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The four-door sedan of the 1968 body style was built in Argentina from 1969 to 1973 and the 1969 body style from 1973 to 1981 under the Fairlane name with three equipment packages: Standard, 500 and LTD. The car was similar to the American model except the engines.
The Talladega was a special, more aerodynamic version of the Torino / Fairlane produced specifically to make Ford even more competitive in NASCAR racing, and it was sold to the public only because homologation rules required a certain minimum number of cars (500 in 1969) be produced and made available.
Ford had 14 models in its intermediate line for 1968. The base model was the "Fairlane", which was available in a 2-door hardtop, a 4-door sedan, and a 4-door station wagon. Next was the mid level "Fairlane 500", which was available as a 2-door hardtop, 2-door SportsRoof, convertible, and a 4-door sedan and station wagon. This was followed by ...
'67 Ford Fairlane 500 Ex–Drag Racer Is on BaT Bring a Trailer. ... Photos show the car in race-prepped form, liveried up and wearing fat drag radials wider than the River Shannon. It went down ...
Ford Fairlane (FB) 500. In May 1962, the smaller 1962 US Fairlane 500 sedan was introduced as the FB model [9] and a 221-cubic-inch (3.62 L) Windsor V8 was fitted [10] in lieu of the 332. Although classified as an intermediate-sized car in the United States, [11] the new model was referred to in Australia as the "compact" Fairlane. [10]
Supplementing the base model were the new Ranchero 500 and 500/XL. In spite of being added to the Fairlane family for 1967, Ford's top performance options for the Fairlane - the GT and the GTA - did not apply to the Ranchero and is a common misconception that they were available.
The Custom name returned for the 1957 model year along with a new Custom 300 series, [5] these two models sitting below the Fairlane and Fairlane 500. [6] The base Custom was the bottom-rung model, whose primary customers were fleet buyers. The Custom 300 was a step up and intended for value-conscious customers.
President Donald Trump signed 32 executive orders in his first 100 days.. Presidential usage of executive orders has varied wildly throughout history. George Washington issued eight.