
In 1964, Motor Trend's Car of the
Year award went to the entire Ford lineup, recognizing its combination of
design, engineering excellence, and performance. In 1970, we gave the nod to
the Ford Torino, which could be ordered in a wide variety of configurations.
Forty years ago, buyers could choose from economical, six-cylinder-powered sedans
to the dragstrip-ready 429 Super Cobra Jet fastback.
These legendary winners
had one thing in common: bandwidth. In the 1960s and '70s, this term wasn't yet
part of popular lexicon. Today, the 2010 Ford Fusion's impressive bandwidth as
a model range was one of the many factors that helped it earn the 2010 Motor
Trend Car of the Year award.
Want an economical midsize sedan
that doesn't cost much, yet won't bore you to tears? Need to please your
greener side with a high-tech hybrid? Fancy a near-sport sedan with AWD,
18-inch rolling stock, and the latest infotainment and electronics? Depending
on which model you choose and how many option boxes you tick, the Fusion can be
any of the above. Arthur St. Antoine calls the Fusion "a compelling sweep
across one of the market's most hotly contested segments."
The original Ford Fusion came to
market for the 2006 model year. The basics were there, but the car wasn't fully
baked. For 2010, Ford's product teams gave the lineup a soup-to-nuts
redevelopment so thorough, it's as if the first-generation car never existed.
Only the passenger-shell sheetmetal and other basic architectural elements
escaped being redesigned, upgraded, or replaced. Although a four-door sedan is
the only body style offered, powertrain choices expand from two to four, and
each is new or substantially revised. There are several trim levels offered as
well: base S, upmarket SE, luxurious SEL, a separate Sport model, and a Hybrid.
Early in this year's COTY program, there were quiet whispers, while heads
nodded, about how the Fusion looked, felt, and drove like an entirely new
machine.
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