Saloon
7 articles
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Ford Cortina: Britain's best-selling car of the 1960s and 70s (1962-1982)The Ford Cortina was Britain's best-selling car for much of the 1960s and 70s, five generations of family saloon that defined the company car park and the family driveway, from the sporting Lotus Cortina to the everyday GLs. A guide to the Mk1 to Mk5, how the generations differ, the fast Cortinas, what to look for, and what they are worth.
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Ford Granada: the executive Ford from The Sweeney to Cosworth (1972-1994)The Ford Granada was Ford's big executive saloon and coupe for over two decades, from the Mk1 made famous by The Sweeney to the aerodynamic, Car-of-the-Year Mk3 and its 24-valve Cosworth flagship. A guide to the three generations, the Granada and Scorpio names, what to look for, and what they are worth.
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Jaguar Mk2 (1959-1967): grace, space, pace and the gentleman's expressThe Mk2 was the compact sports saloon that, in 3.8 form, would see off most sports cars of its day, and it became the definitive 1960s Jaguar, beloved of bank managers, getaway drivers and saloon racers alike. The engines, the Coombs racers, the run-out cars, and what to look for when buying one.
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Jaguar XJ6 and XJ12 (1968-1992): Sir William Lyons' last saloonThe XJ6 of 1968 replaced Jaguar's entire saloon range with one car, and the period press could not find anything that drove better at any price. The three series, the smooth XK six and the V12, the Daimler siblings, and what to look for when buying the last Jaguar saloon designed under William Lyons.
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Ford Cortina Mk4 (1976-1979): the squared-off Cortina that stayed on topThe Cortina Mk4 of 1976 traded the Coke-bottle curves of the Mk3 for crisp Italian-influenced lines and finally shared its body fully with the German Taunus. It kept Ford's best-seller at the top of the British charts to the end of the decade. The development story, the range, and what the survivors are like now.
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Ford Cortina Mk5 (1979-1982): the Cortina 80 and the end of the lineFord called it the Cortina 80; Britain called it the Mk5. The 1979 facelift of the Mk4 was the last Cortina of all, holding the sales lead until the radical Sierra replaced it in 1982 and ended two decades of rear-drive Cortinas. The development story, the run-out, and the survivors.
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Ford Escort Mk2 (1975-1980): the rally-bred everyman FordThe squared-off Escort Mk2 of 1975 was a humble rear-drive family car that doubled as one of the most successful rally cars of all time. The RS1800, RS2000 and Mexico turned the badge into a legend while millions of ordinary Escorts did the school run. The development story, the rally cars, and the survivors.