![]() But design vice president Gene Bordinat mated Boyer's own "very smooth flowing" theme to a bold, jet-scoop front end created in the Corporate Projects Studio under Dave Ash. Other proposals displayed a slab-sided Lincoln massiveness. One tried to push the crisply folded, rocket-ship theme a little further, only to find that it had already gone as far as it could go in 1964-1966. Boyer identified at least six, two each from three separate studios. ![]() In his invaluable memoir, Thunderbird: An Odyssey in Automotive Design, former Thunderbird studio chief William P. Of course there were other, competing proposals for the 1967 program. Certainly, Ford designers shaped some very Toronado-like clays around that time. There's a story, difficult to confirm, that the Toronado design had been leaked to Ford around 1964. Its influence is there to see in the 1967 Thunderbird in the concealed headlights, in the blade-like thrust of the front fenders, in the roofline that fades into the trunk and quarter panel, in the wide-open wheel flares. The 1963 Riviera surely must have turned some heads in Dearborn, but Ford looked particularly hard at the first Oldsmobile Toronado, long before it ever appeared in showrooms. The new trick up Ford's sleeve for 1967 was aįour-door Thunderbird with "suicide doors." But whether it remained "unique in all the world," as its advertisements still insisted, is debatable. The all-new Thunderbird that resulted for 1967 was unquestionably quieter, more refined, and more roadable than any of its smaller ancestors. Veteran Ford designer Gale Halderman, who worked on every generation of Thunderbird from 1958 to 1989, recalled a general feeling that the Thunderbird had to grow larger, too, to maintain its position in the sales race. The General Motors coupes were larger than the Thunderbird and, beginning in 1966, offered more conventional interior layouts. That said, it is nonetheless clear that from 1964 on, the product planners responsible for the Thunderbird were carefully watching the General Motors "E-bodies" in their rearview mirror - and perhaps paying a little less attention to the road ahead. Even as late as 1971, neither the fabulous boattail Riviera nor the new and outlandishly gothic Toronado could out-gun a five-year-old Thunderbird body shell wearing a year-old face lift. The Riviera snuck past the Thunderbird in 1969, only to be slammed back in its place in 1970. In 1967, the Thunderbird beat the Riviera and Toronado combined it even finished ahead of the lower-priced Pontiac Grand Prix every year from 1964 to 1968. In the 1960s, the Ford Thunderbird ruled the full-size, personal-luxury segment, consistently outselling the Buick Riviera, Oldsmobile Toronado, and Cadillac Eldorado. The 1967 Ford Thunderbird was dominant in theįull-size luxury market. If GM's cars were big, the 1967-1971 Ford Thunderbird would be, too. The four-barrel version boosted power to 360 hp.Anxious to preserve the Thunderbird's popularity, Ford planners warily eyed General Motors's moves in the personal-luxury market. The 429 cubic-in Thunder-Jet V8 engine rated at 320 horsepower was a $237 option. Optional equipment included an AM/FM stereo radio, air conditioning, six-way power seats, power windows, and cruise control. The front grille had a horizontal division bar with the Thunderbird emblem in the center. Styling changes for the 1969 model year included large rectangular taillights with a single back-up light mounted in the center of the escutcheon panel. Landau's could be optioned with a power-operated Thunderbird Sun Roof. The two-door Landau was the most popular with 27,664 examples produced, followed by 15,650 of the four-door, and 5,913 of the hardtop. The hardtop listed for $4,800, the 2-door Landau at $4,950, and the four-door Landau at $5,025. ![]() The 1969 Thunderbird continued to be offered as a two-door hardtop, and a two- or four-door Landau with seating for four. Among the most prominent design features of this generation Thunderbird was the fighter jet-inspired grille opening that housed hidden headlights. The new 5th Gen, introduced in 1967, abandoned the prior unibody construction in favor of body-on-frame construction, eliminated the convertible, added a four-door body style with suicide doors for rear-seat access, and moved up-market into Lincoln territory. The 1958 through 1966 Thunderbird had been fundamentally unchanged, built as a sporty two-door coupe and convertible with two rows of seating. The fifth-generation of the Thunderbird introduced the second major change in the car's design direction since its debut in 1955. ![]()
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