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LPG bolsters I6 futureBy BYRON MATHIOUDAKISFORD has given its...

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    LPG bolsters I6 future

    By BYRON MATHIOUDAKIS

    FORD has given its strongest indication yet

    that the lifespan of its venerable Australianbuilt

    inline-six engine will extend beyond

    2016 and meet the forthcoming Euro

    5 emissions standard, following the

    development of the EcoLPi system just

    launched in the FG Falcon.

    Speaking to GoAuto at the EcoLPi launch

    in Melbourne last week, Ford Australia?s

    powertrain engineering manager Pritika

    Maharaj said the new LPG system was

    designed to be in service ?beyond Euro 4? ?

    the current standard, which brought an end

    to the previous E-Gas system last year ? as

    circumstances dictate.

    While she would not comment on the

    life expectancy of the Geelong-made I6

    in future Falcon and Territory models, Ms

    Maharaj said there was little point in Ford

    Australia investing heavily in the Euro

    4-compliant EcoLPi system if it was to be

    replaced before long.

    Ford Australia also confi rmed last week

    that the EcoLPi system was compatible

    with higher-tech engines, including directinjection

    units like the EcoBoost V6, which

    could replace the I6 later this decade and bring

    an end to local Ford engine production.

    ?You have to ask why Ford would bother

    developing the LPi engine that was ?beyond

    Euro 4? if it wasn?t going to have a future,?

    Ms Maharaj said.

    The federal government announced last

    month that from November 1, 2016, all new

    vehicles in Australia must comply with Euro

    5 emissions requirements, while stricter

    Euro 6 regulations come in for all new cars

    sold from July 1, 2018.

    ?Core Euro 5? measures will also be

    introduced from November 1, 2013, although

    these will apply to cars, SUVs and light trucks

    new to the market from that date.

    Ford Australia public affairs director

    Sinead McAlary told GoAuto in June that

    while the I6 in all its iterations can be

    engineered for Euro 5, ?signifi cant time and

    resources would be required to do so?.

    ?One of the advantages of the regulatory

    timing we have received is that we actually

    have the time now to work through all the

    options to determine if that is the right

    course of action to take,? she said.

    Integral to Ford?s planning will be the switch

    to a new-generation Falcon around the same

    time as ?full Euro 5? takes effect in 2016.

    The ?E8? platform underpinning the

    current Falcon and Territory reaches the end

    of its life in 2016, with Australia adopting

    a new-generation global large-car platform

    under the ?One Ford? philosophy.

    To form the basis of Ford?s future Mondeo,

    Taurus and mid-sized SUV replacements for

    the Territory and (eventually) US-market

    Explorer, the new platform is expected to

    use transverse-mounted engines such as a

    derivative of the 3.5-litre direct-injection

    EcoBoost V6, and drive either the front or all

    four wheels depending on the application.

    Point proven, Ford, but hardly anybody

    who buys an LPG car is going to go racing

    in it, are they?

    Or are they? You see, the point is that

    the ?P? in EcoLPi can just as well stand for

    ?performance? instead of ?plodding?.

    From inside the car ? unless they are

    hiding in the considerably shallower boot

    (464 litres versus 535 ? and even less if

    buyers opt to turf out the can of goo for a

    space-saver or $250-extra full-sized spare

    wheel; Ford ought to consider run-fl at tyres)

    ? LPG-haters will not tell the difference,

    like we couldn?t. We promise.

    One of the challenges that the EcoLPi

    engineers had to solve was hot-weather

    starting, so the moment the Falcon is

    unlocked the electronics ?wake up?, while

    pulling the doorhandle primes the system,

    so the maximum delay from the one-crank

    start regime is four seconds. That?s virtually

    petrol I6 levels of ignition time, or slightly

    lengthier, but the point is that?s all you

    might notice as one of the LPG?s differing

    operating characteristics.

    On the move in both the G6E and XR6

    we sampled, we defy anybody not to be

    impressed by the smoothness and willingness

    of the EcoLPi. Torque aplenty, combined

    with that superb ZF six-speeder, makes for an

    impressive low-speed driving experience.

    Feathering the throttle results in the usual

    Falcon forward surge, but in the LPG car from

    about 2800rpm the response is perceptibly

    stronger and more determined ? so much so

    that you can back off a bit and just ride the

    wave of motion, without having to visit the

    slightly harsh top-end rev range that has long

    been part of the I6 engine experience.

    Or, in other words, on those lovely rural

    Victorian roads, we prefer the way the

    EcoLPi drives to a 91 RON ULP Falcon.

    Sitting on marginally different wheel and

    suspension settings to clear some height

    for the tanks below that smaller boot fl oor,

    both FG EcoLPi G6E and XR6 examples

    reaffi rm why Ford Australia?s dynamic

    engineers are among the best in the world.

    Lovely steering, beautiful poise, cosseting

    ride on the Goodyear 235/50 R17 rubber ?

    we were reminded why the Falcon is such

    an underrated over-achiever amongst family

    cars, especially for the price.

    Obviously, we will need more time behind

    the wheel of an EcoLPi to really see how

    the car runs in day-to-day urban nightmare

    traffi c scenarios.

    But we can tell you pretty much with handon-

    heart that Ford Australia?s LPG program has

    far exceeded our expectations for driveability,

    performance, refi nement and integration.

    Notwithstanding the smaller (but still

    manageably practical unless you opt for the

    full-sized spare) boot, as well as the often

    variable experience of actually having to fi ll

    the tank with LPG, we cannot understand

    why you wouldn?t choose this model over

    the standard petrol-engined Falcon.

    If there was justice in this world, the FG?s

    fortunes would turn around right now as

    families who feel forced to switch to a smaller

    four-cylinder car to save fuel and cut some

    CO2 now have a true real-world alternative.

    After all, Ford?s claim that the EcoLPi

    offers Fiesta-segment light car running

    costs in a Falcon package is quite a

    compelling argument.

    We are converted. No other car-building

    country in the world right now offers a better

    and more integrated LPG driving experience

    than Australia.



    EcoLPi: the verdict

    By BYRON MATHIOUDAKIS

    AUTOMOTIVELY speaking, Germany is

    renowned for its engineering prowess, Italy

    owns great design, and exquisite quality is

    what Japan is all about.

    But none of those produce a vehicle on

    the cutting edge of liquefi ed petroleum

    gas (LPG) performance, effi ciency and

    driveability like Australia.

    And Ford is in the vanguard with its new

    EcoLPi system. It is no exaggeration to say

    that this is the new dawn for LPG.

    Let?s begin with the car ? a 2011 FG

    Falcon in either XT, XR6, G6 or G6E fourdoor

    sedan or XL, R6 and XR6 utility style

    ? that blows away any preconceptions about

    LPG thanks to ?liquid phase injection? (LPi).

    Basically, the old style of LPG ? as

    in the previous Falcon E-Gas system ?

    converted the LPG to a vapour at the

    combustion process.

    Not a bad way of doing it, but the

    drop in power and torque (to 156kW and

    370Nm respectively), relatively high fuel

    consumption (14.9L/100km), compromised

    driveability and four-speed rather than

    ZF six-speed auto gearbox meant that the

    regular 195kW/391Nm 4.0-litre I6 petrol

    engine that spawned the LPG was arguably

    a better bet in almost every way.

    Only cheap LPG ? 66 cents per litre

    compared with $1.39/L for ULP (Ford?s

    fi gures: Australian national average January

    to June 2011) kept the old car selling.

    From today, the EcoLPi system treats LPG

    in a completely different manner. By keeping

    it a liquid right through to the combustion

    process, and incorporating new hardware

    specifi cally designed by Orbital and other

    fi rms, the resulting boost in performance (to

    198kW and 409Nm) now eclipses that of the

    existing I6 on regular ULP.

    Better still, consumption falls from the

    old E-Gas? 14.9L/100km to 12.5L/100km

    (still not matching the ULP I6?s 9.9L/100km,

    though, because LPG possesses a lower

    energy density despite its higher octane),

    while carbon emissions plummet from 240g/

    km (and the ULP I6?s 236g/km) to 203g/km

    ? yes, LPG contains fewer hydrocarbons than

    ULP, so that?s why its fuel consumption fi gure

    can be higher while the CO2 rating is lower.

    On paper, this means ? again, according to

    Ford fi gures ? that over a 20,000km annual

    driving cycle between an ULP I6 and EcoLPi

    at the aforementioned bowser prices, the

    $2500 premium that EcoLPi incurs will be

    paid back in 23.5 weeks thanks to the $2000

    federal government rebate and the fact that

    LPG will cost $1102 less at $1650 and 2500

    litres than 1980 litres of ULP at $2752.

    To highlight the point, Ford last week

    assembled a group of journalists on a track

    after about 150km of urban and rural driving

    in a number of new FG EcoLPi sedans, and

    asked each one to identify which was the LPG

    car between a pair of new but disguised XR6

    Falcons following a sprint race and test lap.

    Of course, your GoAuto correspondent

    listened intently for your benefi t throughout

    the press conference and so rightly fi gured

    out that the quicker and marginally more

    effortless vehicle was the EcoLPi car ?

    proving Ford?s point under its controlled

    conditions that not only does LPG no

    longer hinder a Falcon?s performance ? it

    actually improves it while being cheaper

    ? and increasingly so over time ? than a

    petrol equivalent.

    Point proven, Ford, but hardly anybody

    who buys an LPG car is going to go racing

    in it, are they?

    Or are they? You see, the point is that

    the ?P? in EcoLPi can just as well stand for

    ?performance? instead of ?plodding?.

    From inside the car ? unless they are

    hiding in the considerably shallower boot

    (464 litres versus 535 ? and even less if

    buyers opt to turf out the can of goo for a

    space-saver or $250-extra full-sized spare

    wheel; Ford ought to consider run-fl at tyres)

    ? LPG-haters will not tell the difference,

    like we couldn?t. We promise.

    One of the challenges that the EcoLPi

    engineers had to solve was hot-weather

    starting, so the moment the Falcon is

    unlocked the electronics ?wake up?, while

    pulling the doorhandle primes the system,

    so the maximum delay from the one-crank

    start regime is four seconds. That?s virtually

    petrol I6 levels of ignition time, or slightly

    lengthier, but the point is that?s all you

    might notice as one of the LPG?s differing

    operating characteristics.

    On the move in both the G6E and XR6

    we sampled, we defy anybody not to be

    impressed by the smoothness and willingness

    of the EcoLPi. Torque aplenty, combined

    with that superb ZF six-speeder, makes for an

    impressive low-speed driving experience.

    Feathering the throttle results in the usual

    Falcon forward surge, but in the LPG car from

    about 2800rpm the response is perceptibly

    stronger and more determined ? so much so

    that you can back off a bit and just ride the

    wave of motion, without having to visit the

    slightly harsh top-end rev range that has long

    been part of the I6 engine experience.

    Or, in other words, on those lovely rural

    Victorian roads, we prefer the way the

    EcoLPi drives to a 91 RON ULP Falcon.

    Sitting on marginally different wheel and

    suspension settings to clear some height

    for the tanks below that smaller boot fl oor,

    both FG EcoLPi G6E and XR6 examples

    reaffi rm why Ford Australia?s dynamic

    engineers are among the best in the world.

    Lovely steering, beautiful poise, cosseting

    ride on the Goodyear 235/50 R17 rubber ?

    we were reminded why the Falcon is such

    an underrated over-achiever amongst family

    cars, especially for the price.

    Obviously, we will need more time behind

    the wheel of an EcoLPi to really see how

    the car runs in day-to-day urban nightmare

    traffi c scenarios.

    But we can tell you pretty much with handon-

    heart that Ford Australia?s LPG program has

    far exceeded our expectations for driveability,

    performance, refi nement and integration.

    Notwithstanding the smaller (but still

    manageably practical unless you opt for the

    full-sized spare) boot, as well as the often

    variable experience of actually having to fi ll

    the tank with LPG, we cannot understand

    why you wouldn?t choose this model over

    the standard petrol-engined Falcon.

    If there was justice in this world, the FG?s

    fortunes would turn around right now as

    families who feel forced to switch to a smaller

    four-cylinder car to save fuel and cut some

    CO2 now have a true real-world alternative.

    After all, Ford?s claim that the EcoLPi

    offers Fiesta-segment light car running

    costs in a Falcon package is quite a

    compelling argument.

    We are converted. No other car-building

    country in the world right now offers a better

    and more integrated LPG driving experience

    than Australia.



    Above from:
    http://www.goautomedia.com/mellor/mellorweb.nsf/weben/E-news%20Subscription







 
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