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The facility was originally a Volvo facility (VAPG) but was transitioned to the Ford branding in the summer of 2009 and renamed the Arizona Proving Ground (APG). Volvo still is a large user of it. It features a 2-mile oval track with banked curves, a 2-mile completely straight road, a brake test area and some more tracks.
Ford 2.7/3.0 Nano EcoBoost V6 Ford 3.3 Cyclone V6 Ford 3.5/3.7 Cyclone V6 (for FWD vehicles) Livonia Transmission: Livonia, Michigan: U.S. 1,849 Ford 6R transmission Ford 10R60/10R80 transmission Ford 8F35/8F40 transmission U (NA) Louisville Assembly Plant: Louisville, Kentucky: U.S. 1955 4,100 Ford Escape Lincoln Corsair: L (NA) Michigan ...
The facility takes its name from Ford's logo. It will primarily consist of an automotive assembly plant to produce electric pickup trucks, including the Ford F-150 lightning, and a plant to manufacture electric vehicle batteries , as well as a battery recycling facility, suppliers, and a training center.
Introduced with the 2015 Ford F-150 is a twin-turbo 2.7 L V6 EcoBoost engine. It delivers about 325 hp (242 kW) and 375 lb⋅ft (508 N⋅m). [ 73 ] The engine is built at the Lima Ford Engine Plant . [ 74 ]
Kentucky Speedway last hosted a NASCAR race in 2020. The thousands of trucks in its parking lots are visible from space.
Ford has been parking unfinished F150 trucks at the speedway since the spring and the number of trucks at the track has only continued to grow. Just look at how many trucks are sitting in the ...
[7] Other Rouge products included the 1932 Model B, the original Mercury, the Ford Thunderbird, Mercury Capri, and four decades of Ford Mustangs. The old assembly plant was idled with the construction and launch of a new assembly facility on the Miller Road side of the complex, currently producing Ford F-150 pickup trucks.
A 4.2-liter OHV V6, based on Ford's 3.8-liter Essex V6, replaced the 4.9-liter inline-six, while the 4.6- and 5.4-liter SOHC V8s replaced the 5.0- and 5.8-liter OHV V8s. The new V8s were marketed under the "Triton" name and mark the first use of Ford's Modular single overhead cam (SOHC) engines in the F-Series pickups.