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Ford Puma (coupé), a 1997–2001 compact coupé; Ford Puma (crossover), a 2019–present subcompact crossover SUV Ford Puma Rally1, a 2022 Rally1 car built by the M-Sport Ford World Rally Team; Ford Duratorq ZSD "Puma", a line of 2.0-litre, 2.2-litre, and 2.4-litre engines; Ford Escort RS2000, originally intended to be called the Puma [1]
The Ford Puma is a small car that was produced by Ford Europe from September 1997 to July 2002. The Puma is a three-door coupé that is based on the Mark IV Ford Fiesta and was built at Ford's Niehl plant in Cologne, Germany. The Puma follows common design cues with other Ford cars at the time, and is in the New Edge family of vehicles.
Mazda F engine (1.8, 2.0) Mazda L engine (1.8, 2.0, 2.3) Suzuki 1.0 I4 (for Ford Pronto) Ford Motor Company of Southern Africa Silverton Assembly Plant Silverton: South Africa: 1967 4,310 Ford Ranger Ford Everest VW Amarok: Ford Motor Company of Southern Africa Struandale Engine Plant Struandale, Port Elizabeth: South Africa: 590 Ford EcoBlue ...
The 2.3L version of the EcoBoost engine, a derivative of the Mazda L3, debuted in the 2015 Ford Mustang and also the Lincoln MKC crossover and has been implemented in many Ford and Lincoln vehicles with various outputs. The 2.3 L EcoBoost engine is produced with the 2.0 L EcoBoost at the Valencia Engine Plant in Valencia, Spain. In March 2015 ...
Initially, only the long-wheelbase version of the van, [6] outfitted with a 2.0L four-cylinder petrol engine and 4 speed 4F27E, was offered in North America; elsewhere, the 1.8L diesel engine and 5 speed manual transmission was the only available powertrain. The 2.0L Duratec DOHC I-4 gasoline engine has 136 hp @6300rpm, and 128 lb.-ft. of ...
Following discontinuation of the North American SVT Focus in 2004, Ford introduced the ST variant of the ZX4 for 2005–2007, with a 2.3-liter, 151 hp (113 kW) (154 lbf⋅ft (209 N⋅m) (SAE) Torque) Duratec driving a five-speed MTX-75 manual transmission with reverse lock-out. Though power was lower than the SVT, acceleration was only slightly ...
XLS (2001–2007): As the most basic trim level of the Escape, the XLS included: the 2.0-liter Zetec (2001–2004) and the 2.3-liter DuraTec (2005–2007) engines, a five-speed manual transmission, 15-inch steel wheels, an AM/FM stereo with cassette and CD players (later, just a single-CD player in 2005, adding MP3 capability in 2007 along with ...
In qualifying for the Italian Grand Prix at the 5.793 km (3.600 mi) Monza circuit, Montoya lapped his Williams FW24 in 1:20.264 for an average speed of 161.449 mph (259.827 km/h), breaking the speed record of 160.938 mph (259.005 km/h) set by Keke Rosberg in a Honda turbo-powered Williams FW10 at Silverstone for the 1985 British Grand Prix.