Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Maverick LDO option was one of the first American compacts to be marketed as a lower-priced (and domestic) alternative to the more expensive European luxury and touring sedans from Mercedes-Benz, BMW, Audi, and others. [citation needed] 1973 Ford Maverick interior. Minor changes were made from 1973 to 1975.
Although still based on more or less the same chassis design that had served Ford so well since the early 1960s, the Maverick looked modern and sold very well for most of the 1970s.
The Ford Maverick (1970–1977), a compact car sold in North America and Brazil during the 1970s; The rebadged Nissan Patrol Y60 sold by Ford Australia under the Button car plan from 1988 to 1994; The rebadged Spanish-built Nissan Terrano II, sold by Ford of Europe from 1993 to 1999; The European and Chinese version of the Ford Escape, sold ...
A peculiar photo of dozens — and possibly far more — 1973 Ford Maverick sedans painted in Easter egg colors of blue, gold, white, brown, green and orange, parked in a Kansas City cave as if ...
For the 1965 model year, Ford introduced an all-new design for its full-size model range. To further expand its flagship Galaxie 500 series, the 500 LTD was introduced. . Sharing top billing within the Galaxie series with the performance 500XL, the 500 LTD was designed as a luxury-oriented vehicle, offering many features of more expensive vehicles under the lower price of the Ford namep
The basic 1970 Ford Maverick was listed at $1 more while the Chevrolet Nova and Plymouth Duster were priced 10% higher. [25] The Hornet and the Maverick were designed to stem the tide of imported cars that had captured 10% of the total U.S. market, with 80% of them retailing under $2,000. [ 26 ]
The North American version of the Ford Granada is a range of sedans that was manufactured and marketed by Ford over two generations (1975–1982). Developed as the original successor for the Ford Maverick, the Granada shares its name with Ford of Europe's flagship sedan.
First-generation American subcompacts, left to right: AMC Gremlin, Ford Pinto, Chevrolet Vega. American automakers had first countered imports such as the Volkswagen Beetle with compact cars including the Ford Falcon, Ford Maverick, Chevrolet Corvair and Plymouth Valiant, although these cars featured six-cylinder engines and comprised a larger vehicle class.