The year is 1977. Jimmy Carter replaces Gerald Ford to become the 39th President of the United States and creates the United States Department of Energy. Apple Computer is incorporated, and the Commodore PET, the world's first personal computer, is sold. NASA's first space shuttle is christened Enterprise and performs its initial test flight.
Music lovers welcome Fleetwood Mac's latest release, the Grammy-winning album
Rumours. The Supremes, Elvis Presley and Led Zeppelin play their final concerts, and, later in the year, Elvis leaves the building for good. The top grossing movie?
Star Wars. On television, Fonzie rather famously jumps the shark.
In the world of automobiles,
Porsche introduces the front-engine 928 and Burt Reynolds turns the black and gold
Pontiac Trans-Am into an object of desire. And, finally, the
Ford F-Series earns its status as the best-selling vehicle line in America. Clearly, a lot has changed since 1977... except, of course, for the Blue Oval, which can still boast that its full-size pickup truck is the number one nameplate in the United States.
Ford has no intention of passing that particular baton to anyone else, and in order to maintain this impressive bit of marketing gold for a 34th straight year, the Dearborn-based automaker is putting four brand-new engines, including a 3.5-liter turbocharged EcoBoost V6, in the engine bay of its F-150. The automaker says 2011 marks "the most significant powertrain upgrade in 62 years of the F-Series." We, of course, had to verify that claim for ourselves.
Links:Autoblog
http://www.autoblog.com/2010/09/27/2...iew-road-test/
M/T
http://www.motortrend.com/roadtests/...ive/index.html
Pick-up Trucks
http://news.pickuptrucks.com/2010/09...-6-part-1.html