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Wow I had no idea they've been doing it that long!2003
2003.03 or 04.
It was done, in an effort to lower the stance and give more interior space.
They were 'marketing' the Expedition, as an alternative to a mini van. They wanted short women buyers to get in it, easier.
The sales have dropped, from that point on.
The Independent rear end should handle better, but can't tow as much.
It has CV joints, that when the fail are not cheap to fix. The IRS allows for more alignment adjustments.
Ford HAS admitted, it marketed the new Expedition to Women buyers and Men to the F150). Ford thinks guys only want pickups and there wrong. You have to be blind to see its become more SUV, than truck. The 2003 didn't have a 'new' chassis. It was the same body on frame design and not 70% 'stiffer'. That is is just ridiculous. Its the same vehicle, with slight cosmetic changes. 1999-2002 were peak Expedition sales and the same body style. Appx 200,000 vs 40,000 in later year models(a huge change). The more third row room theory, is a joke. Just about every Expedition owner ditched the 3rd row. The 4 CV shaft boots are rubber and if they tear or rip, must be replaced. It is just more thing to worry about breaking. Every heavy duty truck uses a straight axle, not IRS. Your facts are fake news.2003.
Handling. Side benefit was more 3rd row headroom & to accommodate a segment first 3rd row seat that folded flat into the floor.
What do you mean by lowered stance? Ground clearance was up over an inch, 2nd gen compared to 1st. Closer to an inch and a half.
I don't recall any Expedition marketing targeting any minivan. Ford barely marketed the Windstar or the Freestar and had no trouble selling them at the time. In fact, Ford sold 233K 1997 Expeditions and 205K 1997 Windstars.
You either hate women or marketing, because you repeatedly gripe that Ford also marketed the 2018 Expedition to women.
2000 sales were down from 1999.
2001 sales were down from 2000.
2002 sales were down from 2001.
Seeing a trend here? Ford certainly did, thus the next generation.
The redesigned 2003 outsold both the 2002 and 2001.
Should? The new chassis was 70% stiffer (because evidently thats what short women were after) and frankly maximum tow ratings actually increased with the 2003. Besides, we all know women don't tow, so who cares?
I'm trying to think back to the last failed CV joint thread and don't recall many.