I took a good long look at them ...
Fair enough then. My thoughts ...
"was really let down with the bland styling and so so performance."
I think that 5.1 sec 0-60 is pretty good for a non-attention getting sleeper.
"They needed to make the styling a little more aggressive." True.
"can't tell the difference from the energi/hybrid? version ...Who's bright idea was that?"
Not mine! I asked Ford about it, but they never return my calls. lol
"The back at least gets quad exhaust"
We didn't want to give
everything away. ;-)
"it's just meh... Another dime a dozen fusion."
At 24k for new leftovers, that would be $288,000/dozen. Just saying ...
"They're a victim of their own success ... the sport just blends in with the other trims"
Yup, pretty much. I guess success does that to a car. Oh well ...
"isn't exciting and is becoming stale."
Unless of course, you're behind the wheel of one mashing the accelerator.
heh heh
"Would have given it way more tuning overhead!"
They're letting owners go to Unleashed for their tuning, 93 tune is ~100+ horsepower.
"They have some great deals on them no doubt ... but a stinger competitor they are not."
At 24k, they don't have to be!
Fusion is a sedan. There the similarity ends.
Really? V6 Twin Turbo? AWD? Guess there's more similarities than you think!
Straight line acceleration from a dead stop is probably the least important performance consideration.
So you got the 2.0 4 cyl Stinger then, right?
What kind of torque does the AWD Fusion have? What RPM range?
Fusion Sport actually makes a tad more torque than the Stinger GT, but at 2,200 rpm higher:
ENGINE TYPE: Fusion Sport
twin-turbocharged and intercooled DOHC 24-valve V-6
iron-and-aluminum block and aluminum heads
direct fuel injection
Displacement: 164 cu in, 2694 cc
Power: 325 hp @ 5500 rpm
Torque: 380 lb-ft @ 3500 rpm
ENGINE TYPE: Stinger GT
twin-turbocharged and intercooled DOHC 24-valve V-6
aluminum block and heads
direct fuel injection
Displacement: 204 cu in, 3342 cc
Power: 365 hp @ 6000 rpm
Torque: 376 lb-ft @ 1300 rpm
But style and practicality ... all go to the Stinger. Handling and tech and features all go to the Stinger.
True. But to be fair, at a cost of around double the price of a leftover Fusion Sport.
(Btw, we won't see Fusions anymore in NASCAR...)
Wait, first you mention that straight line acceleration doesn't matter (which is a direct indication of a car's power-to-weight ratio), and then you talk about NASCAR?
So, professional motorsports effects what car you buy for the street? Come on now!