The Ford Motor Company Rawsonville plant is an automobile parts manufacturing facility located in Ypsilanti, Michigan USA.
The plant currently ranks among Ford Motor’s oldest manufacturing locations, dating its operations back to the Great Depression. Back then, it was known as the Ford Ypsilanti plant, and provided electrical systems, alternators, starter motors, starter switches, transmissions and other crucial components for the assembly of various Ford and Lincoln vehicles. As a matter of fact, fifteen percent of the facility’s operations were focused on rebuilding automotive generators and starters.
Operating as the Ford Motor Company Rawsonville plant since 1956, the complex currently assembles transmission oil pumps and battery packs for hybrid and plug-in hybrid vehicles like the Ford Explorer, Ford Escape, Lincoln Aviator and Lincoln Corsair.
The Rawsonville plant manufacturers other essential automotive components like air induction systems, ignition coils, carbon canisters, air/fuel spacers and fuel pumps, as well as kitted transmission components for the Van Dyke Transmission Plant, and sequencing of purchased parts for the Ford Motor Compnay Dearborn Truck Plant.
Year opened | 1956 (operated under a different name since the early 1930's) |
Facility size | 1,700,000 square feet (157,935 m2) |
Land occupied | 94 acres |
Location | 10300 Textile Road, Ypsilanti, Michigan 48198, United States |
Hourly employees | 600 |
Salaried employees | 80 |
Total employees | 680 |
Engines | Production Years |
---|---|
Integrated air/fuel modules | 2005 - present |
Alternators | 2005 - present |
Air induction systems | 2005 - present |
Starters | 2005 - present |
Fuel pumps | 2005 - present |
Carbon canisters | 2005 - present |
PHEV/FHEV battery packs | 2005 - present |
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