Ford Bids Goodbye To Thunderbird

mikeyb

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It was a bittersweet moment Friday as the last Thunderbird was driven off the assembly line at Wixom Assembly Plant on 06 July 2005.

"We're sad to see this car go," said Larry Fisher, dealer relations manager at Wixom Assembly Plant. "But I, along with all the other employees here at the plant, am tremendously proud to have been part of the revival of this American icon."

The Thunderbird has come full circle since it was first introduced in 1955. Back then, it was a two-seater designed to compete with the Chevrolet Corvette. In 1958, the T-Bird was reconfigured to seat four people; it remained that way until production ended with the 1997 model year. In 2002, the Thunderbird was reborn with a retro look that harkened back to the early days of the automotive classic.


More than 4 million Thunderbirds have been sold in the last 50 years. The last T-Bird was the 1,160,827th one to roll off the line at Wixom.

Fisher said that the Thunderbird will always be a car that touches an emotional chord with people. The car elicits memories of the '50s and the movie "American Graffiti," which featured the classic automobile.

"I identify with the Thunderbird because it reminds me of simpler days," he said. "For me, it brings back thoughts of the post-war times. America was a growing country. Everybody strived to create the 'American Dream' -- a house, kids, a dog, and a new, distinctive automobile parked in the driveway. It represented a time of great opportunity and an era of automotive personal freedom."

Thunderbird collectors from across the United States and Canada recently attended a "Fifty Years of Thunderbird" event at Ford World Headquarters in Dearborn. And many of the people in attendance had their own special memories to share.

"When my first son was born, our doctor had a 1955 Thunderbird, and we just loved it," said Bendetta Farr, a T-Bird collector from Belleville, Mich. "That's the reason we always looked for one and when we had the opportunity, we bought one. You go down with the street in it, and everybody gives you high-fives. It's just a car that everybody really enjoys."

http://www.blueovalnews.com/2005/products/tbird.last.09jl05.htm
 
they could've done a lot better with that car.... it would have sold better if they put more thought into it.
 
it didn't help that dealers tacked on as much as $15,000 over the sticker price
 
Honestly, the car went downhill when they changed the body style in 89 (along with the Cougar). They had the hottest 2-door body style on the market for 83-88 and then they ****** it up. It took until 87 for them to realize people wanted the HO V8 from the mustang instead of the Turbo 4-banger.

When they released it in 2002 they put it in a completely different market. People that could afford one would have their pick of much nicer cars in the same price range. The reason the Beetle and PT-Cruiser are a success is because they targeted the market that would actually buy one.

Coincidently I drove by a rusty brown 83 or 84 T-Bird that someone put on their front lawn just today. $300 obo. Hah.
 

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i dunno man, alot of people make really nice power from that 2.3 liter 4cyl. they have pretty robust internals and can handle alot of boost.
 
(drool) I'd buy that...

...but if they went with that design they couldn't claim to have gone "full circle". It had to be a 50's retro style 2-seater. That car, as cool as it is, resembles the 60's style with 50's curves and front, finished off with a touch of modern custom hotrod styling. The rear end is still too bloated for today's cars.
 
yeah, the fortynine is ******* awesome.

the thunderbird should have a direct competition to the corvette. they would have had more sales that way.
 

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