok maybe that would dilute the brand but bigger sales mean more profits means more to spend on development means better cars. Of course this only works it properly managed !!!

135sport

442 posts

281 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
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Would a Jag for this money not potentially cut into sales of the Mondeo?
Good for Jag, but not Ford.

sabre

106 posts

285 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
I think its a good move by Jag.
They did a 2.4 in the 50's so small lumps are not new to the marque.

It will allow them to compete with BMW with their paltry 1.8 that no one maons about.

80-90% of 2wd cars are FWD these days? (off the top of my head)

Ford may lose 'Ghia' sales to this car, but my guess is they hope to pinch those little engined Merc, Audi and BMW sales.

nomore

68 posts

276 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
If Ford want Jaguar to stay as a premium performance brand then they should concentrate upon producing performance models not a weak and weedy 2 litre - they already have a couple of those with the mundane and the vulva.

Come on, get something more powerful than the current 3.0 X-type out and I would consider buying it! (well maybe)

Roadpounder

Ali_D

1,115 posts

285 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
Why the big deal about 'volume production' - Ford did invent the idea after all!

st200

8,353 posts

272 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
Errrr.... front wheel drive 2litre X-type. That'll be a Mondeo then?

bertie

8,550 posts

285 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
Any sadder than a 1.8 BMW compact or a 1.4 Merc???

hertsbiker

6,313 posts

272 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
*** Warning!! provocative statement following ****


"Please can someone explain the bias towards RWD cars? - a well designed, and well driven FWD will inevitably run circles round a RWD car..."


Justification:

Now before you jump down me throat, I would like to point out that when you start spending serious money, then you get serious toys, but for Joe Public, FWD is a more cost effective means of going faster & safer.

You may not like that statement, and you may disagree wildly, but

1) not everyone can afford top notch RWD sportscar

2) not everyone is as skilled as PH readers

3) you can get good-ish handling FWD cars, that everyone can afford

4) the "good-ish" handling FWD car is a lot less likely to end up in a ditch than a really nice RWD. (again, driven by Joe Public).


So why slag off FWD ? if it's a pedigree car, then surely it doesn't matter which end is driven?

Go on, argue with me, you know you want to !!

Carl

numlock

24 posts

269 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
Just two weeks ago I was defending Ford, saying it wasn't stupid when it came to brand policy, no 4X4 Jag and the like.

How wrong I was....The only explanation I can think off is that it has something to do with the new company car tax regulations. Or they are short of money....

Front wheel drive bloody Jags!!!! Take a leaf from Lexus (IS200), keep supply below demand, defend residual values, boost the image. Not do a BMW and churn out as many of the ruddy things that you can, cheapening the rest of the brand. Ford have got the Mondeo for that (not that its a bad car mind), they have no excuses.

Fatboy

7,985 posts

273 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
For is in danger of devaluing the Jag brand to the point where the name won't work any more - and while I have no problems with front wheel drive, the AWD X-type shares enough in common with the mondeo that a FWD X-type rings the "Mondeo in a posh suit" alarm bells.

Then again, if people still think the 3-series is exclusive (its about the 4th best selling car in the world IIRC-above the Polo!) then they'll probably do OK.

smeagol

1,947 posts

285 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
Absolutly right Hertsbiker, seeing as I do drive a FWD sports car (M100), that still keeps up with Elise 2 and Exige on country roads, there is a lot to be said about a well set up FWD (remember rally cars are either 4WD or FWD).

It seems to me that a few people here have a snobbish attitude to FWD without knowledge of how well they can drive. Most Jag drivers are not out for "tail out" action.

McNab

Original Poster:

1,627 posts

275 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
No Carl, I don't want to argue with you or anyone else! Although I dislike it, front wheel drive works perfectly well on road cars - even some quite powerful ones.

My worry here is that Ford's decision will remove Jaguar's 'cachet' (or snob appeal if you like), and there will be a lot of extremely sick X-type owners wondering why they bothered. Sad it may be, but one-upmanship is the norm these days, and I go along with mel's point that a really good diesel would have been a better choice.

Fiat produced the 130 Coupe a while back, and although FWD it got rave reviews all round. I picked one up for a song because it simply didn't sell, and I remember 'Lofty' England (Jaguar MD) remarking that it was a no-hoper because Fiat were NOT perceived to be in the luxury manufacturing sector, and woe-betide any manufacturer who strayed outwith their 'place' in the market. He was right to the extent that the Fiat failed miserably....

Opinion, I know, and perhaps old-fashioned. We will just have to wait and see!

marki

15,763 posts

271 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
Mel`s got a good point abut the diesel thing , it would have been a better adition to the X range,, and dont forget i think we are all still on Ted`s happy day thing , im supprised he has not started censoring stuff for being negative!

mel

10,168 posts

276 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
He's not up yet

hertsbiker

6,313 posts

272 months

Wednesday 12th December 2001
quotequote all
good point about the diesel.

Still reckon a large displacement engine is "more jaguar" than RWD !

Anyone able to tell me why a bigger engined car cost SO much more than a smaller capacity? can't be materials, can it?

Regarding the point I tried to make about driven axle - when I was an idiotic yoof, FWD saved me more times than my skill did. Had I been in a RWD motor, no doubt that I would have binned a few more cars.

Now I've allegedly "matured" a bit (laugh all you like), I find that rear wheel steering the bike is one of the most satisfying experiences - even more so than playing with the wife's BMW. I'm sure Mel would agree with this one?

C