Ford Verona/Volkswagen Apollo | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Manufacturer | Autolatina |
Also called | Volkswagen Apollo Ford Orion |
Production | 1989–1992 and 1993–1996 |
Body and chassis | |
Class | Compact/Small family car (C) |
Layout | Front-engine, front-wheel drive |
Chronology | |
Predecessor | Ford Del Rey |
Successor | Ford Escort saloon |
The Ford Verona and Volkswagen Apollo are a pair of small family cars that were manufactured in Brazil by Autolatina, a joint venture between Brazilian subsidiaries of Ford and Volkswagen. The Verona was produced from 1989 to 1992 and from 1993 to 1996, initially as a direct replacement for the ageing Ford Del Rey. [1]
The company spent US$100 million developing and producing the car, which is heavily based on the second generation Ford Orion, and competed mainly with the Chevrolet Monza in the local market. The first generation had the characteristic of being a two-door sedan with a unique rear end, and the only derivation of the fourth generation Ford Escort with this body style, and was also rebadged as the Volkswagen Apollo. [2]
Autolatina ceased production of the Verona/Apollo in 1992, after only three years of the original release, but still produced locally the third generation Orion a year after and keeping the Verona nameplate, until it was replaced by the sixth generation Ford Escort saloon in 1996. [1]
First generation | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Also called | Volkswagen Apollo |
Production | 1989–1992 |
Assembly | São Bernardo do Campo, Brazil |
Body and chassis | |
Body style | 2-door sedan |
Related | Ford Orion Ford Escort |
Powertrain | |
Engine | 1.6 L AE 1600 1.8 L AP 1800 |
Transmission | 5-speed manual |
Dimensions | |
Wheelbase | 2,402 mm (94.6 in) |
Length | 4,215 mm (165.9 in) |
Width | 1,640 mm (64.6 in) |
Height | 1,331 mm (52.4 in) |
Curb weight | 955–980 kg (2,105–2,161 lb) |
The first generation Verona was released in November 1989, as Ford's Brazilian subsidiary wanted a stronger competitor for the mid-size segment leader at the time, the Chevrolet Monza, despite being based from a lower segment car. It was heavily based on the second generation of the European Ford Orion, [3] which in turn was based on the "Erika" third generation Ford Escort platform of 1981. Compared to the European Orion, the Verona had a unique body style, being a two-door sedan with a higher rear design and horizontal tail lights, the styling of which strongly resembled the sedan (Sapphire) version of the European Ford Sierra. The two cars are also mechanically different, and while the Orion was only available in the four-door body style, the Verona was only available with two doors. It lacked some features available in the Orion, for example the folding rear seats, to reduce production costs. [1]
In 1986, Argentine and Brazilian subsidiaries of Volkswagen and Ford formed the Autolatina joint venture, leading to a series of badge engineered cars. [4] The Verona was the first model to be rebranded during the alliance and its sibling was the Volkswagen Apollo, released in 1990. The alliance also allowed Ford to have access to more powerful engines, better suited to the segment it would compete, since one of the most common complaints in the Ford Del Rey it would replace was its poor performance. [5]
Code named Nevada, the Verona development cost US$70,000,000 to Ford do Brasil, and aimed to create a competitive car for the midsize segment without excessive spending, due to the bad financial situation of the subsidiary at the time. Another US$30,000,000 were used to update the São Bernardo do Campo assembly line, where the car was produced. It was considered to build a four-door Ford Orion in Brazil, but two-door sedans were more suitable to local demand, which led to the creation of the Verona. [5] The final name was chosen in computer, among other 21 options, including Stallion, Novara and the proper project code name Nevada. [3]
LX and GLX were the two trim lines available for the Verona, the first one carried by a 1.6 L CHT engine and the last by a 1.8 L Volkswagen AP engine, both with ethanol and petrol variants. [3] Base model was the LX and could be equipped with green glasses, rear window defroster, AM/FM stereo and power mirrors, while the GLX was the upscale trim level and could be equipped with fog lights, aluminum wheels, lumbar support adjustment, Bosch radio/cassette player with code to inhibit theft and power mirrors. Air conditioning and sunroof were also optional features in the GLX trim. [1] Unlike its Apollo twin, the Verona dashboard was identical to the Ford Escort one. [6] The last model year offered 14 pol aluminum wheels as an optional feature. That same year, the Verona was discontinued in the South American market.
In a 1989 road test conducted by a Brazilian magazine, the Verona 1.8 L managed to go from 0 to 100 km/h in 11,72 seconds and reached a maximum speed of 168.3 km/h. [7] In this same road test, dynamometer measurements determined that ethanol engines produced 105 PS, while Ford would publicize this engine as it only produced 99 PS. This was done to avoid a higher tax on the circulation of goods (ICM) for ethanol engines for cars with power above 100 PS. [7] [8]
Specifications for each engine can be found in the table below. [9]
Name | Displacement | Engine | Fuel | Bore x Stroke | Compression ratio | Output | Torque |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1.6 AE (AE 1600) | 1.555 cm³ | 4cyl | Petrol | 77 x 83,5 mm | 9.0:1 | 76.5 PS (56 kW; 75 hp) @5200 rpm | 130.7 N⋅m (96 lb⋅ft) @3200 rpm |
1.6 AE (AE 1600) | 1.555 cm³ | 4cyl | Ethanol | 77 x 83,5 mm | 12.0:1 | 77.9 PS (57 kW; 77 hp) @5200 rpm | 130.5 N⋅m (96 lb⋅ft) @3200 rpm |
1.8 UD (AP 1800) | 1.781 cm³ | 4cyl | Petrol | 81 x 86,4 mm | 8.5:1 | 91 PS (67 kW; 90 hp) @5500 rpm | 142.2 N⋅m (105 lb⋅ft) @3400 |
1.8 UD (AP 1800) | 1.781 cm³ | 4cyl | Ethanol | 81 x 86,4 mm | 12.3:1 | 105 PS (77 kW; 104 hp) @5500 rpm | 152 N⋅m (112 lb⋅ft) @3400 rpm |
Note: AE is an acronym for "Alta Economia" (High Fuel-Efficiency in English), AP stands for "Alta Performance" (High Performance in English). [10]
The Apollo was essentially a re-branded Ford Verona sold from 1990 to 1992. More expensive and marketed as a sportier model, it was only available with the 1.8 L AP engine. [11] Compared with the Verona, it has only minor differences. [12] These are shorter gear ratios, stiffer shock absorbers, different dashboard with orange lighting (unlike the Verona, the Apollo do not share its dashboard with the Escort), smoked tail lights very similar to the ones from the Ford Sapphire, chrome-less rear window frames, fixed-height front seats, painted mirrors (GLS trim) and airfoil. During the first model years, its front turn signals had clear lenses while the Verona had orange lenses. [13] Trim levels were GL (base model) and GLS. A special edition named VIP was released in 1991. [14]
A recurrent complaint from Apollo owners was the usage of steel rod-operated gear shift instead of the commonly used cable-operated gear shift. Both Verona and Apollo had cambering issues as well, partially due to rear suspension's project that was not adequately designed for a saloon. [15]
Second generation | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Also called | Ford Orion (Argentina) |
Production | 1993–1996 |
Assembly | São Bernardo do Campo, Brazil (1993-1995) Pacheco, Argentina (1995-1996) |
Body and chassis | |
Body style | 4-door sedan |
Related | Ford Orion Ford Escort |
Powertrain | |
Engine | 1.8 L AP-1800 2.0 L AP-2000 |
Transmission | 5-speed manual |
Dimensions | |
Wheelbase | 2,525 mm (99.4 in) |
Length | 4,229 mm (166.5 in) |
Width | 1,690 mm (66.5 in) |
Height | 1,369 mm (53.9 in) |
Curb weight | 1,060–1,145 kg (2,337–2,524 lb) |
The Verona discontinued in 1992 was relaunched in late 1993, this time sharing its body style with the third generation Ford Orion and only available as a four-door sedan.
Three trims were offered, a base (LX), an intermediate (GLX) with power steering, power windows and locks and also an upscale (Ghia), the first two with the 1.8 L AP engine and the Ghia with the 2.0 L AP. The 1.6 L CHT engine was discontinued. [16] In 1995, the 1.8 L gained electronic fuel injection, the LX version was renamed GL and the Ghia gained a new digital electronic fuel injection from FIC (standing for Ford Indústria e Comércio - Ford Industry and Trade, the brand's division of electronic components), replacing the old analog Bosch LE Jetronic fuel injection. [1] That same year, a new version was added to the line, the sportier 2.0i S, available with Recaro seats, air conditioning, cassette player and disc brakes in four wheels. [16]
In 1996, the Verona was facelifted, with a new hood and the oval grille. Production also shifted from São Bernardo do Campo to Pacheco, Argentina, where it was marketed as Ford Orion. That same year, the sixth generation of the Ford Escort went on sale and the Verona nameplate was dropped and replaced by the Escort Sedan. [16]
In a 1993 road test, the Verona went from 0-100 in 11.1 s and reached maximum velocity of 186.6 km/h. Drag coefficient was 0.31. [17]
Specifications for engines available can be found in the table below. [18]
Name | Displacement | Engine | Fuel | Bore x Stroke | Compression ratio | Output | Torque |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1.8 AP (AP 1800) | 1.781 cm³ | 4cyl | Petrol | 81 x 86,4 mm | 8.5:1 | 91.1 PS (67 kW; 90 hp) @5500 rpm | 142 N⋅m (105 lb⋅ft) @3000 |
1.8 AP (AP 1800) | 1.781 cm³ | 4cyl | Ethanol | 81 x 86,4 mm | 12.3:1 | 105 PS (77 kW; 104 hp) @5500 rpm | 152 N⋅m (112 lb⋅ft) @3400 rpm |
2.0 AP (AP 2000) | 1.984 cm³ | 4cyl | Petrol | 82,5 x 92,8 mm | 9.0:1 | 108 PS (79 kW; 107 hp) @5400 rpm | 167 N⋅m (123 lb⋅ft) @3400 |
2.0 AP (AP 2000) | 1.984 cm³ | 4cyl | Ethanol | 82,5 x 92,8 mm | 12.0:1 | 115.6 PS (85 kW; 114 hp) @5400 rpm | 172 N⋅m (127 lb⋅ft) @3400 rpm |
2.0i AP (AP 2000i) | 1.984 cm³ | 4cyl | Petrol | 82,5 x 92,8 mm | 10.0:1 | 120.1 PS (88 kW; 118 hp) @5600 rpm | 174 N⋅m (128 lb⋅ft) @3200 rpm |
In 1990, the Verona was the 7th best-selling car in Brazil, the Apollo was the 17th. The following year, the Verona rose to the 6th place and the Apollo to the 8th. In the last production year, they both fell to 9th and 15th positions, respectively. [19] Total production of the Volkswagen Apollo was 53,130 units. [14] Sales figures from both cars in Brazil are shown below.
Calendar Year | Verona [19] [20] [21] | Apollo [19] |
---|---|---|
1990 | 33,248 | 13,494 |
1991 | 32,676 | 26,976 |
1992 | 20,243 | 10,437 |
1993 | 3,462 | — |
1994 | 15,142 | — |
1995 | 6,940 | — |
1996 | 6,614 | — |
The Ford Sierra is a mid-size/large family car manufactured and marketed by Ford Europe from 1982–1993, designed by Uwe Bahnsen, Robert Lutz and Patrick le Quément — and noted for its aerodynamic styling producing a drag coefficient of 0.34, a significant improvement over its predecessors.
The Ford Orion is a small family car that was produced by Ford Europe from 1983 until 1993. A total of 3,534,239 units were sold during the car's ten-year production life.
The Ford Versailles was a mid-size automobile between 1991 and 1996 in Brazil and Argentina. It was a version of the Volkswagen Santana sold in the 1990s, when Ford and Volkswagen shared models in South America in a joint venture known as Autolatina. It replaced the Ford Del Rey in Brazil and the locally built Ford Sierra in Argentina. The station wagon version was sold as the Ford Royale.
The Volkswagen Gol is a subcompact car that was manufactured by Volkswagen do Brasil from 1980 to 2023 as Volkswagen's entry-level car in the Latin American market—where it succeeded the Volkswagen Type 1 (Fusca) and the Volkswagen Brasilia. Several variants of the Gol-derived Voyage and Parati were marketed in North America as the Volkswagen Fox from 1987 to 1993.
The Ford Corcel is a family car which was sold by Ford do Brasil in Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay and Venezuela. It was also assembled in Venezuela. The French-influenced styling of the Corcel was unique to Brazil until late 1977. From this year, the redesigned Corcel II bore a strong resemblance to the European Ford Escort and Ford Cortina of same era, but its Renault underpinnings remained the same. The Corcel was eventually replaced by the Del Rey, which was originally introduced as a better equipped version of the Corcel.
The Ford Del Rey is a midsized car produced by Ford do Brasil in Brazil from 1981 to 1991. It was a successor to the Ford Landau as the flagship model of the lineup and to the higher priced versions of the popular Ford Corcel II. Like the Corcel II, the Del Rey was designed exclusively for Brazil, but was sold in Chile, Venezuela, Uruguay, and Paraguay, as well.
The Ford CHT engine is an inline four-cylinder internal combustion engine family produced by the Ford Motor Company in Brazil during the 1980s and 1990s. It was derived from the Renault Cléon-Fonte engine. It is unrelated to the similarly-named Ford CVH engine.
The Ford Tempo is an front-engine, front-drive, five passenger, two- or four-door sedan manufactured and marketed by Ford for model years 1984-1994, over a single generation. The successor of the Ford Fairmont, the Tempo marked both the downsizing of the Ford compact car line and its adoption of front-wheel drive. Through its production, the model line was offered as a two-door coupe and four-door sedan, with the Mercury Topaz marketed as its divisional counterpart.
The Ford Galaxy is a seven-seater car produced by Ford of Europe from June 1995 to April 2023. Considered in the motor industry to be a large multi-purpose vehicle (MPV), it was the first Ford-brand MPV produced and marketed outside of North America, the model line is currently in its third generation. Sharing its platform architecture with the Ford Mondeo, the Galaxy was developed alongside the Ford S-Max; the model line is slotted between the Connect and Custom variants of the Ford Tourneo/Transit model family.
The Ford Escort is a small family car that was manufactured by Ford of Europe from 1968 until 2000. In total there were six generations, spread across three basic platforms: the original, rear-wheel-drive Mk.1/Mk.2 (1968–1980), the "Erika" front-wheel-drive Mk.3/Mk.4 (1980–1992), and the final CE-14 Mk.5/Mk.6 (1990–2002) version. Its successor, the Ford Focus, was released in 1998, but the final generation of Escort was phased out gradually, with the panel van version ending production in 2002 in favour of the Ford Transit Connect.
The North American version of the Ford Escort is a range of cars that were sold by Ford from the 1981 to 2003 model years. The direct successor of the Ford Pinto, the Escort also largely overtook the role of the European-imported Ford Fiesta as the smallest vehicle in the Ford model line in North America. Produced across three generations, the first generation was a subcompact; the latter two generations were compact cars. Becoming highly successful in the marketplace, the Escort became the best-selling car in the United States after 1982, a position it would hold for much of the 1980s.
The Volkswagen Brasília is a rear-engined small family car developed by Volkswagen do Brasil and internally designated as the Type 321. Named for Brazil's capital city, the car was manufactured and marketed by Volkswagen in Brazil from 1973 to 1982; in Mexico from 1975 to 1982; and built from knock down kits in Nigeria, where it was marketed as the Igala from 1976 to 1980.
Ford Motor Company Brasil Ltda. is the Brazilian subsidiary of American automaker Ford Motor Company, founded on 24 April 1919. The operation started out importing the Ford Model T cars and the Ford Model TT trucks in kit form from the United States for assembly in Brazil. The Ford brand, however, had already been present in the country since 1904 with both vehicles being sold in Brazil.
The North American version of the Ford Granada is a range of sedans that was manufactured and marketed by Ford over two generations (1975–1982). Developed as the original successor for the Ford Maverick, the Granada shares its name with Ford of Europe's flagship sedan. The model line was marketed as a luxury compact vehicle, expanding the segment in the United States.
The Volkswagen Passat (B1) is a large family car produced by Volkswagen in West Germany from 1973 to 1981.
The B3 Passat was heavily facelifted in 1993, and despite being designated B4, it was not an all-new model. The facelift resulted in every external body panel being changed, except for the roof and glasshouse, with most obvious exterior change seeing the reintroduction of a grille to match the style of the other same-generation Volkswagen models of the era, such as the Mk3 Golf and Jetta. The interior was mildly updated and included safety equipment such as dual front airbags and seat belt pretensioners, although the basic dashboard design remained unchanged. The B4 sedan was replaced in late 1996 by the new B5 Passat.
The Ford Focus Mk 2 is the second generation of Ford Focus, a range of small family cars produced by Ford Motor Company from 2005 to 2010. It was launched at the Paris Motor Show on September 25, 2004, as a three and five-door hatchback and an estate, although the new car was previewed, in 4-door saloon form, as the 'Focus Concept' developed by Ford Europe at the Beijing Motor Show in mid-2005.
The Ford Mondeo I (first generation) is a mid-size car that was produced by Ford, beginning on 23 November 1992, with sales beginning on 22 March 1993. It is also known as the Mk I Mondeo; the 1996 facelift versions are usually designated Mk II. Available as a four-door saloon, a five-door hatchback, and a five-door estate, all models for the European market were produced at Ford's plant in the Belgian city of Genk. In December 1992, Autocar published a section on the Mondeo, and how it would conquer rivals.
The Fiesta Mark IV was launched in October 1995 and became Britain's best-selling car from 1996 to 1998, when it was overtaken by the all-new Ford Focus, a replacement for the Ford Escort.
The Ford Fiesta Mk5 is the fifth generation of the Ford Fiesta supermini built in Europe between April 2002 and 2008. The Fiesta continued to be built in Mexico until 2010 and in Brazil until 2014. Most engines were carried over from the previous Fiesta. This generation became the best-selling Ford Fiesta generation to date. This was the first Fiesta to be sold in Asia and Australasia, where it replaced the Kia-based Festiva.