Book Description
Luxurious enough for the most discriminating buyer, the 1955 model offered plush vinyl upholstery, "Astra Dial" control panel, adjustable steering wheel, tachometer and clock, all standard. Yet with its 292 cubic inch V-8 engine (rated at 198 horsepower), four barrel carburetor and dual exhausts, it was high-spirited enough for any enthusiast. The car was recognized immediately as a breakthrough in automotive engineering and design and soon developed a dedicate owner body. Although the original two-seated Thunderbird was manufactured for only three years, it was so advanced in concept that its influence in the automobile industry is still being felt today as the Ford Motor Company again presents its descendents.
Despite many changes through the forty years leading to its demise in the mid-nineties and re-birth on 2001 Thunderbird retained its individuality and has earned its soubriquet "Unique in all the World". In these page one can revisit and enjoy another look at the unique world which is....
THUNDERBIRD!
Publisher comments
Excerpted from Thunderbird! an Illustrated History of the Ford T-Bird. by Ray Miller, Glenn Embree. Copyright © 1988. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Assuming an average price of $4000 each, and with a stistical average of over 55,000 units per year, that event at Detroit in 1954 presaged an added annual volume of almost a quarter of a billion dollars for each succeeding year!"