Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The eleventh generation Ford Thunderbird is a front-V8, rear-drive, two passenger convertible with an optional removable-hardtop, manufactured and marketed for model years 2001-2005 by Ford Motor Company, having debuted at the 1999 North American International Auto Show.
The Ford Thunderbird is a personal luxury car manufactured and marketed by Ford Motor Company for model years 1955 to 2005, with a hiatus from 1998–2001.. Ultimately gaining a broadly used colloquial nickname, the T-Bird, Ford Introduced the model as a two-seat convertible, subsequently offering it variously in a host of body styles including as a four-seat hardtop coupe, four-seat ...
Yes, '05 was the last 'Bird. Sometimes old names come back, but I wouldn't expect to see a new T-Bird. The last generation was very unsuccessful, and Ford has too many financial troubles to risk another one anytime soon. RivGuySC 02:08, 30 May 2008 (UTC) Talk at the time was that Ford priced the revived T-Bird at too high a level.
Eli Manning is a public menace, at least to a small group of "Manningcast" viewers. A certain hand gesture by the former New York Giants quarterback a month ago led to three complaints being filed ...
On the television program MotorWeek in a review of the 1991 Thunderbird and similar Mercury Cougar, a road test of a V8-equipped Thunderbird revealed that the car could accelerate from 0 to 60 mph in 9.2 seconds; approximately two seconds faster than a standard V6 Thunderbird but about two seconds slower than a Super Coupe. [9]
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
The ninth generation of the Ford Thunderbird is a personal luxury coupe that was manufactured and marketed by Ford for the 1983 to 1988 model years. In response to the sales downturn of the 1980–1982 Thunderbird, the model line underwent one of its most substantial redesigns for the 1983 model year.
Ford restyled this generation of the Thunderbird in favor of a more squared-off, "formal" look. The only remnant of the Thunderbird's former sporty image was that the standard 390-cubic-inch 300 hp (224 kW) V8 engine needed nearly 11 seconds to push the heavy T-bird to 60 mph (97 km/h). The softly sprung suspension allowed considerable body ...