- 5,204
- Finland
I'm just going to check if I got this right. They don't want that a car sells well because then they'd have to produce more of those cars and then sell them for profit.They don't want people to buy the SS because *conspiracy theory* the Zeta car is going out of production and GM doesn't want it to continue. Continued good sales would mean they'd have to keep making it.
Except that there's no alternatives for a basic Camaro in the Chevrolet line-up. However there are I4 and V6 saloons that are basically exactly the same as a 4 cylinder basic SS would have been for 90% of car buyers. Why compete with yourself and sell something that's already available? A V6 Falcon would have the same problem.There is no 4 cylinder or 6 cylinder base model sold. As such, it only sells to one type of person. It'd be like only selling the SS Camaro, with no options beyond exterior colour and gearbox options. The bulk of Camaro sales are obviously the V6, regardless of how iconic the V8 one is. The sales would tank if it was only a V8. And the SS has the same problem.
But even then the I4 Falcon would be slightly more than an equivalent Fusion, which in the lower specs is what the Falcon would be. It's only the V8 models where Ford hasn't got a car already, and they've got an example in the SS of how many people actually want such a car.Who said anything about costing more than the alternatives? Common sense tells you the Falcon would sell for within the same ballpark as the equivalently equipped Mustang, if they're on the same platform. $25k for the most basic, up to about $40k for a fully equipped V8.
I don't. Ford, if they were to make such a thing, would though.And you want an argument that it would sell? Alright, here we go:
Mustang sells because it's a Mustang. It has been in production for over 50 years, and is a well known name all across the planet even though it hasn't even been sold outside North America. Falcon on the other hand has been Oceania only since the 70s, and is relatively unknown even among most of non-Oceanian petrolheads.until you realise that the Mustang sells about 10,000 a month.
So taking that into account, we can assume the Falcon would sell right around 10,000 cars a month in the States. And that's ignoring the fact that saloons ALWAYS outsell coupes in America.
But how is that possible when they sell practically no Corollas in Germany.And next you can argue it wouldn't sell outside of America. One has to look no farther than Germany to find the answer to that. In Germany, the V8 Mustang not only outsells the BMW M4 by a large margin, the Mustang with all engine options is the best selling sports car in the country. Again, that obviously isn't a perfect comparison, but it's reasonable to assume the Falcon would outsell the Mustang, just as the 3 series outsells the 4 series.
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