HYBRID & ELECTRIC

AT COLTON MOTORS

Hybrid & Electric Ford

By electrifying our entire range of vehicles, we’re not just imagining what tomorrow will look like. We’re already building it.

If you’re considering making the switch to an electrified vehicle, then it’s important you understand the differences between them.

View the information below on Mild Hybrid, Hybrid, Plug-in Hybrid and All-Electric Vehicles.

New Ford Focus

Ford Focus

Mild Hybrid

Ford Puma

Ford Puma

Mild Hybrid

Ford Kuga

Ford Kuga

Plug-In Hybrid

Ford Transit Custom

Transit Custom

Plug-In Hybrid

Ford Ranger

Ford Ranger

Plug-In Hybrid

Ford Transit Connect

Transit Connect

Plug-In Hybrid

Ford Explorer

Explorer

Electric

Ford Capri

Capri

Electric

Ford E Transit

E-Transit

Electric

Ford Puma Gen-E

Puma Gen-e

Electric

EV Guide

HYBRID (HEV)

A seamless blend of conventional and electric power. Hybrid vehicles have two sources of power. They can automatically switch between conventional mode, pure electric mode (for short distances)or use both to power the vehicle as needed.

MILD HYBRID (MHEV)

A small-electric motor that helps improve efficiency. Mild Hybrid vehicles have two sources of power that work together – a conventional engine and a battery -driven electric motor. The electric motor does not power the car. It simply assists it.

PLUG-IN HYBRID (PHEV)

Plug In. Charge up. Improve Efficiency. Plug-in Hybrids have the two sources of power like a Hybrid, but with a larger high voltage battery, enabling you to drive longer distances on All-Electric power.

ALL-ELECTRIC (BEV)

100% Electric. Just charge it up and go. All-Electric cars are powered by electricity alone. This means they have to be charged before you can drive.

Simplifying your switch to electric

Owning a Plug-in Hybrid

Different EV modes explained