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The Pub For General Automotive Related Talk |
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20-12-2010, 09:53 PM | #1 | ||
Chairman & Administrator
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It is the must-have material to help keep the prying paparazzi away from Ford Australia's top-secret vehicles being developed by the company's prototype team. With an aggressive product roll-out of new vehicles planned for 2011, Ford Australia's program co-ordinator, Damian Lavric, said the sports material was just one of several materials used by the company to disguise its vehicles. Vinyl, foam, vacuum-formed plastic and glass-fibre are also employed in Ford's cover-up campaign. With a major model onslaught planned for 2011, starting with the new turbo-diesel Territory, it has become increasingly critical to keep important test vehicles covered. Apart from the diesel Territory, Ford will launch the new Ranger utility next year, as well as the next-generation Focus and Liquid Phase Injection (LPi) dedicated LPG versions of the Falcon. Ford Australia prototype build co-ordinator for Falcon and Territory, Simon Allen, said the company used a Melbourne-based supplier for its lycra material. "We always try to source locally," he said. Other materials available throughout the One Ford world globally were also evaluated for their suitability for local testing, he said. "As part of One Ford we try to leverage material and ideas that are being used elsewhere," Allen said. "We have access to techniques used around the world." FG Falcon prototype build co-ordinator, Neil Trickey, and his team was responsible for crafting the first use of lycra on the FG – codenamed Orion – during its development. Because of its elastic nature, Lycra can more easily cover a vehicle to help distort its exterior shape, but it's important not to interfere with critical functions, like opening doors or fuel caps. Ford, like other carmakers, often has several pre-production prototypes running around the country for various testing and mileage accumulation Those vehicles have to be shielded from prying eyes. "These days most people have a camera phone so we have to be extra careful when we use public roads with a prototype," Lavric said. "It is a difficult job because we want to keep driving vehicles in real-world conditions but we don't want to inhibit key vehicle functions at the same time, like engine cooling. "It's ironic because we want to disguise the vehicles and hide all the details, but all the stickers and camouflage draw the attention we are trying to avoid." It's not just a vehicle's exterior that must be hidden; the interior is just as important. Any interior coverings can be difficult to fit because they must hide the controls but also allow engineers easy access to audio as well as heating and ventilation switchgear. Ford's camouflage gear must also be durable and solid enough to cope with the harsh Australian conditions, particularly in the outback. Some vehicles are even shipped in purpose-built crates to avoid exposure and any materials must also be durable enough to survive transporting from location to location. Because it will be sold in 180 markets around the world, the new Ranger – codenamed T6 – required detailed full-body camouflage capable of not only surviving often brutal Australian conditions, but the freezing cold of Europe and extreme heat of the Middle East. The man responsible for covering up the Ranger utility prototypes, build co-ordinator, Les Schinck, said work on the T6 was one of the bigger jobs the team had undertaken in recent years. Ford's camouflage team has been flat-out over the past 18 months crafting covers for its newest vehicles. The science of camouflage is more than just covering a vehicle in black tape and vinyl cladding. The whole process starts at the clay modelling stage, even before prototypes hit the road and requires precise measurements to help disguise a vehicle. "We have to be aware of how we are going to camouflage a vehicle from the very early stages of a vehicle's evolution," Lavric said. To help contain costs, Ford also recycles camouflage materials, with equipment being modified and reapplied on other vehicles.
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20-12-2010, 09:59 PM | #2 | ||
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I guess the new Territory thread Ford were trailing the see through camo?
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20-12-2010, 11:29 PM | #3 | ||
Browsing here and there..
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Camouflage is serious business.
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20-12-2010, 11:52 PM | #4 | |||
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I must be weird, but I'd love to work in that department, because sometimes I think the manufacturers leave too little to the imagination - case in point the Territory! It should still have full front and rear camo... |
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20-12-2010, 11:55 PM | #5 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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I saw that and another territory last week
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21-12-2010, 12:07 AM | #6 | |||
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Hmm.. 'science of camouflage'. Wow that must be some tight fitting white lycra on that Territory mule, overstretched perhaps? |
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21-12-2010, 09:44 AM | #7 | ||
Lucifer's Angel
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^^Camouflage fail
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21-12-2010, 10:48 AM | #8 | |||
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ones you still see camoed fully at this point in time are running prototype panels which even though they will not be part of final production, they still dont want released to the public. fail?? i dont think so. |
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21-12-2010, 11:03 AM | #9 | ||
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The front reminds me of a Aston. Similar grill.
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21-12-2010, 11:07 AM | #10 | ||
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if they didn't use cammo at all, no one will notice..
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21-12-2010, 11:45 AM | #11 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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yeah, some of those taped up zebras are more eye catching that if they were normal. I'd like to see them use brown rust coloured paints to make them look old, then you might not notice that it;s a new car.
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21-12-2010, 12:11 PM | #12 | ||
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I remember with the 'Orion' (FG), they had things on the C-pillar that made it look like it was going to have a lump on it. That eventually disappeared as it got closer to the unveiling. Also the bottom of the doors had cladding on them to cover the indentation at the bottom of the door skins.
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21-12-2010, 12:17 PM | #13 | ||
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It works too well.
Judging by the Ford sales figures it's also hiding the Falcon and Territory of buyers. |
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21-12-2010, 12:50 PM | #14 | ||
Meep Meep
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What a dull press release.
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Thundering on.... |
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21-12-2010, 12:58 PM | #15 | |||
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