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RR93LWB

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Of the many Fusions we've read about going to dealers and new owners, they all go by rail from Hermosillo MX up through AZ and then to the proper railhead to get into a truck. For the DC/Baltimore area it's Jessup MD and for the Richmond area it's Petersburg VA -- if your salesman says the car is coming by boat into Baltimore, I can't say that definitely is not the case but would be the first I've heard of such a thing.

 

If the salesman was inaccurate on that assessment, I would have to wonder if he/she is also inaccurate on that being the ONLY candidate VIN within 700 miles -- could be, but there are a lot of Fusions on lots and an awful lot of dealers within a 700 mile radius of DC.

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Within whatever Ford database this dealer accessed, there were 5 Fusion Hybrid Titaniums with heated/cooled seats in Ingot silver. 4 with black interior. 1 with medium soft ceramic. One of the 5 was fully loaded, so it was out. (I remember Cincinnati being one city, so maybe it was less than 700 radius: 500?) Of those cars, only the one in transport and the fully loaded were listed as available/not sold. I sat and looked at the screen with them. I'm pretty sure it's a Ford Company database of some sort. I don't know how the dealer swap stuff works for sure. I don't know whether certain dealers have relationships with certain out of state dealerships or if it's wide open so long as it's a Ford dealer in a specific radius. I've been in contact with 5 dealers total and none have an Ingot silver Titanium with heated/cooled seats on the lot, but they all "can find it or order it".

 

Yes they can do a wide search within what radius they want, my salesman from my order in 2012 showed me that, so if it's out there they can find it and if it's in a reasonable distance they can get it.

 

My Dad has been one of those old retired guys that drives dealer swaps, has been doing it for 15 years - basically if a vehicle is not already spoken for, they do all they can to trade with one another in order to make a sale - the horse trading comes in when dealer 1 will call dealer 2 and say "you have a Fusion with VIN 12345 and I have someone that wants it" and dealer 2 then says "OK well what can you send me? I have a lot of interest in Escapes but only 2 on hand and you say you have 12 then send me one" and it's kinda like the old days with baseball cards that helps the other guy round out his inventory etc. So it definitely can be done, and maybe some dealers are willing to trade within a 100 mile radius and some within a 300 mile radius (out of the few hundred DX runs my Dad has made I think the farthest was 300 miles, most are 50-150 miles) - the downside with doing a long-distance DX is that one customer may be happy to get the car they want, but then the unclaimed swap car now has several hundred miles on it and that can be a turn-off from later prospective buyers due to the miles on it (many people get picky on that), so it's wise to not go crazy on distance.

 

If you know you definitely MUST have options A and B and definitely do NOT want to pay for options Y and Z, probably best to place a retail order (probably good to shop around between dealers that will offer the best price there too) and wait for it to come in, as you'll then have several years driving exactly what you wanted.

 

But I wouldn't order from the guy that insists that they come via ship from Baltimore.

Edited by jeff_h

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I just did some searching about Baltimore's Auto shipping ports and the arcticles I have been reading do state that Ford ships vehicles from Veracruz to Baltimore.

 

 

Höegh currently exports from Veracruz to Jacksonville and Baltimore as legs on a loop that go to Europe and the Middle East. Its largest customers are Nissan, Ford, and Volkswagen.

 

“We ship from Mexico to the US twice monthly, and recently increased our sailings, while we are also replacing this route with bigger vessels,” says Höegh’s Lovdal. “Within 12 to 18 months, we should experience faster growth.”

 

Rick Powers says a lack of rail capacity has increased some flows from Mexico into east coast ports, such as Baltimore. “From Veracruz, we receive vehicles for GM, Nissan, and Ford every two to three weeks, and irregularly as well,” says Powers. “We predict a steady flow this year, while next year there may be a big increase.”

 

The lack of rail capacity makes sense as to why the shipping occurs. Just the sheer volume of vehicles one could put into a auto container ship would be amazing.

 

Very interesting read that makes sense from a business end. Here is one of the articles.

 

http://www.automotivelogisticsmagazine.com/data/riding-the-waves

 

.

Edited by jeffo65

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I just did some searching about Baltimore's Auto shipping ports and the arcticles I have been reading do state that Ford ships vehicles from Veracruz to Baltimore.

 

Looking at the geography, I would think this more feasible for Ford Fiestas, which are assembled in Cuautitlan MX (marked 'A' below) and not too far from Veracruz (marked 'B' below) - but Hermosillo is way up north (circled) and probably not feasible to send them way south to get on a boat... maybe the salesman was thinking about shipments of Fiestas?

Mexican_Assembly_zps55f2a73b.jpg

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You won't get the best price on a dealer transfer car. The dealers swap the cars at invoice price and then they either have someone drive a car to go get the one you want or they have the cars shipped. Somebody has to pay for that, and it's going to be the buyer.

 

Your best bet is to find a car within a distance that you are willing to drive that has what you want and maybe a bit more and then go to that actual dealer and negotiate the best deal for that car. Here in the Boston area, most Hybrid SEs are selling for right at invoice minus $1500 in rebates. You may be able to get below invoice with no trade or work a better deal on the trade value but these cars are selling pretty well without the same discounting you see on the regular gas models.

 

With the '15s starting production soon, 2014 inventory with desirable options is getting scarce. You'll either pay more for an ordered 2015 or make do with what you can find among the 2014s.

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