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Ford Territory
2009–2010 Ford Territory (SY II) TX
Production 2004–present
Assembly Campbellfield, Victoria, Australia
Engine(s) 4.0 L Barra I6
  • 182 kW (244hp) 380 Nm (SX)
  • 190 kW (255hp) 383 Nm (SY)
  • 245 kW (328hp) 480 Nm (SY Turbo)
  • 270 kW (362hp) 550 Nm (FPV F6X 270)
Wheelbase 2,842 mm (111.9 in)
Length 4,856 mm (191.2 in)
Width 1,898 mm (74.7 in)
Height 1,714 mm (67.5 in)
Curb weight 2,015 kg (4,440 lb)-2,045 kg (4,510 lb)

The Ford Territory is a crossover SUV built by Ford Australia and based on the EA169 platform of the Ford BA Falcon. It was released in April 2004. Its code name inside Ford was E265. It won the 2004 Wheels Car of the Year award, the reviewers praising car-like handling and practicality as reasons for its win. Ford had reportedly spent A$500 million on developing the range over four years.

Ford introduced the Territory alongside the existing Falcon wagon, which was built on the same production line.[1] Ford Australia senior executives expected the Falcon wagon to be discontinued soon after the introduction of the Territory, surmising that Falcon wagon sales would substantially decline as fleet buyers migrated to the Territory. However, the two models co-existed because the Falcon wagon retained much of its fleet sales base and the Territory appealed mainly to private buyers.[2]

South African sales for the Territory began in 2005. Exports to Thailand began in 2006, with the Thai model being offered only in AWD Ghia trim.

Powertrains[]

The Territory is sold with two engine choices, the 4.0L inline-six engine as the standard engine, and a turbo charged six-cylinder version in the Turbo model. The base engine is available in RWD and AWD. The RWD model has a four-speed automatic gearbox, and the AWD has the ZF six-speed auto. The turbo model only comes in AWD. In 2010 Ford will update the current 4.0L inline-six to meet strict Euro 4 emission standards. In 2011 Ford will introduce a new model with the 2.7L diesel V6 that is shared with Land Rover, Peugeot and Citroen. It will use the ZF six-speed auto exclusively across the range. The engine will emit up to 25 percent less CO2 compared to the current 4.0L inline-six.[3]

SX (2004–2005)[]

2004-2005 Ford Territory (SX) Ghia wagon 01

2004–2005 Ford Territory (SX) Ghia (with optional bull bar)

2004-2005 Ford Territory (SX) TX wagon 02

2004–2005 Ford Territory (SX) TX

The original model was the SX and was produced between 2004 and 2005. The engine was the 4.0-litre DOHC straight-six Barra engine from the Falcon, developing 182 kilowatts (244 hp).

Appearance-wise, the Territory resembles the Ford Taurus X sold in North America. Both cars have similar styling cues—it was this that sold the Territory to Ford executives at the head office in Dearborn, Michigan. Simon Butterworth, who was behind the Ford Falcon facelift of 2003, styled the Territory but had worked with his American counterpart, J Mays, in working in the global Ford "DNA". Marcus Hotblack worked on the Territory's interior, with a Swiss army knife as a metaphor. Consequently, the car has touches such as flexible cupholders and a handbag holder to the side of the seat for female drivers, recognising that many SUV buyers are women.

Australian and New Zealand SX series models are slightly different visually: all models sold in New Zealand have body-colour bumpers and alloy wheels, including the base model. Front light detail resembles that of jewellery in a black box. In New Zealand, the only rear wheel drive model is the base version and all other models have all wheel drive; while in Australia, all models are available with either rear-wheel drive or all-wheel drive.

The Ford Territory (SX) was the first Australian-built vehicle to be fitted with an electronic stability control system.

Specification levels[]

Both rear- and all-wheel drive configurations were offered in three trim levels. All-wheel drive models have an optional Hill Descent Control system, using the anti-lock braking system to control the car's motion downhill, inherited from Land Rover.

Options of five seats (in two rows) or seven seats (in three rows) are available. The rows of seats are arranged in a "theatre style", with the back row highest. They fold down smoothly into the floor. A DVD player is available as an option on all models.

  • TX:
  • TS: added side curtain airbags (optional on TX), which were a first for an Australian made car.
  • Ghia:

SY (2005–2009)[]

FPV F6X white

2008–2009 FPV F6X (SY)

An updated SY model arrived in October 2005, bringing with it a ZF six-speed automatic transmission on all AWD models and an increase in power to 190 kilowatts (250 hp). The model also comes with a Rear Parking Camera (optional on the TS and standard on the Ghia), another first for an Australian made vehicle.

Ford Australia introduced a turbo variant of the base engine, in mid 2006. The addition of the turbo boosted the engine performance to 245 kW (329 hp) and 480 N·m (350 lb·ft) of torque

An enhanced version of the Ford Territory was introduced by Ford Performance Vehicles (FPV) in January 2008 as the "FPV F6X". It was fitted with the same 270-kilowatt (360 hp) turbocharged engine as the FPV F6[4] and accelerates from 0–100 kilometres per hour (0–62 mph) in 5.9 seconds. The F6X was only available with all-wheel drive and the six-speed ZF automatic as fitted to the Ford FG Falcon. The lack of sufficient differentiation from other Territory Turbo models and the significantly higher price meant it met with only limited success and it was discontinued in June 2009 when the SY II was introduced.

SY II (2009–2011)[]

The SY II facelift was revealed at the 2009 Melbourne International Motor Show. It consists of moderate front-end changes as well as other minor exterior changes. The interior gets upholstery changes across the range, with the old colour schemes being replaced with more modern ones.

2009 Ford Territory (SY II) TX wagon 02

Ford Territory TX (SY II)

Specification levels[]

  • TX: receives body-coloured bumpers and alloy wheels standard over the SY.
  • TS: also gains body-coloured bumpers, newly designed alloy wheels as well as third-row seats standard.
  • Ghia: models get mirror mounted side indicators, new alloy wheels, privacy glass for the rear windows and third-row seats standard.

The SY II received a revised front suspension to address a well documented weakness in the front lower ball-joints.[5] The previous design has the ball joints under constant tension which has resulted in some complete failures of the joint (causing the wheel to detach from the suspension and steering) and premature wear requiring lower control arm replacements after as little as 30,000 kilometres (19,000 mi). The new system has the lower ball-joints under compression, eliminating the premature wear issue.

Safety[]

Through the addition of a front passenger seatbelt warning chime due to be implemented on cars produced from 11 January 2010, the entire Territory range will be rated the full five-star Australasian New Car Assessment Program (ANCAP) crash test score. Models produced prior to this date were previously rated at four stars.[6]

SZ (2011–present)[]

2011 Ford Territory T5 - Release Day

Ford Australia CEO, Bob Graziano posing for the assembled press with a 2011 Ford Territory (SZ) TX.

Known as the SZ series,[7] Ford Australia released official photos of the 2011 facelift model on February 8, 2011. The car now features a large lower air intake and thin upper grille. Titanium models feature LED marker lights, replacing the fog lights on the mid spec TS. The rear of the car now features horizontal style tail lights, replacing the vertical lights on previous models. The update will also see the introduction of diesel power. The interior now features a large eight-inch touch screen.[8] The diesel Territory will use a Land Rover-sourced 2.7-litre V6 combined with the six-speed 6R80 automatic transmission produced by Ford in the US.[9] Ford's 4.0-litre petrol inline six gains the modifications received by the FG Falcon. Delivering 195 kilowatts (261 hp) of power, the six will only be available on rear-wheel drive models, with all-wheel drive reserved for the diesel.[10] Among the new safety features are a driver's knee airbag and updated stability control system, now version 9.0 by Bosch incorporating an anti-roll-over function.[11]

Specification levels[12][]

  • TX: 17-inch alloy wheels, iPod/USB integration, Bluetooth phone connectivity and cruise control.
  • TS: 18-inch alloy wheels and adds an eight-inch colour touch screen, front fog lights, dual-zone climate control, seven-seat capacity, premium audio system and reversing camera.
  • Titanium: LED running lights, privacy glass, auto-dimming rear-view mirror, satellite navigation with Traffic Message Channel, 10.2-inch rear DVD entertainment system and leather seat trim.


Territory as an emergency vehicle[]

2004-2008 Ford Territory TX wagon (Mobile Intensive Care Ambulance) 01

MICA Single Responder in Melbourne.

The Territory is used in varying roles by several emergency services in Australia. Victoria Police use the Territory as a patrol car as well as specialist departments such as the Major Collision Investigation Unit. The Territory Turbo has been used by the Traffic Management Unit for traffic patrols. Ambulance Victoria uses the Territory for Mobile Intensive Care Ambulance Single Responder units, and for similar roles in other ambulance services. It is also used by some fire brigades as a crew/equipment transport vehicle.

The Australian Federal Police and NSW Police both use the Territory Turbo as a VIP protection and escort vehicle.

References[]

Smallwikipedialogo This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Ford Territory. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Tractor & Construction Plant Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons by Attribution License and/or GNU Free Documentation License. Please check page history for when the original article was copied to Wikia


  1. "Road Test: Ford Territory AWD & RWD". Web Wombat. Retrieved on 2011-03-15.
  2. Stanford, James (13 November 2009). "Axe hovers over Falcon wagon". GoAuto. John Mellor. Retrieved on 15 March 2011.
  3. Maric, Paul (2009-07-24). "Ford Falcon, Territory go four-cylinder, diesel | Car Advice | Reviews". Car Advice. Retrieved on 2010-10-09.
  4. "First Drive: Ford’s super-Territory 4WD". Drive. Fairfax Media (2008-01-31). Retrieved on 2008-02-12.
  5. Gover, Paul (2009-05-22). "We’re not kicking Ford". Herald Sun. The Herald and Weekly Times. Retrieved on 2011-01-13.
  6. Lord, Philip (2009-12-14). "Ford Territory rings a bell to get five stars". GoAuto. John Mellor. Retrieved on 2009-12-15.
  7. Duff, Craig (9 March 2011). "Ford Territory adds diesel". Herald Sun. The Herald and Weekly Times. Retrieved on 2011-03-09.
  8. "2011 Ford Territory first official image". Retrieved on 2010-12-31.
  9. Beissmann, Tim (2011-03-10). "2011 Ford Territory diesel technology has global potential". Car Advice. Retrieved on 2011-03-11.
  10. Hammerton, Ron (2011-03-09). "Ford promises silky, thrifty Territory". GoAuto. John Mellor. Retrieved on 2011-03-11.
  11. Hammerton, Ron (2011-03-09). "Ford Falcon set to get new Territory's electric steering". GoAuto. John Mellor. Retrieved on 2011-03-11.
  12. Car Advice, 2011 Territory pricing revealed.

External links[]

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