Webster

The Constitution was made to guard the people against the dangers of good intentions." --American Statesman Daniel Webster (1782-1852)


Sunday, August 4, 2024

My Dream Car.. :)

 When I was a kid in the mid 70's, I made extra money cutting grass to support my comic addiction and one of my customers had a 1970 Torino GT, I loved that car, it to this day is my "Dream car" if I ever hit the lottery, that will be the car, I will buy, plus a couple of others. but that one for sure.


       You can see my model, I have it in my "Bonus" room behind one of my CD's of one of my favorite movies.  Well anyway I saw this "blurp" while surfing around and instead of posting a "rant", I decided to post a something about my "dream car.  I'm sure others have their own "dream car" and mine if I got it would be the "Grabber" green or the blue with the "Dog Dish" rims and the "Laser treatment on the side :)   yes I can dream ya know.  And as a side point, "My Atlanta Assembly Plant" built the Torino's in the 1970's


The Torino series grew in size for 1970. Starting with the Fairlane 500, all closed two-door models were hardtops, including the Torino and Torino Brougham; the Torino Cobra and Torino GT were SportsRoof fastbacks. (There also was a mid-year Falcon, which was the only two-door post in the series.).

The 1970 Torino GT was only available as a SportsRoof and convertible, with the coupe being discontinued. The SportsRoof featured a rather severe roofline with a kamm tail complemented by a honeycomb inlay covering the full-width taillights, while the convertible shared the taillights but featured a more conventional rump. Up front, the GT featured the option of hidden headlights and a non-functional hood scoop. Along the sides, hash marks and a GT badge on the rear fender could be the launching point for the optional Laser stripes in contrasting colors.


There were several new engines as well. While the 351 4V was introduced in 1969, that was the Windsor version, while in 1970 a revamped “Cleveland” version included upgraded “porcupine” heads and beefier block due to a different cooling system. Also new was the 429, a replacement for the 428. While the 429 4V had existed since 1968, debuting as an option for the Thunderbird, it was new for Ford’s mid-size cars. The engine put out 360 horsepower and a very impressive 480 ft-lb of torque. Ford also offered a pair of all-new 429s with 370 horsepower: the 429 Cobra and 429 Cobra Jet Ram-Air. Both engines were identical aside of one having an air induction system though today both are referred to as the 429 Cobra Jet. The Shaker scoop was also available for the 351 2V and 4V engines though, strangely, it was not available with the 429 4V.





1 comment:

  1. Out of high school my buddy had a new 1970 Torino 429 super cobra jet, 4 speed, 391 locker. It was purple with the laser stripe. ( he called it the grape). It had the rear window louvers. We were supposed to go cut the grass at one of his moms rental house before we could go cruzing He had this little flatbed trailer that was about 4x4 foot. His plan was to load the lawnboy on it with me keeping it on the trailer. As it was just down the street I stupidly agreed. He pulls out the driveway and rips it through 3 gears.. I just about launched that mower along with my arms trying to hold on. Good times.

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