San Francisco Chronicle

The Ford Taurus, once a top seller, dies

- By Tom Krisher

DETROIT — A car that once was America’s top-seller is about to die — for a second time.

Ford Taurus, may you rest in peace at the salvage yard.

Blame the full-size sedan’s slow demise on the national obsession with SUVs and Ford Motor Co.’s need to slash costs and remake itself for a new era of self-driving cars and shuttles.

Ford announced the car’s passing this week as part of major restructur­ing plan aimed at focusing capital spending on more popular sport utility vehicles and technology needed to morph Ford into a mobility

company.

The 114-year-old automaker said it would stop selling all car models in North America but two: the Mustang muscle car and a version of the compact Focus called Active. That means Ford’s Chicago plant will stop making Tauruses in March. North American production of the Focus compact car and Fiesta subcompact will halt in May, while the midsize Fusion lives a few more years before it departs.

They’ll be replaced by five new SUVs, all to deal with a market that has shifted dramatical­ly in five years. Last month, trucks and SUVs were two-thirds of U.S. new vehicle sales. They were less than half in March of 2013.

“We will focus on products and markets where we know we can win,” new CEO Jim Hackett said in making the announceme­nt.

That means the end of the line for the Taurus, which was completely remade as a new car for a third time in the 2010 model year. The timing couldn’t have been worse. It came out as high gas prices were sending families to more efficient midsize sedans like the Toyota Camry and Honda Accord. Then the SUV boom hit.

“It had everything going against it,” said Karl Brauer, executive publisher for Kelley Blue Book and Autotrader.

The Taurus was built on heavy, older underpinni­ngs, limiting Ford’s ability to create more interior space or make the car more efficient, Brauer said. At the same time, midsize competitor­s used newer technology for better ride and handling and to expand inside space.

As a result, sales of the latest Taurus peaked in 2013 at nearly 80,000, falling to just over 41,000 last year.

The latest Taurus did develop a bit of a cult following, though, especially the 365-horsepower turbocharg­ed performanc­e version called SHO for “Super High Output.”

“It’s really a sad thing to see a good car like that go,” mused Corey Aaron of Buford, Ga., who owns a metallic gray 2013 SHO that he loves because it can out-accelerate many other cars yet looks like a sleepy family sedan.

Aaron, a member of an SHO enthusiast club, says Ford is shortsight­ed for getting rid of a car with a loyal following. Before the Taurus, Aaron bought only foreignbra­nd vehicles, which he considered to have better performanc­e and quality.

“After getting behind the wheel, it totally changed my perspectiv­e on domestic manufactur­ers,” he said.

The Taurus debuted in late 1985, at a time when Ford was in financial trouble and needed a big hit. The company had found that American tastes were changing away from big, boxy sedans to more nimble and efficient European cars.

So more than 1,000 Ford staffers came up with a sleek-looking, roomy car with a smooth ride that was efficient and handled like a smaller car. Derisively called a “flying potato” by a competitor, the Taurus was so futuristic that it became the template for all modern sedans.

By the 1990s, the cars were everywhere. The Taurus became the bestsellin­g car in America in 1992 with sales of nearly 410,000, just as Japanese imports were starting to take hold. It kept the top spot for five years until being supplanted by the Toyota Camry in 1997.

Sales remained strong until the Taurus got a makeover in 1996. Although the second generation sold well, it never matched the original car’s numbers.

In the late 1990s, Ford began focusing more on higher-profit trucks and SUVs and let the Taurus languish. The last one rolled off the assembly line in 2006. By then, Ford had sold over 7 million of them, many going to rental car companies toward the end.

Shortly after production stopped, Ford again was caught off-guard by spiking gas prices and had little to offer consumers. It got into financial trouble again before a new CEO came in. He realized the value of the Taurus brand, resurrecte­d the name and relabeled what was then the Five Hundred sedan.

 ?? Richard Drew / Associated Press 2011 ?? Mark Fields, a Ford executive vice president, introduces the 2013 Taurus SHO at the New York Internatio­nal Auto Show. Now the Taurus is dying, again.
Richard Drew / Associated Press 2011 Mark Fields, a Ford executive vice president, introduces the 2013 Taurus SHO at the New York Internatio­nal Auto Show. Now the Taurus is dying, again.

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