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1995 Ford Taurus Review (continued)
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Ford's best-selling Taurus front-drive intermediate family of vehicles includes the country's best-selling station wagon. The Ford midsize wagon shape has changed little since 1985, when the current body shell was introduced. After 10 years, it still looks great, a testament to its then-radical design.

There's a GL version for starters, with no lower body cladding and a more basic interior, offering a standard 140 hp 3.0-liter V6 and a 4-speed electronic automatic overdrive transaxle.

The LX package includes color-keyed lower body cladding, cast aluminum wheels, console and floor shifter, the light group, a cargo area net, cloth seats, and cloth and vinyl trim.

All Tauruses come with dual airbags, air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, electric rear defroster and tilt wheel as standard, but the LX is a considerable upgrade for the money. Both wagons come with standard roof racks, and both are available with extra-cost anti-lock brakes (ABS).

Little has changed on the 1995 Taurus LX Wagon from last year's offering. The 3.0-liter base V6 engine gets a number of durability upgrades, and Ford claims that the suspension has been retuned end-to-end for a smoother ride.

Solar-tint glass in the front and rear has been made standard in all models. And for the first time, taillamp assemblies are made of recyclable plastic.

The 3.0-liter base engine and the 3.8-liter optional V6, with a balance shaft for smoother running, are both rated, oddly enough, at 140 hp, but the 3.8 is rated at 3800 rpm and the 3.0 at 4800 rpm. The 3.0 makes 165 pound-feet of torque at 3250, but the 3.8 makes a much heftier 215 lb.-ft. at only 2200 rpm, and is the clear choice for heavy hauling.

Interior Features

When these cars were revamped inside and out in 1992, they weren't given enough credit for change - and the most change took place on the inside.

Our LX Wagon had a rich and interesting environment, with lots of nice detailing around a very well-done basic set of analog instruments, triple rotary controls for climate and the annoying small-button Ford radios. An AM/FM stereo is standard, and it even comes with handy remote controls for volume and station on the dash.

The new-in-'92 instrument panel received dual airbags as standard last year, along with CFC-free air conditioning. The panel is very easy to use and see, with more attention to graining and texture than most intermediate cars' instrument panels.

The Taurus' seats are somewhat spare but proved to be long-term comfortable, and the flip-up tailgate with separate flip-up glass is a model of good design. There were cupholders and storage nooks all over our LX Wagon - in the doors, the console and in the rear.

All of the interior materials of our tester seemed first-rate, and components were well-made and installed with a minimum of visible mechanical stuff or bare metal.

The Taurus Wagon is flexible, too. You can get seating for five, six, seven or eight people, and the third seat can face either forward or rearward, depending on the seating options you choose.

Ford designers didn't forget they were creating a station wagon. We enjoyed adequate hip- and legroom with six adults, and we had a generous amount of cargo area behind the rear seat, to boot.


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