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2004 ford focus
2004 ford focus













2004 ford focus

2004 ford focus

It seems inevitable: What began as a fringy, outlaw car hobby - born in teenage status anxiety and bred in thousands of garages stinking of smoked pistons - will go mainstream as part of an increasingly sophisticated array of dealer options. Brembo brakes? Check - and all conveniently installed and financed as part of the car’s purchase price. This I predict: Very soon, car buyers will be able to choose from a punch-list of factory-approved tuner parts available through your local dealer - HKS exhaust system? Check. It’s because the aftermarket is heading your way. You may ask why anyone beyond a hormone-sotted teenager should care. Such monstrosities often detonate in festive clouds of carbon-fiber shrapnel. This is a key difference between hot rodding and tuning: Most tuning is not D.I.Y., but D.I.F.M., “do it for me.” Bad things happen when inexperienced hobbyists stuff leaf-blower turbochargers, lumpy cams and Taiwanese electronic control modules under the hood. The limiting factor to all this rampant prosperity is that relatively few people have the tools or know-how to properly modify modern cars. The sport-compact aftermarket is now worth more than $3.2-billion a year. Others are purely creatures of the tuner phenomenon, like Greddy, APC and Wings West. Some evolved out of racing, such as CompTech and NOS. Some aftermarket companies are familiar, blue-chip firms like AP Racing, Eibach, Neuspeed and Momo. Likewise, current issues of Sport Compact Car magazine - what Guns and Ammo is to the rifle-in-the-tower set - are crowded with ads shilling everything from screaming “Stage III” turbochargers to carbon-fiber rear spoilers the size of blackjack tables. By the late 1960s, hot rodders could draw from a pornocopia of high-performance goods found in the back pages of Hot Rod magazine or Hemmings Motor News brands like Edlebrock, Hurst, Holley, Rochester and Flowmaster have become bits of gear-head Americana. Both began as eyeball engineering, where if something looked fast, then it was fast.Īnd both movements quickly aroused vast, highly specialized industries to support them. Both were grass-roots, anarchic, existentially D.I.Y. In this respect, sport-compact tuning materialized out of the same ether as hot rodding in the 1940s and ’50s. High school auto shop classes became crowded with kids laying up their own fiberglass air dams, welding megaphonic extensions to tailpipes and taking cutting torches to springs. Kids wanting to invest these grotty hand-me-downs with some style and performance had to rely on their ingenuity, for the most part. These cars, while exceptionally sound mechanically, were about as sexy as corrective headgear.

#2004 FORD FOCUS DRIVERS#

Sport compact “tuner” car culture – a la “The Fast and the Furious” – emerged in the mid-’90s when a generation of new drivers began fixing up their beloved first cars, mostly used Honda Civics, Preludes and Accords. Ford and others are making a furious push into the sport accessories market.















2004 ford focus