The 1961 thunderbird.

Automatic Washer - The world's coolest Washing Machines, Dryers and Dishwashers

Help Support AutomaticWasher.org:

washernoob

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 3, 2010
Messages
1,446
       

Here is a little preview of our new thunderbird.

Some details.

390 big block. 300 horse power
Power seats
Power windows
Power steering and brakes.
Knock away steering wheel.
Heat and a/c
Dual exhaust

Mint green in color. Turquoise and white original interior with an impeccable dashboard that was covered it's whole life.

washernoob++6-29-2011-09-06-1.jpg
 
I think the 61' was far from petite. It was a large, heavy car. Not especially known for its cornering handling. But it did deliver a very impressive smooth ride. The styling was a major departure from the 60' and was considered quite revolutionary for its time.
 
Thanks!

Yes while it is a very very low sitting car (almost thought it had been slammed) it's a very long and fairly wide car.

It's no continental size but it's very large compared to the fair lane of the day for sure.

And is indeed a very smooth ride
 
<span style="font-size: medium; font-family: georgia,palatino;">Beautiful! </span>

<span style="font-size: medium; font-family: georgia,palatino;">I bet it is a blast to drive!</span>
 
Ah, yes, Elwood Engel . . .

. . . who, a few years later, would design the Chrysler Turbine prototype, body by Ghia, only 50 built for consumer evaluation. Chrysler still owns 2, Jay Leno has one, and a few auto and science museums house the rest.

Note the family resemblance.

joeekaitis++6-29-2011-11-53-50.jpg
 
Nice car!  I didn't realize the knock-away steering wheel was an option.  I had that on my '68 Cougar and thought it was a new thing for that model year.

 

So it has a behemoth tube radio.  Does it still work?
 
I didn't realize that any of the Chrysler Turbines were still in existance.  I understood that the government made Chrysler destroy all models as a condition of the 1980's bail-out.

 

It's good to know that some still are in existance.  There was a Monaco family resemblence there.
 
I noticed that too when I first saw the Chrysler turbine car, lots of Ford styling cues. Also note the "turbine" trim styling in the interior. In the video I posted in the link below, even Jay Leno thinks the same as he owns one. But they got terrible gas mileage.

These are jet engines in these cars, not a turbo charger as we have today!

 
Whitewalls!

Great color on a beautiful Thunderbird, but it really needs a set of correct '60s thin whitewalls like those on the Chrysler and Valiant above, and of course some Thunderbird wheel covers. For '61 whitewalls were still a little bigger than the rest of the '60s but not nearly so large as '50s whitewalls, which look terrible on '60s cars.

 

I always loved those '61-'63 Thunderbirds, ever since I was small. For an American luxury car of the time they are compact although quite heavy. They share a lot with the period Lincoln Continentals - including unibody contruction - and were made in the Lincoln plant in Wixom, Michigan. This helps explain the very high OEM prices that were way above any other Ford badged car and more in line with a nice Buick, back when nice Buicks were bought by people who today would be buying Lexuses. Unfortunately Thunderbirds shared most of their chassis engineering with the big Fords, which means steering and braking aren't nearly as sporty as the car's looks, but the Lincoln connection meant overall build quality was very nice and clearly better than a regular Ford or Mercury.

 

That Valiant is so nicely proportioned, I really like both that and the corresponding Dart. I'll always remember when I was a kid and a neighbor drove a '63 Dart Sport Coupe. She loved it and was really unhappy when her husband swapped it on an enormous Olds Delta 88. I wonder what the weight difference is between the 271 V8 and slant six? Slant sixes are good engines but super heavy for a compact car, in particular when compared to a Falcon/Comet 144/170 six or Corvair six.

 
 
It's beautiful!!

Wow, that 61 T-bird is just wonderful! I'll be humming that Beach Boys tune "Fun Fun Fun" for the rest of the day now... LOL
 
I am sorry that some seem to have a comprehension problem. I wrote petite-looking, not petite. The rounded, flowing lines made it seem that way along with the round tail lights as opposed to the rectangular ones before and after this model run. Maybe I should have said suppository-shaped. I know it's wide. I have ridden the back seat of more than one and on either side of the hump, there is luxurious room for two; three and the middle man is SOL. Unfortunately Ford had a severe Continental complex and everything had to grow bigger and boxier. I was not trying to demean or diminish the size of your car or anything else. I remember riding in them from my childhood. A friend bought a white 66 convertible with white leather interior when we were in high school and it is still in her family. Another neighbor drove the 57 and a friend's father drove the 59 or 60. I am sorry for trying to say something nice about your new car that was misunderstood.
 
Whitewalls.

Indeed it does need whitewalls. Even the owner said those radials on it are pretty bad.

ItI has side skirts but the current rear wheels are too wide and rub on the skirts.
 
I was just watching the commercial and it appears that the used some pretty wide walls on them. Almost looks like 2 1/4"
 
Nice opening shot of the tire in an ad for the nearly-identical '62 Thunderbird. '61 was a transition year for whitewalls in the US, with them being larger than the '62 and later size but smaller than the gargantuan '50s size. Given that the "missle bird" body style lasted through '63 I'd err on the side of being small rather than large; to me the whole car is so clean and sixties it doesn't need much extra decoration. I do really prefer them with the fender skirts, it adds so  much sleekness!

 
You know best! I'm a whitewall person. Waiting to get my early Christmas present of whitewalls for my Volkswagen

The tires on the thunder are super nice show tires. But just too wide. I do like the baby moon wheels though. I dont care much for the original spoke wheels.
 
Most of the 50 Chrysler turbine cars were cut up way before the late '70s bailout because Chrysler would have had to pay import duty on them otherwise...they were made in Italy although the drivetrain was American, of course. (Source: Chrysler and Imperial: The Postwar Years, by Richard Langworth).   One of my uncles always had Thunderbirds. I remember playing with the Swing-Away steering wheel and the power windows, which only expensive cars had then.   Here's a history of the Swing-Away wheel.

http://automotivemileposts.com/tbird1961swingaway.html
 
NICE CAR

My fav in this series was always the '63 with the swoop into the door and the three speed lines there. T-birds of this Ilk offered "rock-a-way" suspension. Didn't help the cornering but was good on the straight aways.

 

Does it have Factory AC? I don't see the vents at the sides of the dash. Beautiful dash BTW, just as I remember them as a kid!

 

 

 
 
Back
Top