phil
Well-Known Member
I agree both of those scenarios are possible. But I believe the first is the more likely. If Ford were serious about continuing to manufacture and promote the Mach-E long term, they would want to move it to the presumably superior and more cost-efficient platform. Leaving it on the outdated, inefficient platform tells me they'll milk it for whatever they can get in the short term, and then kill it.One interpretation is pessimistic: Ford has decided the Mach-E is not a long-term proposition and doesn’t want to spend the money to move it onto the new architecture.
Another interpretation is much less dramatic. The current Mach-E platform is already developed, paid for, and well understood. If Ford believes it can continue improving the vehicle without spending millions on a migration, then staying put may simply be the better business decision. I’m personally more inclined towards this viewpoint.
The reality is that both explanations can fit the facts we currently have.
But perhaps Ford sees it differently, or perhaps circumstances will change. We will see.
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