Ontario Community Newspapers

Oakville Beaver, 22 Jun 1994, p. 28

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Festival â€" Wednesday, June 22, 1994 Funny how the quietest minivan in its class is making so much noise with automotive experts. Ford is evidently on the right track. When you mention the Windstar in Highland Park, Chrysler employees develop facial ticks. John Phillips, Car and Driver The result is the 1995 Ford Windstar, which combines a surprisingly smooth and quiet ride with an array of thoughtful extras that make Chrysler‘s vans seem unrefined by comparison. Joann Muller, Detroit Free Press Windstar makes its best case on the road, cruising at complete ease at 130 km/h, reassuring in its roadâ€"holding, more comfortable than many sedans over bumpy pavement. Dan Proudfoot, The Toronto Sun Windstar is more than eight inches longer than the extended MagicWagons making it easily the Kareem Abdulâ€"Jabbar of the minivan set...And the Windstar blows the Chrysler out of the water in fuel economy. Joe Duarte, World of Wheels Magazine The car feels solid and surprisingly surefooted on the twisty bits...Windstar held the road well in tougher.cornering than most minivan owners will attempt..:a stateâ€"ofâ€"theâ€"art© ,’ vehicle that can go head to head with the best in the business. it‘s clear that the Blue Oval gunners have scored a bull‘sâ€"eye. Mac DeMere, Motor Trend ‘ It is a striking, beautifully executed vehicle... Performance is exactly as promised: strong, smooth, quiet. Jim Kenzie, Automotive Journalist For more information, please call 1â€"800â€"561â€"FORD. Doug Sweet, The Montreal Gazette Quality is Job 1.

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