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Ford Duratorq engine Duratorq is the marketing name of a range of Ford diesel engines first introduced in 2000 for the Ford Mondeo range of cars. The first design, codenamed "Puma" during its development replaced the older Endura unit which had been around since 1984.
Ford E-Series The Ford E-Series, formerly named and also known as the Econoline or "Club Wagon", is a line of full-size vans (both cargo and passenger) and truck chassis from the Ford Motor Company. The E-Series is related to the Ford F-Series line of pickup trucks.
Ford Elite The Ford Elite was an automobile produced by the Ford Motor Company for the North American market for the 1974-1976 model years. The Elite was based on the Ford Torino, and was a two-door coupe intended to be, in the words of Ford's advertising, a "mid-size car in the Thunderbird tradition"—a more affordable personal luxury car than the Thunderbird, intended to compete with such cars as the Chevrolet Monte Carlo and the Chrysler Cordoba.
Ford Erika Platform Erika is the name given to the platform used by Ford for its small family cars in the early 1980s. It was first introduced in 1980 for the European Escort Mk 3, and also spawned the Ford CE14 platform which formed the basis of the first generation American Escorts.
Ford Escape The Ford Escape (designated U204) is a compact crossover SUV sold by the automaker Ford Motor Company since 2001 and priced below the Ford Explorer. It is also Ford's first crossover SUV, and many companies introduced their first crossover SUVs that time, with Pontiac offering the Aztek and Hyundai offering the Santa Fe.
Ford Escape Hybrid The Ford Escape Hybrid, launched in 2004, is a gas-electric hybrid powered version of the Ford Escape sport utility vehicle developed by the Ford Motor Company. Built in Kansas City, Missouri, it is the first hybrid SUV to hit the market.
Ford Escort The Ford Escort was a compact car manufactured by the Ford Motor Company from 1967 through 2003. Although it was originally a European model, the Escort badge has been applied to several different designs in North America over the years.
Ford Escort (European) The Ford Escort was a small family car manufactured by the Ford Motor Company from 1967 through 2003. Although it was originally a European model, the Escort badge has been applied to several different designs in North America over the years.
Ford Escort (North American) The Ford Escort was a compact car manufactured by the Ford Motor Company. The North American Escort adopted both the badge and the general design of a redesigned European model, and the name has been applied to several different designs in North America since its introduction as Ford's first success
Ford Escort rally championship The Ford Escort Rally championship was run by the Ford Motor Company in 1978 to find new rally drivers. Cars were all identical Ford Escort sport models & the championship was run over the BTRDA stage rally championship, Competition was very fierce with the lure of a works Ford drive to the winner.
Ford Essex V6 engine (UK) The Ford Essex V6 engine was a 60° V6 engine built between 1967 and 1988 by the Ford Motor Company in the United Kingdom at their engine plant in Essex, hence the name. It was produced in two main capacities, 2.
Ford Estate Ford Estate is a suburb in Sunderland. The suburb is divided into two areas: High Ford borders the run-down estate of Pennywell and like its neighbour, has many of its houses boarded up, ready for redevelopment or reconstruction.
Ford Explorer The Ford Explorer is a mid-size sport utility vehicle sold mostly in North America and built by the Ford Motor Company since 1990. It is still in production as of 2006, and is manufactured in Louisville, Kentucky (it was also assembled in Hazelwood, Missouri until the plant closed on March 10, 2006).
Ford Explorer Sport Trac The Ford Explorer Sport Trac is a mid-size sport utility vehicle with a pickup truck bed sold mostly in North America. The Sport Trac is based on the Ford Explorer SUV and has been built by the Ford Motor Company since 2001.
Ford F-250 Super Chief The Ford F-250 Super Chief (often known as just the Ford Super Chief) was a concept car that was created by the Ford Motor Company. The Super Chief was first introduced at the 2006 North American International Auto Show.
Ford F-650 Though initially called the F-600, The Ford F-650 is a commercial truck offered by Ford. Though it is made mainly for use as a utilitarian truck for towing, heavy hauling, use in construction and it is offered at Ford's official site under commercial vehicles, aftermarket has made the F-650 into a premium truck similar to the International CXT.
Ford Fairlane (Australian) The Ford Fairlane is a large, luxury automobile model manufactured by Ford Australia from 1960 to the present day, with only a brief absence in the mid-1960s. The name was taken from Henry Ford's estate, Fair Lane, near Dearborn, Michigan.
Ford Falcon (Argentina) The Ford Falcon, Argentina model, a fullsize car built by Ford Motor Company that resembled the 1960s North American Falcons, were built until the early 1990s. Green Falcons became infamous due to their use by death squads during the military dictatorship of the 1970s and early 1980s.
Ford Festiva The Ford Festiva was a subcompact car sold by the Ford Motor Company in North America, Asia and Australasia, introduced in 1986 in Japan. The car was manufactured by Kia in South Korea, which at the time was part-owned by Ford, and was derived from the Kia Pride, while Japanese, New Zealand and Australian models were manufactured by Mazda in Japan and derived from the Mazda 121, which was the car the Pride was derived from.
Ford FE engine The Ford FE engine was a Ford V8 engine used in vehicles sold in the North American market between 1958 and 1976. It was intended to fill the need for a medium-range displacement engine in Ford's lineup of available V8's.
Ford Fiesta The Ford Fiesta is a mid-class supermini car designed by the Ford Motor Company in Europe, and also manufactured in Brazil, Mexico, Venezuela, China, India and South Africa. It is now marketed worldwide, including Japan and Australasia, but was only sold briefly in North America.
Ford Five Hundred The Ford Five Hundred (code name D258) is a full-size sedan produced by the Ford Motor Company, succeeding the Ford Taurus. In North America, the name may evoke memories of the Fairlane 500 and Galaxie 500 models of the 1950s through 1970s.
Ford Flathead engine The Flathead was the first Ford Motor Company V8 engine, other than the V8 that Lincoln was producing and had been producing since before Ford bought Lincoln, and ranks as one of the company's most important developments. Before the 1932 introduction of this engine (and the accompanying Ford V-8 automobile), almost all production cars aimed at the average consumer used straight-4 and straight-6 engines.
Ford FN platform The Ford FN-10, or "Full-Sized North American Project #10", was a vehicle platform used to build the 1993-1998 Lincoln Mark VIII Series motor vehicles. The FN-10 platform was used to build the Mark VIII series from 1993 until the platform's demise in 1998.
Ford FN10 platform FN10 is the designation for an automobile platform formerly used by the Ford Motor Company in the 1993 to 1998 Lincoln Mark VIII luxury car. The FN10 platform is similar to that of the MN12 platform used in the 1989 to 1997 Ford Thunderbird and Mercury Cougar, but had its roots in a 1980s project code named "Saturn".
Ford Focus (North America) The Ford Focus is a compact/small family car made by the Ford Motor Company and sold in most Ford markets worldwide. It was launched in 2000 in North America to supplant the Ford Escort and Ford Contour as Ford's compact car.
Ford Focus C-MAX The Ford Focus C-MAX is a compact MPV designed by Ford for the European market and built since 2003. It was the first to use the Ford C1 platform, also used by the Mk II Ford Focus, which was introduced a year later, and the compact MPV Premacy/Mazda5.
Ford Foundation The Ford Foundation is a charitable foundation based in New York City created to fund programs that promote democracy, reduce poverty, promote international understanding, and advance human achievement. The current president is Susan V.
Ford Fox platform The Ford Fox platform was a rear wheel drive, unibody automobile architecture that Ford used for 15 years in the North American market. It was designed to be relatively lightweight and simple, in keeping with the general downsizing of Detroit designs in the late 1970s.
Ford Freda The Ford Freda is a rebadged 8-seater Mazda Bongo Friendee MPV, introduced to the Japanese home market in 1995. It is styled, literally, like a box, purely for space efficiency and for conservative Japanese tastes.
Ford Freestyle The Ford Freestyle (code name D219) is a mid-size crossover SUV / station wagon, introduced for the 2005 model year by the Ford Motor Company to compete primarily with mid-size rivals such as the Toyota Highlander, Honda Pilot, Nissan Murano and Mitsubishi Endeavor, as well as other station wagons like the Subaru Legacy and Outback models. In Ford's lineup, it replaced the Ford Taurus station wagon, and currently slots between the Edge and the Explorer.
Ford Frick Ford Christopher Frick (December 19, 1894 - April 8, 1978) was an American sportswriter and executive who served as president of the National League from 1934 to 1951 and as Baseball Commissioner from 1951 to 1965. His most highly criticized decision as commissioner was to convince baseball record-keepers to list the single-season home run records of Babe Ruth and Roger Maris separately in 1961, based on the length of the season played.
Ford Fusion (North America) The North American Ford Fusion (code name CD338) is a mid-size car produced by the Ford Motor Company since the 2006 model year. It is based on the Ford CD3 platform, of which the Mazda6 is the best known example.
Ford Futura The Ford Futura is a large car made by Ford Australia. Although the car that bears this name may be more accurately known as the Ford Falcon Futura, the 'Falcon' name has not appeared on the badging for several years.
Ford Galaxie The Ford Galaxie was the primary full-size car built in the United States by the Ford Motor Company for model years 1959 through 1974. A version of the car was produced in Brazil under the names Galaxie 500, LTD and Landau from 1968 to 1982.
Ford Garrison Robert Ford Garrison (August 29, 1915 - June 6, 2001) was a Major League Baseball outfielder. A native of Greenville, South Carolina, he played for the Boston Red Sox (1943-1944) and Philadelphia Athletics (1944-1946).
Ford GT40 The Ford GT40 was a sports car and winner of the 24 hours of Le Mans four times in a row, from 1966 to 1969. It was built to win long-distance sports car races against Ferrari (who won at Le Mans six times in a row from 1960 to 1965).
Ford Gyron The Ford Gyron was a futuristic two-wheeled gyrocar first shown to the world in 1961 at the Detroit Motor Show as a concept car. One wheel was at the front and the other at the rear like a motorcycle and the car was stabilized by gyroscopes.
Ford Hall Ford Hall is an all-female residence hall at Kansas State University. It is located on the South East corner of the Derby Complex at Kansas State's Manhattan, Kansas campus south of Haymaker Hall and east of West Hall on Manhattan Avenue and Old Claflin Road.
Ford HSC engine The HSC ("High Swirl Combustion") was an automobile engine from Ford Motor Company sold from 1984 until 1994. It was produced in Lima, Ohio, largely using tooling and designs adapted from the predecessor 200 inÂł straight 6.
Ford CHT engine The letters CHT denote a particular type of 4-cylinder internal combustion engine produced by the Ford Motor Company in Brazil during the 1980s. It is a completely different engine from the CVH engine and should not be mistaken with it.
Ford Interceptor The Ford Interceptor is a new concept car which debuted at the 2007 North American International Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan. The Interceptor is a retro-styled sedan that reflects a modern interpretation of the classic sporty American muscle cars from the 1960s, like the Ford Galaxie.
Ford Johnson Ford Johnson (1942- ) is an American writer, speaker on spiritual and esoteric topics, and president of a service organization working with adolescents. A former member and respected leader of Eckankar, he left the religion and is now perhaps best known for his book Confessions of a God Seeker which critiques the religion and its founder Paul Twitchell, and lays the groundwork for Johnson's Higher Consciousness Society.
Ford Ka Ford Ka (pronounced as "car", "ka" or "Kay-a") is a city car from the Ford Motor Company marketed in Europe and elsewhere. The European version is produced at Ford's Valencia plant in Southern Spain, while that sold in Latin America is made in Brazil
Ford Kent engine The Ford Kent is an internal combustion engine from Ford of Europe. Originally developed in 1959 for the Ford Anglia, it is an in-line four cylinder overhead valve type engine with a cast iron cylinder head and block.
Ford Landau Launched at the 1975 motor show in SĂŁo Paulo (SalĂŁo do AutomĂłvel) the Ford Landau was a large car, manufactured up until 1983 by the Brazilian subsidiary of American automaker Ford at their factory in SĂŁo Bernardo do Campo, Brazil. It became the brand's new top model in Brazil and, based on the successful Ford Galaxie, it featured the newly introduced 302 engine, a lighter 5.
Ford LTD Crown Victoria The Ford LTD Crown Victoria was a full-size rear-wheel drive sedan produced by the Ford Motor Company from 1983 to 1991. It was renamed the Ford Crown Victoria after 1992, but while receiving a completely different body and drivetrain, it used the same platform.
Ford LTD II The Ford LTD II was a mid-size car built by the Ford Motor Company between 1977 and 1979 for the North American market. It was based on the Ford Torino, which it effectively replaced, and used the same platform as the concurrent Ford Thunderbird, which was down-sized for 1977.
Ford Madox Brown Ford Madox Brown (April 16, 1821 – October 6, 1893) was an English painter of moral and historical subjects, notable for his distinctively graphic and often Hogarthian version of the Pre-Raphaelite style. While he was closely associated with the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, he was never actually a member.
Ford Madox Ford Ford Madox Ford (December 17, 1873 – June 26, 1939) was an English novelist, poet, critic and editor whose journals The English Review and The Transatlantic Review were instrumental in the development of early 20th-century English-language literature. He is now best remembered for The Good Soldier (1915) and the Parade's End tetralogy.
Ford Mansion The Ford Mansion is part of the Morristown National Historical Park, and is located on a hilltop in Morristown, New Jersey. The Ford Mansion was the "hard winter" (from December 1779 - May 1780) quarters of George Washington and the Continental Army.
Ford Model 48 The Model 48 was an update on Ford's V8-powered Model 40A, the company's main product. Introduced in 1935, the Model 48 was given a cosmetic refresh annually, begetting the 1937 Ford before being thoroughly redesigned for 1941.
Ford Model A (1927) The Model A was the second huge success for Ford, after its predecessor, the Model T. First produced on October 20, 1927 but not sold until December 2, it replaced the venerable Model T, which had been produced for 18 years.
Ford Model B (1932) The Model B was a new Ford automobile produced in the 1932 model year. It was an updated version of the Model A and remained largely unchanged until the 1935 model year, when the updated Model 48 was introduced.
Ford Model C The first Ford Model C was introduced in 1904 and was a version of the first Ford Model A with more modern look, slightly more powerful engine and 15 cm (6 inches) longer wheelbase. It was the entry-level car in the Ford model lineup, slotting below the upscale Model B.
Ford Model T The Ford Model T (colloquially known as the Tin Lizzie and the Flivver) was an automobile produced by Henry Ford's Ford Motor Company from 1908 through 1927. The model T set 1908 as the historic year that the automobile came into popular usage.
Ford Model Y The Model Y was the first Ford specifically designed for markets outside the United states of America. The car was powered by a 933 cc, 8 hp Ford Sidevalve engine, and was in production in England from 1932 until 1937, France from 1932 to 1934 and Germany as the Köln from 1933 to 1936.
Ford Modular engine The Modular engine, or "mod motor" as it is often referred to, is Ford Motor Company's modern overhead camshaft (OHC) V8 and V10 engine family. It gradually replaced the Windsor small-block and 385 big-block engines over several years in the mid-1990s.
Ford Monday Night Football Ford Monday Night Football (or MNF) is a programme which had started in 1993, when Sky Sports obtained the rights for the English football Premier League. Richard Keys presented the show, but stepped down in the beginning of the 2003/04 season.
Ford Motor Company of Canada Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited is the manufacturing and sales arm of Ford Motor Company for Canada. It was founded in 1904 in Walkerville, Ontario by Gordon McGregor as President and Henry Ford as Vice-President.
Ford Motor Company Philippines Ford Motor Company Philippines (FMCP) is a local Ford Motor Company subsidiary focused on manufacturing automobiles for local and regional consumption. Production began in September 1999 with the Ford Lynx, and the company began building the Mazda-based local Ford Ranger in March, 2000.
Ford MTX-75 transmission The MTX-75 (Manual TransaXle), is a 5-speed transmission developed by Ford Motor Company for its larger engined front wheel drive models. 75 refers to the distance in millimeters between the main and lay shafts.
Ford Mustang The Ford Mustang is an automobile produced by the Ford Motor Company, originally based on the Ford Falcon compact.Iacocca: An Autobiography, by Lee Iacocca, Chapter VI The first production Mustang rolled off the assembly line in Dearborn, Michigan on 9 March, 1964, and was introduced to the public at the New York World's Fair on 17 April, 1964, and via all three American television networks on 19 April.
Ford Mustang SSP The Ford Mustang SSP was a lightweight police car package based on the Ford Mustang produced between 1982-1993. The car was meant to provide a speedier option for police departments in lieu of other full sized (and heavy) sedans on the market at the time.
Ford Mustang SVO The Mustang SVO was a limited-production version of the Ford Mustang sold from 1984 to 1986, during which time it was the fastest, most expensive version of the Mustang available. Although it departed both physically and mechanically from any prior version of the Mustang, it held the same spot within the lineup, both in terms of performance over "lesser" variants and in prestige, as had variants such as the Shelby tuned and "BOSS" Mustangs of the 1960s and 70s.
Ford Mustang variants Ford and other third party companies offered their own modified versions of popular Mustang in order to cater performance centric enthusiast who wants more power, sharper handling and better styling. Although most of the Mustang variants were aimed at enthusiast with an exception with the Special Service Package (or SSP), which was design for law enforcement.
Ford Orion The Ford Orion was a saloon built by the automaker Ford for the European market from July 22 1983 to 19 September, 1993. The Orion moniker was applied to the four door saloon variants of the Ford Escort until 1993, after which the name was dropped and the model became part of the Escort range until it was replaced in 1998.
Ford Park Cemetery Ford Park Cemetery is a 34 acre (140,000 m²) cemetery in central Plymouth, England, founded in 1848. Its official name at the time of inception was The Plymouth, Devonport and Stonehouse (Ford Park) Cemetery, although it is seldom referred to by that title any longer.
Ford Parklane The Ford Parklane was a car produced by the Ford Motor Company in the United States for one year only, 1956. Launched to compete with the Chevrolet Nomad, it was a two-door station wagon, based on the Ford Ranch Wagon, but unlike that low-end workhorse model, it was tricked out with all the fittings of Ford's top-end Fairlane models of that year, including the distinctive stainless steel side 'tick' and a well-appointed interior.
Ford Performance Racing Ford Performance Racing (FPR) is one of the premier motorsport teams contesting the V8 Supercar Championship Series. The team currently campaigns two BF Falcon racecars, driven by Steven Richards and Mark Winterbottom.
Ford Pinto The Ford Pinto is a subcompact car manufactured by the Ford Motor Company for the North American market, first introduced in 1971, and built through the 1980 model year. Its legacy is best remembered for its safety problems.
Ford Pinto engine The Ford Pinto engine is the unofficial but ubiquitous nickname for a 4 cylinder internal combustion engine built by the Ford Motor Company in Europe. In Ford sales literature it was referred to as the EAO or OHC engine, it is also sometimes called the Metric engine since it was designed using the metric system.
Ford Pinto in popular culture The Ford Pinto was an American subcompact car manufactured by the Ford Motor Company, first introduced in 1971, and built through the 1980 model year. The car is frequently referenced in works of popular culture, and this article consists of a list of such references, which often are based on the perceived cheapness or low safety standard of the vehicle.
Ford Power Stroke engine The Power Stroke is a family of turbodiesel truck engines sold by Ford Motor Company for the Ford F-Series trucks, the Ford Econoline van, the Ford LCF commercial truck, and the Ford Excursion SUV and built by Navistar International Corporation (International Truck and Engine Corporation).
Ford Prefect (character) Ford Prefect is a fictional character in the radio series (and subsequent books, television series, and so on) The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by the British author Douglas Adams. He is the only character other than the protagonist, Arthur Dent, to appear throughout the Hitchhiker's saga.
Ford R-Series The Ford R-Series range of bus and coach chassis was evolved from designs made by Ford's Thames commercial vehicle subsidiary until the mid-1960s. A number of components were shared with the D-series lorry, including the engine which was mounted vertically at the front of the vehicle, ahead of the front axle so as to provide a passenger entrance opposite the driver.
Ford R. Bryan Ford R. Bryan (13 May 1912-14 May 2004) who was himself a member of the Ford family of Dearborn, provides authentic and fascinating information about the Ford family based almost entirely on information and photographs contained in the Ford Archives of Henry Ford Museum and associated Greenfield Village.
Ford Racing DS Ford Racing DS is a game that has been announced for Nintendo DS. It is expected to feature nostalgic and modern Ford cars for racing as seen in Ford Racing for PSOne, and Ford Racing 2 and Ford Racing 3 for PlayStation 2.
Ford Rainey Ford Rainey (August 8, 1908 – July 25, 2005) was an American movie, stage and television actor. Rainey was a familiar face in motion pictures, including his film debut White Heat (1949), The Sand Pebbles with Steve McQueen and Two Rode Together with James Stewart.
Ford Ranges The Ford Ranges () is a grouping of mountain ranges standing east of Sulzberger Ice Shelf and Block Bay in the northwest part of Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica. Discovered by the Byrd Antarctic Expedition on December 5, 1929, and named by Byrd for Edsel Ford of the Ford Motor Company, who helped finance the expedition.
Ford Reflex The Ford Reflex (or REFL3X, as spelled on the vehicle nameplate) is a concept car introduced at the 2006 North American International Auto Show that, according to Ford, "proves small cars can be bold and American". It is a technological showcase that includes solar panel-powered headlights, integrated child seat, baby cam with a monitor mounted on the dash, inflatable rear safety belts, and an interior quieted by ground rubber taken from Nike athletic shoe outsoles.
Ford RS200 The Ford RS200 is a mid-engined, four-wheel drive sports car produced by Ford from 1984 through 1986. The road-going RS200 was based on Ford's Group B rally car and was designed to comply with FIA homologation regulations, which required 200 road legal versions be built.
Ford SAV The Ford SAV is a seven-seater, large MPV concept car developed by Ford of Europe. It was first displayed to the public at the 2005 Geneva Motor Show and was intended as a styling exercise to show the new direction for Ford's designs in the European market.
Ford Scorpio The Ford Scorpio was an executive car produced by the Ford Motor Company at its factory in Cologne, Germany between 1985 and 1998. Known within Ford by its codename DE-1, it replaced the Granada, although the car was still badged Granada in the United Kingdom, the Scorpio badge only being used on the top-of-the range versions (hence the Granada Scorpio) until 1994, when the entire range was called Scorpio.
Ford Shelby Cobra Concept The Ford Shelby Cobra is a concept car that the Ford Motor Company unveiled at the 2004 North American International Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan. The Shelby Cobra concept is a roadster based on the original Shelby Cobra that Carroll Shelby developed in 1964.
Ford SHO V6 engine Ford Motor Company worked with Yamaha Motor Corporation to develop a compact 60° DOHC V6 engine for transverse application. This V6 was to power a mid-engine sports car in the early 1990s, but that project (known internally as GN34) was cancelled.
Ford Sigma engine The Ford Sigma is a small straight-4 automobile engine sold by Ford Motor Company as the Zetec-SE and by Mazda as the MZI. The engine was introduced in the mid-1990s and production continues through the present.
Ford SI6 engine Ford's Volvo Cars subsidiary designed the SI6 ("short inline 6") straight-6 automobile engine for use in 2006 models. An evolution of the company's long-used straight-5, which itself is an evolution of the Volvo B6304 straight six engine, the SI6 can be mounted transversely for front wheel drive applications or longitudinally for rear wheel drive.
Ford Skyliner The Ford Skyliner was an innovative full-size automobile with a retracting hardtop produced by the Ford Motor Company in the late 1950s. Based on the North American Ford Fairlane, the Skyliner had a complex mechanism which folded the front of the roof and retracted it under the rear decklid.
Ford Super Sunday Ford Super Sunday is Sky Sports' flagship live football programme, televised most Sundays throughout the Barclays Premiership season at 3pm on Sky Sports 1. It has been presented since its debut in August 1992 by former TVam host Richard Keys, alongside a variety of guest match pundits.
Ford Taunus V4 engine The Taunus V4 was a V4 piston engine with one balance shaft, introduced by Ford Motor Company in Germany in 1962. The German V4 was built in the Cologne plant and powered the Ford Taunus and German versions of the Consul, Granada and Transit.
Ford Taurus The Ford Taurus was a mid-size front wheel drive car manufactured by the Ford Motor Company in North America. It was introduced in December 1985 as a 1986 model, replacing the Fairmont-based rear wheel drive LTD model.
Ford Telstar The Ford Telstar was an automobile sold by the Ford Motor Company in Asia, Australasia and Africa, comparable in size to the European Ford Sierra and the American Ford Tempo. It has been progressively replaced by the Ford Mondeo.
Ford Thunderbird The Ford Thunderbird is a car manufactured in the United States by the Ford Motor Company. It entered production for the 1955 model year as a two-seater sporty car; unlike the similar Chevrolet Corvette, the Thunderbird was never sold as a full-blown sports car.
Ford Torino The Ford Torino was a car produced by the Ford Motor Company for the North American market between 1968 and 1976. The Torino was a midsize car by American standards of the time - quite large by modern standards, but smaller than the fullsize Ford Galaxie.
Ford Torino Talladega The Ford Torino Talladega was a car produced by the Ford Motor Company during 1969 only. Named after the Talladega Superspeedway racetrack in Alabama, it was a special racing version of the Ford Torino produced specifically to make Ford competitive in NASCAR racing, and was sold to the public only because homologation rules required a certain number of sales to the public.
Ford Tourneo Connect The Tourneo Connect is a leisure activity vehicle produced by Ford, which was first put into production in 2002 to the British market. Principally termed a commercial vehicle, Ford predicted relatively low sales of between 800-1000 mainly to taxi operators, due to its given status as a commercial vehicle.
Ford Trimotor The Ford Trimotor, nicknamed The Tin Goose, was a three engine civil transport aircraft first produced in 1925 by Henry Ford and continued until June 7, 1933. Throughout its lifespan a total of about 200 aircraft were produced.
Ford Verona The Ford Verona was a car sold in Brazil in the 1990s. It was a locally designed two-door saloon version of the European Ford Orion Mk 1, intended to cater to Brazilian demand for two-door sedans (no two-door Orion was available in Europe).
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