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The Ranchero was a hit with both the automotive press and the buying public, filling an untapped market niche for vehicles with the utility of a light pickup and the ease of operation and riding characteristics of a car. In fact, the Ranchero had a marginally higher cargo capacity by about 50 lb (23 kg) than the half-ton F-Series pickup. Both ...
It was the most expensive vehicle offered by Ford. The 1958 Skyliner sold for $3,163 ($33,403 in 2023 dollars [10]) while the standard convertible sold for $2,650 ($27,985 in 2023 dollars [10]) and the sedan went for $2,055 ($21,702 in 2023 dollars [10]). A total of 14,713 units were produced in 1958. Ford Fairlane 500 Skyliner weighed 4,609 ...
The two-door hardtop and convertible were dropped, while the station wagon and Ranchero were moved to a larger platform shared with the contemporary Fairlane. The Ranchero left the Falcon line and adopted the Fairlane's front sheet metal for 1967. The 1966 Falcon was used in the Trans-Am series. The 1967 models were mostly the same as the 1966 ...
Ford Ranchero Ford Del Rio Mercury Commuter: ... 1958 89,474 1959 123,412 Fourth-generation Country Sedan production (6- and 9 passenger combined) [4] Year
Four months after her husband died in a Craigslist purchase gone bad, a young widow is speaking out for change in the community, FOX59 reports. Before Jim Vester's death in December, violence was ...
Ford Ranchero The Ford Durango is a two-passenger coupe utility sold in limited production by Ford Motor Company [ 1 ] between the 1979 and 1982 model years. [ citation needed ] The vehicle was the result of a joint venture between Ford and National Coach Works, located in Los Angeles, California .
The impetus for the creation of the Del Rio was Ford's desire to remain in the two-door sport wagon market started by the Chevrolet Nomad and Pontiac Safari and the decision to discontinue the company's original attempt at a sport wagon, the premium Parklane, which failed to entice buyers during 1956, its only year in production.
Edmunds.com ranked the 1958 Edsel as the 7th worst car of all time. [22] However, in the book Automotive Atrocities! The Cars We Love to Hate , author Eric Peters declined to include the Edsel and defended it, saying, "People made fun of the Edsel – Ford's $400 million mistake – but its resemblance to a chrome-splattered bus station urinal ...