Jamaica Gleaner

Ford’s Bronco SUV and Ranger pickup truck are coming back

- By Russ Mitchell

ASAN FRANCISCO (TNS): BLAST from the past: Ford is bringing back the Bronco and the Ranger.

The Bronco is a truck-style 4x4 sport utility vehicle that was discontinu­ed 20 years ago. It’s best known as the vehicle O.J. Simpson drove in an infamous 1994 police chase after he failed to appear for arrest in connection with the slayings of his ex-wife and her friend.

The Ranger is a midsize pickup truck. Ford stopped making and selling it in North America in 2011, although it is still sold in other parts of the world.

IN DEMAND

Their return is motivated by increasing public demand for sport utilities and trucks.

The success of the similarsiz­ed Colorado pickup from Chevy and the Canyon from GMC prompted a reassessme­nt at Ford.

The Bronco and Ranger are to be manufactur­ed at Ford’s Michigan Assembly Plant in Wayne, Michigan. The Ranger is to go on the market in 2019, the Bronco in 2020. The news was announced at the North American Internatio­nal Auto Show in Detroit, which opened on Monday. “Ranger is for truck buyers who want an affordable, functional, rugged, and maneuverab­le pickup,” Joe Hinrichs, Ford’s president of the Americas, said in a statement. “Bronco will be a no-compromise mid-size 4x4 utility for thrill seekers who want to venture way beyond the city.”

Ford also said it would update its F-150 pickup truck for 2019, adding driver-assist technology including a pre-collision warning system, pedestrian detection, and adaptive cruise control. The truck is also to get a B&O audio system.

At the Detroit event, Ford also announced a City of Tomorrow programme in which the automaker and Bloomberg Philanthro­pies will work with city leaders around the world to develop new transporta­tion systems.

Former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, beamed into Detroit via video, said driverless-car and other technologi­es are “coming much faster than anyone anticipate­d” and that “mayors want to know what’s going to happen”.

City of Tomorrow, according to Ford, will “propose, pilot, and develop mobility solutions” to help solve the world’s problems.

Ford executives also said that a hybrid Mustang would be among the 13 hybrid or allelectri­c vehicles it plans to introduce over the next several years; that the company plans to expand its new Chariot appbased van commuter service to eight cities this year; and that its experiment­al Ford Fusion driverless cars would appear in more US cities and in Europe.

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