Ford Taurus SHO
Ford Taurus SHO | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Manufacturer | Ford |
Model years | 1989–1999 2010–2019 |
Designer | Jack Telnack |
Body and chassis | |
Class | Mid-size (1988–1999) Full-size (2010–2019) |
Layout | Front-engine, FWD (1989–1999) Front-engine, AWD (2010–2019) |
Related | Ford Taurus |
The Ford Taurus SHO (Super High Output)[1] is the high-performance variant of the Ford Taurus. Originally intended as a limited-production model, the SHO was produced for the first three generations of the Taurus, for model years 1989-1999.[2][3] After an 11-year hiatus, the SHO was reintroduced for model years 20102019.[4]
Marketed by Ford, without a Mercury Sable counterpart, the 2010-2019 SHO served as the basis for the Ford Police Interceptor Sedan, replacing the long-running Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor. The final version is the only Taurus ever offered with the twin-turbocharged EcoBoost V6 engine.
The first three generations of the SHO were assembled by Ford at Atlanta Assembly (Hapeville, Georgia); the fourth generation was assembled at Chicago Assembly (Chicago, Illinois).
Background
[edit]In 1984, executives of the Yamaha Motor Corporation signed a contract with the Ford Motor Company to develop, produce, and supply a compact 60° DOHC V6 engine based upon the existing Vulcan engine for transverse application.[5][6]
There has been some confusion about the original intended use of the engine. It was thought this engine was first intended to power a mid-engine sports car, that project (known internally as GN34) was canceled. Patents have been found and pictures of prototype SHO powerplants installed in the Taurus show that the original intent was for the larger FWD setup and the GN34 would have come later.[7] There were a few GN34 prototypes produced, most with standard Vulcan engines and a few other factory swaps, a SHO Ranger being one.
First generation (1989–1991)
[edit]First generation | |
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Overview | |
Model years | 1989–1991 |
Assembly | Hapeville, Georgia (Atlanta Assembly) |
Body and chassis | |
Body style | 4-door sedan |
Platform | Ford DN5 platform |
Related | Ford Taurus Mercury Sable |
Powertrain | |
Engine | 3.0 L SHO V6 |
Transmission | 5-speed MTX-IV manual |
Dimensions | |
Wheelbase | 106.0 in (2,692 mm) |
Length | 188.4 in (4,785 mm) |
Width | 70.8 in (1,798 mm) |
Height | 54.1 in (1,374 mm) |
Curb weight | 3,285 lb (1,490 kg) |
The SHO differed from the normal Taurus on the exterior by using a Mercury Sable hood, revised bumper fascias, side cladding, and fog lamps. The interior featured sports seats and an 8000 rpm tachometer. The SHO used a Yamaha Built V-6 engine that redlined at 7,000 RPM and became the only Taurus with a manual transmission since the 4-cylinder MT-5 was discontinued in that year.[1] The transmission was designed and manufactured by Mazda and had the following gear ratios with a final drive ratio of 3.74:
Gear | Ratio | mph per 1,000 rpm | Max Speed (mph) @ 7000 rpm |
---|---|---|---|
1st | 3.21 | 6.2 | 44 |
2nd | 2.09 | 9.5 | 67 |
3rd | 1.38 | 14.5 | 101 |
4th | 1.02 | 19.6 | 137 |
5th | 0.74 | 26.8 | 143 @ 5350 |
The first generation Taurus SHO could accelerate from 0-60 mph in 6.6 seconds[8] with a quarter mile time of 15.0-15.2 seconds. Car and Driver reported a top speed of 143 mph (230 km/h) in their December 1989 issue.
An edition of the SHO marketed as the Plus Package became available in late 1990 as part of option package #212A, with styling differences from the standard SHO including a plastic 'Power Bulge' hood, chrome window trim, plastic spoiler without the 3rd brake light, body colored stripe in the lower cladding, black mirrors, black B and C pillars, rod shifter upgrade, and a body color TAURUS badge.
It is believed that some SHOs came with only part of the package options, regular SHOs that received the other options because Ford needed to use what they had with the 1992 body change.[citation needed] White painted pluses had the option of white painted wheels resembling the blades of a flood slicer, colloquially referred to as slicer wheels.[9] 1991 was the only year that a "Mocha Frost" color option was offered. Also in 91 an exclusive metallic green was available on the Plus Package.[10]
Second generation (1992–1995)
[edit]Second generation | |
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Overview | |
Model years | 1992–1995 |
Assembly | Hapeville, Georgia (Atlanta Assembly) |
Body and chassis | |
Body style | 4-door sedan |
Platform | Ford DN5 platform |
Related | Ford Taurus Mercury Sable |
Powertrain | |
Engine | 3.0 L SHO V6 3.2 L SHO V6 |
Transmission | 4-speed AX4S automatic 5-speed MTX-IV manual |
Dimensions | |
Wheelbase | 106.0 in (2,692 mm) |
Length | Sedan:192.0 in (4,877 mm) |
Width | 71.2 in (1,808 mm) |
Height | Sedan: 54.1 in (1,374 mm)–55.4 in (1,407 mm) |
Curb weight | MTX: 3,309 pounds (1,501 kg) - 3,395 lb (1,540 kg) ATX: 3,450 pounds (1,560 kg) - 3,505 lb (1,590 kg) |
The SHO was redesigned for 1992, using the previous powertrain, the Yamaha Built V-6 engine and 5-speed manual transmission. The second generation SHO borrowed from the Mercury Sable's front fenders, hood, and headlights, but revised bumper fascias, fog lamps, and no middle lightbar.[11] The SHO also featured unique seats, side cladding, and dual exhaustr. 1992 models can be identified by their rear trunk lid without a spoiler, their downturned exhaust tips, and only a driver's side airbag (later models have both driver's and passenger airbags). For the 1993 model year, the rear brakes on the SHO were converted to solid discs, replacing the vented discs of almost identical dimensions used in for model years 1989–1992.
The lack of an automatic transmission had hurt sales, rectified for model year 1993 . A 3.2 L version of the Ford SHO V6 engine was introduced for the automatic-equipped SHO, which still had 220 hp (164 kW), but now boasted 215 lb⋅ft (292 N⋅m), a 15 lb⋅ft (20 N⋅m) increase over the 3.0 L version.[12] It was later discovered by enthusiasts that Ford had put less aggressive intake camshafts in the 3.2L motor to maintain the same horsepower rating as the 3.0L, while still having more torque. The 1993 to 1995 automatics use the AX4S (previously named AXOD-E) transmission with these ratios:
Gear | Ratio |
---|---|
1st | 2.771 |
2nd | 1.543 |
3rd | 1.000 |
4th | 0.694 |
Reverse | 2.263 |
MY 1993: For MY 1993, the SHO interior featured an updated center console. Other changes for 1993 included a trunklid spoiler with integrated center high mount stop lamp, and wheels that resembled the blades of a food slicer, colloquially called slicer wheels. These wheels were directional, i.e., using mirror image designs specific to each side of the car.[11]
MY 1993: The 94-95 models deleted chrome window trim, door handles were now body color, and black was no longer offered as an interior or exterior color.
Encouraged by editors at Car and Driver, Ford engineers worked with the magazine staff to create a SHO station wagon,[13] starting with a production Taurus wagon, installing the SHO unique front end, replacing the stock engine and drivetrain with SHO drivetrain and replicating the interior of a high spec SHO sedan, including its sport seats, steering wheel and most of the SHO's equipment.[13] Car and Driver tested the wagon and drove it cross country — admitting it had been created "just for fun" and was not a serious production vehicle. A second wagon was built for brake testing.[13] Rear tire clearance was a primary hindrance for a production version, with Ford unable to justify modifiying the rear body shell, one of the largest body stampings.[14]
The second generation of SHO has become prominent in American pop culture when comedian Conan O'Brien used his personal green 1992 model in a number of comedy sketches. He would later facetiously claim to be the main influence behind Ford's decision to revive the model in a 2009 comedy sketch, where he "reviewed" the 2010 SHO with a Ford employee.
Third generation (1996–1999)
[edit]Third generation | |
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Overview | |
Model years | 1996–1999 |
Assembly | Hapeville, Georgia (Atlanta Assembly) |
Body and chassis | |
Body style | 4-door sedan |
Platform | Ford DN101 platform[15] |
Related | Ford Windstar Ford Taurus Mercury Sable |
Powertrain | |
Engine | 3.4 L SHO V8 |
Transmission | 4-speed AX4N automatic |
Dimensions | |
Wheelbase | 108.5 in (2,756 mm) |
Length | 197.5 in (5,016 mm) |
Width | 73.0 in (1,854 mm) |
Height | 55.1 in (1,400 mm) |
Curb weight | 3,329 lb (1,510 kg) |
For 1996, the SHO was redesigned, following the Ford Taurus (third generation) design. Unlike its predecessors, this SHO was more refined and used less radical bodywork. It differed from the normal Taurus with different seats, Alloy wheels, bumpers, V8 drivetrain, as well as a wind deflector being placed on the driver's side windshield wiper, to keep it on the windshield at high speeds. This SHO model sold in lower numbers than the previous SHO generations, with sales peaking at 9,000 units in 1997.[2] As a result, Ford cut the SHO when redesigning the Taurus for its fourth generation. It was also the only Ford Taurus generation with a V8 Engine.[16]
Engine
[edit]A 235 hp (175 kW) aluminum 3.4 L V8 engine with heads from Yamaha and block from Cosworth was specified for the SHO model, but it was given the same four speed transmission as the LX: the manual gearbox option was no longer offered on the SHO.[17] Separation of the camshaft from its sprocket has been implicated in a growing number of engine failures, at around 50,000 miles (80,000 km).[18] This problem can be rectified by having the camshafts welded.[18] The number of engines with failure has been documented at about 1,200 out of about 20,000 engines.[19] Other undocumented cases very likely exist. There was no SHO for the 2000 model year, some believed that the then President of Ford Motor Company Jac Nasser influenced the designers not to design a SHO model for he was focusing on the Premier Automotive Group that consisted of Lincoln, Jaguar, Volvo, Aston-Martin and Land Rover built under that umbrella and the SHO would detract sales to that division of Ford Motor Company.
Transmission
[edit]The 1996 and later models got the AX4N transmission, which has the same gearsets (and thus the same gear ratios) as the AX4S used in the 1993 to 1995 SHO, but had improved torque capacity and shift quality, such as 3-2 downshifts.
SARC system
[edit]As of 1996, The SHO V8 came with a Semi-Active Ride Controller, (SARC) which modified the hardness and stiffness of driving at different speeds. When energized (Lower speeds) it is full soft, when no power (fast speeds and hard braking), full hard. This included modified suspensions strut and Adaptable Assisted Steering. Each corner of the car can be in either mode and acts independently. This eliminates dive on heavy braking and drastically reduces squat on acceleration. The shock solenoids on all 4 struts and the solenoid on the ZF rack and pinion steering changes their behaviour (hard or soft) based on (independent) suspension sensors and ABS sensor based speed detection. The 1996 and 1997 models had sensors on all 4 wheels. The 1998 models only had sensors on the 2 front wheels. The SARC suspension option was deleted on the 1999 models using the same struts of the 1996-2007 (non-SHO) Taurus, but keeping the adjustable power steering option. [20]
Fourth generation (2010–2019)
[edit]Fourth generation | |
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Overview | |
Production | June 15, 2009[21]–March 1, 2019[22] |
Assembly | Chicago, Illinois (Chicago Assembly) |
Body and chassis | |
Body style | 4-door sedan |
Platform | Ford D3 platform |
Related | Ford Taurus Ford Police Interceptor Sedan |
Powertrain | |
Engine | 3.5 L Ecoboost V6 Twin-turbo |
Transmission | 6-speed 6F55-automatic |
Dimensions | |
Wheelbase | 112.9 in (2,868 mm) |
Length | 202.9 in (5,154 mm) |
Width | 76.2 in (1,935 mm) |
Height | 60.7 in (1,542 mm) |
Curb weight | 4,388 lb (1,990 kg) |
A month after the introduction of the sixth generation Taurus, Ford preented a returning Taurus SHO at the 2009 Chicago Auto Show.[4]
After skipping two Ford Taurus generations, the resurrected sport sedan went on sale in the summer of 2009 as a 2010 model. In a first for the SHO nameplate, permanent torque vectoring all-wheel drive was standard. The power-plant was a 3.5L direct-injected Twin-turbo EcoBoost V6, which utilized a pair of Garrett GT1549L turbochargers and produced 365 hp (272 kW) at 5500 rpm and 350 lb⋅ft (475 N⋅m) of torque at 1500-5250 rpm.[23] [24] This engine was mated to Ford's 6F55 [25] six-speed SelectShift automatic transmission with a paddle or console activated manual mode.
The fourth generation SHO came with Ford's new SR1 suspension setup with MacPherson front struts and a multi-link design in the rear. This included SHO-specific shock absorbers, springs, stabilizer bars and strut mount bushings. An optional Performance Package offered better brake pads, recalibrated steering, a "Sport Mode" for the stability control, additional cooling capacity by way of an engine oil cooler, transmission cooler, and PTU cooler; a shorter 3.16 to 1 final drive ratio, summer tires, spare tire delete, mobility kit (tire inflator with sealant), and an Alcantara wrapped steering wheel. Adaptive cruise control was not available with the Performance Package. Notably, many of the features found on the Performance Package (including the power-train) were shared with the EcoBoost version of the 2013-2019 Ford Police Interceptor Sedan.
A 2012 SHO was featured in the film Men in Black 3 as the MIB's official car.[26]
Visually, the differences from the regular Taurus were subtle. The 2010-2012 models were even more subtle, sporting a 3-bar chrome wide-toothed grill, SHO C-Pillar logo and 5-spoked wheels. The 2013-2019 model employed a black grille with small honeycomb-shaped/mesh-like look, 19" or optional 20" "flower" design wheels with other 20" designs in later years, and SHO fender badges. They all had a SHO-specific decklid spoiler, dual polished stainless steel exhaust tips, new parking lamp bezels, and a SHO EcoBoost rear logo.[27][28]
While the 4th generation SHO remained largely unchanged after 2013, 2017 brought a few light updates to the SHO. Ford SYNC 3, which featured both Apple CarPlay and Android Auto was made standard on all SHO's. A revised Sony audio system featuring ClearPhase and Live Acoustics technology was introduced as standard equipment as well. Additionally, two new 20 inch wheel choices were made available. [29] The final update to the SHO was the deletion of the power rear sunshade for the 2019 model year. The 4th generation Taurus SHO ended production along with the rest of the Taurus line on March 1, 2019.
Gear | Ratio |
---|---|
1st | 4.484 |
2nd | 2.872 |
3rd | 1.842 |
4th | 1.414 |
5th | 1.000 |
6th | 0.742 |
Reverse | 2.88 |
Final | 2.77, 3.16 (PP) |
Awards
[edit]The 2010 Taurus SHO was named Car of the Year by Esquire magazine.[30]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b "Birth of the Ford Taurus SHO". Official SHO Shop.
- ^ a b "Taurus/Sable Encyclopedia (SHO numbers)". Taurus Car Club of America. Archived from the original on 2008-04-11. Retrieved 2008-04-04.
- ^ "Ford Taurus SHO | Birth of the Ford Taurus SHO". Shoshop.com. Retrieved 2011-01-31.
- ^ a b Paukert, Chris (11 Feb 2009). "Chicago 2009: SHO Starter - Ford Taurus SHO kicks off Chicago". AutoBlog.
- ^ "SHO n Tell". Jon Mikelonis and Matt Wilder. Archived from the original on 2011-04-26. Retrieved 2008-04-04.
- ^ Ford Motor Company (2007-07-19). 1989 Ford Taurus SHO commercial. Ford Motor Company.
- ^ McTaggart, Bryan (25 Nov 2014). "A Stalled Experiment: The Ford GN34 Program". BangShift.com.
- ^ "Super High-Output Heritage: New Taurus SHO Revives Performance Model From 1989-1999". Media.Ford.com. February 11, 2009. Archived from the original on 2009-03-19. Retrieved 2009-04-01.
- ^ Burry, Jeff (10 Jul 2008). "Modern Classics: Ford Taurus SHO, 1989 – 1999". Trader Corporation. Autos.CA.
- ^ "The SHO PLUS Option". SHO Club. Archived from the original on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2009-03-24.
- ^ a b "Generation 2 Spotters Guide". Taurus Car Club of America. 2006-12-18. Archived from the original on 2006-11-19. Retrieved 2007-02-13.
- ^ "1990–1995 Ford Taurus Review". Consumer Guide. Archived from the original on 2007-03-28. Retrieved 2007-02-13.
- ^ a b c Phillips, John. "The Billy Wagon. Strong as hog's breath, our one-of-a-kind family hauler amazed little leaguers. Sorry, you can't have one". Car and Driver (April 1993): 36–41.
- ^ "Is there an SHO Station Wagon?". SHOtimes. 2002-07-21. Archived from the original on 2005-03-07.
- ^ "1996 Ford Taurus - Motor Trend Magazine". Motor Trend. 1995-02-02. Retrieved 2019-12-18.
- ^ "Specifications, History, and Other Stuff".
- ^ DiPetro, John (2003-04-18). "Inside Line: Ford Taurus/Mercury Sable". Edmunds. Archived from the original on 2006-06-15. Retrieved 2006-05-29.
- ^ a b "What We Know, What Ford Does Not Want You to Know, & Who Is To Blame". V6SHO.com. Retrieved January 26, 2006.
- ^ "Cam Failure Links". V6SHO.com. Retrieved October 5, 2011.
- ^ "Active Suspension Theories". Retrieved 2019-12-18.
- ^ "2009 Order Cutoff - 2010 Startup" (PDF). ARI. June 29, 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 16, 2009. Retrieved 2009-07-06.
- ^ Rexinger, Austin (March 4, 2019). "Say Goodbye To The Ford Taurus". Ford Authority. Motrolix LLC. Retrieved March 10, 2019.
- ^ "Ford Media". Archived from the original on 2011-09-13. Retrieved 2011-01-31.
- ^ "Ford 3.5L EcoBoost Engine Info, Power, Specs, Wiki". Retrieved 28 March 2023.
- ^ "Ford Media EcoBoost 6F55" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-08-12. Retrieved 2011-01-31.
- ^ Elmer, Stephen (2012-05-23). "Men in Black 3 Stars Ford Taurus SHO". AutoGuide.com. Retrieved 2012-05-24.
- ^ Ben Wojdyla (2009-02-11). "2010 Ford Taurus SHO: The Sleeper Awakens!". Jalopnik. Retrieved 2009-02-11.
- ^ "2010 Ford Taurus SHO Announced". Automoblog.net. February 20, 2009.
- ^ Past Models. 2017 Taurus Ford Media
- ^ "2010 Ford Taurus SHO named Esquire Car of the Year". Autoblog. June 10, 2009.