Absolutely. I wonder how targeted the surveys are as well. With how much information is sold and bought, I would guess Ford has some pretty good ideas on their potential customers spending habits. How much would an avid off roader spend versus a city boy looking for a new adventure? People who have a history of outfitting vehicles in the past versus no history of vehicle upgrade purchases?Brandon, I saw that also. I'm wondering if Ford is playing with these prices just to see where we will bite.
The F150 is apples and oranges. going from a 3.3 6-Cylinder to a smaller 6-cylinder with a turbo isn't the same as going from a smaller 4cyl with a turbo to a bigger 6-cylinder with a Turbo.Just sent to Ford on Twitter:
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Now let's hope they listen.
The numbers work but one thing still doesn't make sense to me. If the prices Ford uses are $1500 for the soft top and $2200 for the MIC top, then there is an implied $1500 credit towards your top.I was trying to figure this out and as soon as I started to type out my question I figured it out.
So the soft top has value, it isn't "free". To get the MIC top for $700, you have to trade in your soft top. So if its $3700 for both, you have
X + (X+700) =$3700
$1500 for Soft top
$2200 for MIC top
$3400 for Modular painted top
Not really since both are direct injection turbo engines. The NA 3.3 to a TDI is more apples and oranges than a turbo 4cyl to a turbo 6cyl. It doesn't make sense from a cost perspective.You're "upgrad
The F150 is apples and oranges. going from a 3.3 6-Cylinder to a smaller 6-cylinder with a turbo isn't the same as going from a smaller 4cyl with a turbo to a bigger 6-cylinder with a Turbo.
In a new F-150 it says it’s $1600 not $600.for reference on my 19 f150 going from 2.7 to 3.5 engine was $600 just engine as A10 was standard.