Some years ago, Ford Motor Company and General Motors struck a deal to split costs and share engineering on a pair of fuel-efficient new automatic transmissions. One of those transmissions is a ten-speed automatic for longitudinal (RWD-based) vehicles like the ​​Ford Mustang​​ and ​​Chevrolet Camaro​​, which has already found its way into a fairly wide range of Blue Oval products. Ford took the engineering lead on that transmission. The other is a GM-developed nine-speed intended for transverse (FWD-based) vehicles, which debuted in the 2017 Chevrolet Malibu Turbo before making its way into several other GM products.

But Ford has yet to use the nine-speed automatic transmission, despite having just revealed freshened-up versions of the Edge and ​​Transit Connect​​. The reason? According to a recent article published ​​by Automotive News​​, Ford didn’t see enough extra efficiency from the new transmission’s ninth gear to justify the extra cost and weight. Ford has instead come up with a pair of eight-speed automatics to serve in the GM transmission’s place.

Granted, one of those transmissions is based on GM’s nine-speed, with one forward drive ratio simply eliminated. The other, made for somewhat higher-performance vehicles like the new ​​Ford Edge ST​​, is based on a six-speed developed as part of a 2002 Ford/GM partnership. Reportedly, a third eight-speed for lower-torque vehicles is in the pipeline.

According to AN, Ford made the decision not to use the GM-developed nine-speed transverse automatic as-is before GM ever put the transmission in a vehicle. When GM eventually did press the new gearbox into service, there was little to no efficiency gain over GM’s eight-speed. AN points out that the 2017 Chevrolet Malibu gained just 1 mpg on the highway over the previous car with the eight-speed, while the Buick Envision actually lost 1 mpg highway when it traded in its six-speed for the nine for 2019.