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2005 Ford Five Hundred
Redefining the American automobile?again
Gary Witzenburg / autoMedia.com
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Ford says 2005 is its "Year of the Car," and this is their "car." Their new flagship Five Hundred is the 2005 equivalent of its revolutionary Taurus in 1986. Like Taurus 19 years before, it redefines the American car. But while Taurus was mostly about styling and character, Five Hundred redefines the interior package and powertrain.
Five Hundred's exterior design is handsome yet conservative in the European mold.
"We took a look at the attributes that make crossovers popular," says Ford Group Vice President, Product Creation Phil Martens, "and sought to deliver some of those qualities in a sedan. While the industry tries to create new car-based crossovers, the Ford Five Hundred stands alone as the first crossover-based car."
It's a 4-door sedan with SUV and crossover advantages, including cargo capability, versatility, "command" seating and available all-wheel drive. It accomplishes this by marrying a sedan body to an all-new, "Volvo-inspired" crossover platform. Volvo-inspired? Yes, because Swedish-maker Volvo is part of Ford's European-based Premium Automotive Group (PAG).
Three inches longer than today's Taurus but a foot shorter than Ford's Crown Victoria, it cleverly crams a big-car interior into a midsize body and adds a 21 cu.-ft. trunk, one of the largest anywhere. Three series are offered, beginning with the well-equipped Five Hundred SE. The mid-range SEL adds appearance features, dual-zone air conditioning, an electronic message center, premium sound system and leather-wrapped steering wheel and shift knob. The top-of-the-line Limited adds to that a painted bright grille, an Audiophile sound system, heated exterior mirrors, leather seating surfaces and heated driver and front passenger seats.
Inside are upscale materials, colors, textures and graphics that Ford calls "guilt-free luxury."
Copyright autoMedia.com 2000-2008
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