Ford’s first crossover, desperately seeking
attention
Most of the news coming out of Ford Motor Company’s
Dearborn, Mich., headquarters focuses on the
troubles the blue oval is having this year.
Ford lost $1.4 billion in the first half of
2006, and a whopping $5.80 billion for the third
quarter 2006 alone.
In September, Alan Mulally, a former Boeing
executive, replaced Henry Ford’s grandson
William Clay Ford Jr. as the company’s
CEO. Earlier announcements included U.S. workforce
reductions by as many as 30,000 and plans to
shut 16 plants. Ten years ago, one in four new
vehicles sold in the U.S. carried the blue-oval
marque. Today it’s around 15 percent.
In response, Ford is scrambling to bring new
vehicles to the market, including the 2007 Edge,
a new crossover utility vehicle that bears an
unreasonable amount of expectations from its
parent company.
Beyond the triple-bladed razor grille, the
same that adorns last year’s new Ford
Fusion, the Edge seems an amalgamation of a
dozen or so products already on the market.
Edge looks good, with clean, athletic lines,
rakish windshield, swept forward rear roof complete
with rear spoiler and clear-lens taillamps and
rounded wheel arch openings. It’s a nice
enough looking vehicle, but the styling doesn’t
turn heads either. During my weeklong test drive
I went completely unnoticed and wasn’t
asked once what it was I was driving, despite
the telltale manufacturer’s license plate
and having perhaps the only Edge in Arizona.
That’s a long way from what I experienced
when the Mustang was introduced a few years
ago, and not good news if the Edge is expected
bring traffic to dealer showrooms and begin
to solve Ford’s problems.
Edge is offered in two models: the front-wheel
drive base SE ($25,995) and the SEL ($27,990).
All-wheel drive is available on either model
for an additional $1,650. All Edge versions
are equipped with an all-new 3.5-liter V-6 that
delivers 265 horsepower and is mated to an all-new
six-speed automatic transmission. Highway fuel
economy is expected to average in the low to
mid 20s and the Edge can tow up to 3,500 pounds
when properly equipped.
Inside, Edge provides two-row seating for five;
a third-row seating option is not available.
The front seat is comfortable, but I wished
for just a bit more legroom. Two adults will
fit comfortably in the back seat, three for
short distances only. Rear seats recline (but
don’t slide fore and aft) and are split
60/40. Grab handles in the back ease entry,
but not for front seats. Rear seats have a power-fold
option and the front passenger seat folds so
the Edge can carry longer objects like a ladder
or eight-foot long lumber.
The large center console is designed to hold
objects as large as a laptop and features a
concealed power point and MP3-audio input jack.
Small slots molded into the side of the console
keep phone and MP3 cords neat and organized.
The console lid has a ticket clip, two penholders
and a tissue holder.
While we liked the overall shape of the dash
and the functionality and ease of audio, climate
and our optional navigation controls, Ford cheapened
the look with every dash surface and door panel
constructed of economy-looking hard plastic.
Another huge problem for me was the annoying
reflections from the dash on the angular windshield.
I’ve experienced this same problem in
other similarly designed vehicles.
On the road, the new Edge is quiet, handles
well and is tossable in turns. Performance from
the 265 horsepower left me feeling the Edge
was lighter on its feet than the two-ton plus
curb weight would indicate. I gauged an unofficial
zero to 60 mph time in the seven- to eight-second
area.
Standard safety equipment includes Ford’s
Advanced Trac with RSC (Roll Stability Control)
that automatically kicks in if the system detects
you’re cornering too fast and the vehicle
is in danger of tipping over. Seat-mounted side
air bags, Safety Canopy air curtain system,
and Ford’s personal safety system come
standard on all Edge models. Edge has not been
tested for crash test durability.
I tested a well-equipped SEL with all-wheel
drive. Options included the huge dual panoramic
roof with a fixed rear glass panel and a one-touch-open
switch that offers tilt and slide opening. Other
options on my tester included 18-inch tires,
DVD-based navigation system, reverse sensing
system, Sirius satellite radio, leather trimmed
seats and Audiophile CDX6.
Edge is being built at Ford’s Oakville,
Ontario, Canada, assembly alongside the new
Lincoln MKX, the Lincoln version of the Ford
Edge. Ford says that even before the Edge started
rolling off the assembly line, the company had
received 20,000 dealer orders for the new crossover
utility vehicle. Ford says that more than 1
million people have checked out the Edge’s
Web site, and 320,000 visitors have configured
an Edge for themselves.
Overall, we think Ford loyalists will be more
than pleased with the Edge. Of less certainty
is if it will attract new shoppers to dealer
showrooms or just steal sales from the fading
Explorer, Expedition and now-defunct Taurus?
Edge faces formidable competition in this segment
with the likes of the popular Nissan Murano,
Toyota Highlander and Honda Pilot. To succeed,
it will need to pull buyers away from those
brands. It remains to be seen if the lure of
the new Edge can sustain the kind of staying
power Ford so desperately needs to help ease
some of its financial woes. We certainly hope
so.