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Ford Police Interceptor, intercepting crime and emissions

By | March 15, 2010, 11:13 AM PDT

If you’re highly trained at spotting a parked Crown Vic while approaching at 70-plus miles per hour, you may want adjust your speeding strategy by staring at this photo:

Hint: it resembles a Taurus.

Ford has unveiled the new Police Interceptor. The police car may replace the typical Crown Victoria cruisers for which production will cease in 2011.

Along with safety enhancements (side-curtain rollover protection system, enhanced brakes), as well as accoutrements to make patrolling more comfy (extra legroom, seats crafted for police utility belts), the new black-and-white features an EcoBoost engine.

No, it’s not a hybrid.

But the Interceptor’s EcoBoost, a.k.a 3.5-liter V6 engine, might reduce the fuel costs to the police departments, the taxpayers and the environment. Ford claims these savings could be as much as 25 percent.

From Ford:

A highly efficient 3.5-liter V-6 engine delivering at least 263 horsepower and E85 compatibility is 25 percent more efficient than the 4.6-liter Single Overhead Cam (SOHC) V-8 offered in the current Crown Victoria Police Interceptor.

Plus, an all-new 3.5-liter EcoBoost V-6 twin-turbocharged, direct-injection engine will deliver at least 365 horsepower and 350 ft.-lb. of torque across a broad rpm range.

A high-capacity six-speed SelectShift Automatic transmission delivers the power of EcoBoost to the road via the sophisticated torque-sensing all-wheel-drive system.

Michael Graham Richard of TreeHugger reports:

It remains to be seen if the E85 capability will be used much, but it’s a good way to help future-proof the vehicles a little. Law enforcement doesn’t change vehicle models too often, and if in a few years there’s a cleaner source of ethanol available (not corn, but maybe something like switchgrass of agricultural waste), it’ll be good to have the flex fuel engines.

Municipalities could also upgrade their aging armadas with the Dodge Charger. But in the Interceptor, whether cops are chasing you down the highway or idling in front of the 7-Eleven, they might be doing it more efficiently energy-wise.

Video from Autoblog

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Melissa Mahony

About Melissa Mahony

Melissa Mahony was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2010 to 2011.

Melissa Mahony

Melissa Mahony

Contributing Editor, Energy

Melissa Mahony has written for Scientific American Mind, Audubon Magazine, Plenty Magazine and LiveScience. Formerly, she was an editor at Wildlife Conservation magazine. She holds degrees from Boston College and New York University's Science, Health, and Environmental Reporting Program. She is based in New York.

Follow her on Twitter.

Melissa Mahony

Melissa Mahony

Melissa does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers. She currently works for the Wildlife Conservation Society as an editor. Should Melissa cover a topic in which the WCS is involved, she will disclose this fact in her writing.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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0 Votes
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Considering how E85 is more expensive and has a lower heat content...
...I don't know how that aspect will be saving anybody any money. But
the rest looks good.
Posted by JohnMcGrew@...
16th Mar 2010
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RE: Ford Police Interceptor, intercepting crime and emissions
Funny...but I distinctly remember the Boys in Blue driving Tauruses in Robocop. (And probably plenty of other movies, too. I'm just surprised it took Ford this long to get around to making one.)

http://robocoparchive.com/info/thecars.htm

Too bad it doesn't look like a 6000 SUX. (j/k)
Posted by JJMach
16th Mar 2010
0 Votes
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RE: Ford Police Interceptor, intercepting crime and emissions
I like it. Looks a bit like something out of Mad Max.
Posted by Brad Egeland
16th Mar 2010
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Police Taurus
Back in the 1980s, Ford built a Police Taurus that was (for the time) about the hottest thing on the roads.

Longstanding myths to the contrary, civilians could then (and, i assume, can still) buy the special police versions - if you can find a dealer willing to order them for you.

And, in those days, the dealership nearest to the plant Tauruses came out of was quite happy to order them for you.

Ford, however, discourages dealerships from doing so, because Ford loses money on single-unit, non-fleet sales of such cars.
Posted by fairportfan
16th Mar 2010
0 Votes
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A Beauty with and Irony
It's a beauty, no doubt.

There's also a subtle irony. Taurus was the name of the bull tamed by Jason of Argonaut fame. Bull is one of the names criminals refer to police as. Taurus = bull = cop
Posted by sperry532@...
16th Mar 2010
0 Votes
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And...
They still have the same drawbacks. They are vehicles designed for
civilian use, and adapted for law enforcement use. I think the Carbon
Motors E7 will be a much more viable police vehicle.

http://www.carbonmotors.com/

-Dave
Posted by dave@...
16th Mar 2010
0 Votes
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Re; And...
It looks pretty cool and all, but the top end and acceleration specs rather suck. Diesels are wonderful for an assortment of things, but the rest of the vehicle needs to be properly designed to make the best use of where diesels excel. As a standard patrol vehicle, it may be great, but I wouldn't want to try to catch someone while driving it.There happen to be the same questions with the baseline Ford offering as well. Both looks cool, though.
Posted by Daughain
16th Mar 2010
0 Votes
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The BIG problem....
is the fact that Taurus is an FWD platform. Crown Victoria police cruisers, and Caprices, and all those old standbys didn't have the Tranny squatting over the front axle, together with the engine.

As Police Departments who've tried to use Taurus and Impala FWD squads know all to well, the damage which they suffer when jumping a curb is often extremely serious. And with so many large drivetrain components fit together so tightly, it's also much harder to take them apart from repair/replacement.

My old Taurus went 140+ MPH on premium gas. (It was, in fact, the 1989 SHO interceptor mentioned by another commentator above.) The problems weren't "speed" and "acceleration", both were fantastic. There problem was then, and is now, that the FWD layout puts too much stress on the front axle, and it can't handle the inevitable damage of police squad service.

The new Taurus comes in 4WD too, of course, but it's a unibody FWD platform, and the 4WD components are added to that.
Posted by Rick S._z
16th Mar 2010
0 Votes
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RE: Ford Police Interceptor, intercepting crime and emissions
It's a pity Ford can't make quality cars for the rest of us... you
know, like the imports that don't rust out, don't have crappy
interiors and exteriors, get really good mileage while delivering
necesary power, don't cater to gas-guzzling "muscleheads", don't
pretend to provide off-road performance when they will never be off
the highway, and so on.

Good riddance, fat, stink, disgusting Hummer!!

The financial sector on Wall Street have not learned, have no
intention of changing, have not been dealt with, are still getting
their obscene bonuses and are still creating their obscene valueless
pieces of paper that caused this mess - and still at public expense
- and will soon turn us back into another recession.

The big American automakers hire the same pool of greedy entitled
people as the financial sector... that ME-FIRST, DAMN EVERYBODY ELSE
generation don't give a crap about the rest of us driving public -
why would they give us what we really need when they can sell fancy
models at $100,000 a pop to the police?
Posted by bimjimmy
23rd Mar 2010
0 Votes
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RE: Ford Police Interceptor, intercepting crime and emissions
Sorry Melissa, no substitute for cubic inches. Small block cars just don't cut it when you need to have brute acceleration or passing power especially when you are trying to catch and stop someone with real V8 power. That's why for years rural polic forces have opted for Crown Vics, Chargers, and Camaros, etc. Maybe good for intercity. Good article though. Will be reading your stuff more often.
Love
Uncle Brent
Posted by Bigdboy
27th Mar 2010
0 Votes
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RE: Ford Police Interceptor, intercepting crime and emissions
Who called me ? The information about unknown phone number to find out who owns that number and why they call. Who is calling me.
Posted by EdwardKresge
7th Jun 2010
0 Votes
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RE: Ford Police Interceptor, intercepting crime and emissions
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