- #3180 of 3244
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Re: Ordering from factory [ionosphere1]
by nvbanker
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Mar 25, 2008 (4:51 pm)
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Replying to: ionosphere1 (Feb 02, 2008 12:46 pm)
I do not know how long it takes to build the car once they start, do you?
About an hour - building the car isn't where the time is. Queueing into production with special orders does, and shipping does. But once they decide to build it, it's done in one day.
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- #3181 of 3244
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Ordering from factory
by ionosphere1
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Mar 25, 2008 (6:33 pm)
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I'd never do this again....waiting 4 months for a car. I had sold my car 1 week after ordering the new one, so I was without a car for 4 months minus 1 week. Was tough, but now I'm in car heaven with my new Merc.
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- #3182 of 3244
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Re: Ordering from factory [nvbanker]
by euphonium
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Mar 26, 2008 (9:47 am)
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Replying to: nvbanker (Mar 25, 2008 4:51 pm)
1997, Wixom, MI it took one hour to produce 11 Mark VIII's and it took one hour to assemble 33 Town Cars. Computer Sequential Production enabled that.
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- #3183 of 3244
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Re: Ordering from factory [euphonium]
by nvbanker
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Mar 30, 2008 (1:11 pm)
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Replying to: euphonium (Mar 26, 2008 9:47 am)
Interesting, euph: so I'm trying to figger this out - if my Town Car began life as what, a frame? How long from frame to drive it out the factory door does that actually take? If you get 33 of them driven off in an hour......how long was each of them in production?
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- #3184 of 3244
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Re: Ordering from factory [nvbanker]
by euphonium
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Mar 31, 2008 (7:35 am)
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Replying to: nvbanker (Mar 30, 2008 1:11 pm)
Beginning with the frame/bare body, the Genesis is at least a two week drying period following painting. After the body is dry in the Paint Shop, then it begins it's 33/hour assembly process. The Continental and Town Car shared the same line while the Mark had its own. I took the tour in December 97 and don't remember if they were running more than one shift a day or not. It impressed me that no part for assembly is older than 24 hours after arrival before it is assembled. 18 wheelers and train cars were on the move as suppliers were taught to have their components there on time.
The assembly line is a heck of a lot cleaner than the machine room of a paper factory.
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- #3185 of 3244
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Re: Ordering from factory [euphonium]
by nvbanker
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Mar 31, 2008 (2:57 pm)
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Replying to: euphonium (Mar 31, 2008 7:35 am)
And that's what's interesting too: The Continental and Town Car shared the same line, yet the Continental, by Ford's own admission during the late 80's and early 90's was "the worst car we had", and the Town Car was about the best. My anecdotal experience with both cars was the same. How can they do that?
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- #3186 of 3244
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Re: Ordering from factory [nvbanker]
by euphonium
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Mar 31, 2008 (8:59 pm)
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Replying to: nvbanker (Mar 31, 2008 2:57 pm)
Good question. Today I wonder where in the assembly process will they place the Town Car while producing them at St. Thomas, Ontario. After having seen the Continental share the line with Town Cars, it would not be a surprise to see a mix of CV, GM, & TC all on the same line. Perhaps a mix of 20 CV, 10 GM, & 5 TC not necessaryily in that order either due to their computer sequential production system they had in Wixom.
Having taken factory drive away a couple of times since 1950, I'd like to do it one more time, but in Coventry/Birmingham, U.K.
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- #3187 of 3244
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Re: Ordering from factory [euphonium]
by nvbanker
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Apr 06, 2008 (8:40 am)
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Replying to: euphonium (Mar 31, 2008 8:59 pm)
Having taken factory drive away a couple of times since 1950, I'd like to do it one more time, but in Coventry/Birmingham, U.K.
Ooooh, nice thought - but better hurry. TATA may soon move that process to New Dehli. Also, it's a LONG drive home from there.....
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- #3188 of 3244
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O/D
by helmetcam
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Apr 20, 2008 (12:03 pm)
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Should I use O/D or not? 2004 Crown Vic. 30,000, LX Sport
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- #3189 of 3244
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Re: O/D [helmetcam]
by nvbanker
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Apr 21, 2008 (9:52 am)
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Replying to: helmetcam (Apr 20, 2008 12:03 pm)
Yes, you should. 2 good reasons.
#1 - the A4OD transmission in that Ford is built like Fort Knox - it's made for livery and police use, and even with neglect, will go 100,000 before needing any work. Properly lubricated, nobody knows how long it will run before breaking down. So there's no reason NOT to use it.
#2 - Your mileage will improve a lot if you use it.
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