I don't think so. The Cougar did her job when the industry asked her to. But here's a video that shows that people didn't get it and the world moved on from what we were supposed to be, I guess?
There will be for some of them yes. What there wont be is cougar parts though. Ford doomed this car when they made it. In a period when they're other models were starting to go back to their roots, like the early 2000s thunderbird. They completely went a different direction with one of the most Iconic muscle cars of history. People fantasize about 60s cougars, to make a 2 door car that for some ungodly reason turned out FWD. Instead of going back to its roots as some people were expecting, they produced a car that looks like it belongs parked between a celica and an eclipse. It's design wasn't appealing to anyone who wasn't fresh out of school at the time, but had so many design short comings that anyone who put their money into a honda civic stood a really good chance of beating it. Put that with the fact that Fast and the Furious came out in 2001 which showcased all the import cars. It took what crowd the cougar was building away.Look at the middle market cars that are about today which what the cougar was back when it was new, do you think in 20 years time there will be a club of people who still love them?
Irrelevent? No .
Mad? Maybe
Cool? For sure![]()
I think why its considered a flop is because it came in under what was the projected sales numbers. That wasn't just in the UK though it was in all markets of the world.Like so many blog, vlogs, YT videos and fake news on the internet these days, that one is just some random bloke's opinion.
There may be any number of reasons why the public perception of a product is that it was a flop, when it may well have completely met the manufacturer's expectations.
eg. low sales numbers in the UK; cost of adapting product for RHD; availability of product for export (manufacturing capacity allocated to local markets), tax reasons (why manufacturers have to choose whether to send a few larger high-value cars or many smaller cheap cars). Using up production runs of obsolete or soon to be outlawed components.
The Cougar, being a limited production run/limited sales success car makes it special more so than the relatively common (in the UK) Puma, which itself was probably too small to succeed Stateside (Dan?)
The sharing of Mondeo (mainly the cherished sporty variants) parts makes it at least possible there'll be availability of important spares for our lifetimes.
The landscape is due to change, electric cars a likely to be a major factor in the future, heck even cars that take the fun out of travelling. Driving might be something most mortals only do on experience days and they'll marvel at the skills those of us who get behind a wheel on the road. Our classics might even be condemned to self-driving vehicle transporters just to make meets and shows.
Make the most of it now...
I consider y'all family even though I talk nothing like all y'all, I drive on the wrong side of the road, and enter my car from the passenger side ( can't help it that's where they put my steering wheel). I'm not arguing with anyone about anything to do with it. I know a crapload about them. Probably enough to take it apart and put it together with my eyes closed while half asleep, talking on the phone, drunk, and the whole time eating some of the thinnest bacon any of y'all have ever seen. My way isn't always right, and I don't know everything. So honestly, I don't have a right to tell someone no you're wrong even if I do have an easier way to do something.I hope everone understands that I started this thread to get us talking again, and thinking about who we are and why we're here for a new year.
The responses have been thoughtful and respectful even when they conflict, which is exactly what I expect from you good people, so thank you all.
1 they named it a cougar.
3 aftermarket parts. Sure we had cold air intakes and limited slip differentials.....
4. Its design sucks for building any power with...
This really only applies to the US (and yes I know was it's main target market) most people in Europe have never heard of or have any attachment to the old Cougar Muscle cars
This really only applies to the US (and yes I know was it's main target market) most people in Europe have never heard of or have any attachment to the old Cougar Muscle cars
Does this really have an impact on new car sales? I suspect Motor execs couldn't give a rats bum about future owners
and the interior is horrible which goes a long way in any vehicle priced at a premium.
Having said all that, they did something right because the design has stood the test of time and they still look good now, we all love ours so here's to happy Cougaring![]()