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Discussion in 'General Station Wagon Discussions' started by dodgeguy, Nov 30, 2008.

  1. dodgeguy

    dodgeguy Well-Known Member

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  2. RyanDude

    RyanDude New Member

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    what year is that?
     
  3. dodgeguy

    dodgeguy Well-Known Member

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    Not sure. I found it on a Google search. Not much info.
     
  4. RyanDude

    RyanDude New Member

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    I like those little wagons, they would make good drag cars.:chirp:
     
  5. wagonmaster

    wagonmaster Administrator Staff Member Moderator

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    Its a 1976 Brazilian dealer converted Ford Maverick wagon
    mavsw2.jpg
    mavsw1.jpg
     
  6. the Rev

    the Rev senior junior Charter Member

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    WM's posted those before...he know s his Mav n Comet stuff;)

    ..on a side note WM...i went and looked at a73 Comet 4dr the other nite
    ..66,000 orig miles...factory buckets!!!...in a 4dr???:yup:..but yet...drum all round on a V8 car??....its freekin spotless tho!!

    i'm so tempted to buy it and make it a wagon...its killin me:p
     
  7. wagonmaster

    wagonmaster Administrator Staff Member Moderator

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    Discs were optional starting in 1974...
     
  8. Taranau

    Taranau Well-Known Member

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    those disc brakes

    I'd understood that in Ford history,the 65 Mustangs were the first to come with the now traditional discs in front/drums in back set up---but only if you got a V8.With a six,you got drums all around.And,that within a few years,all the Fords had that set up...Is it possible this was a six cylinder Maverick to begin with?Or did Canada lag behind,a little?(I meant that in a good way:oops:)I know many GM and Mopar models had drums all around into the early 70's.
     
  9. wagonmaster

    wagonmaster Administrator Staff Member Moderator

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    The Maverick was introduced in the 1970 model year with three sixes (170,200 and 250) as the only engines available. The 302 became an option during the 1971 model year. I would not be surprised if Ford never intended to offer a V8 option for the Maverick as it was to compete with imports like the VW. Consequently, discs may never have been on the drawing board when designing the Maverick and became an option only in 1974.
     
  10. Taranau

    Taranau Well-Known Member

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    those Mavericks

    That does help explain.And then,the Mustang was a "sportscar";)! Iacocca thought the V8 version should have the disc brakes,because it was a "sportscar";). The inline six wasn't a "sportscar" engine:49:. (tell that to Jaguar) And since the Maverick was basically a first generation Mustang in disguise,with a six,drums all around:mad:.
     
  11. Bluegrass Cruiser

    Bluegrass Cruiser New Member

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    You know my wagon had discs in the front and drums in the rear. All the FWD A-Bodies had that except the Pontiac 6000 SLE AWD which had discs all around. Would love to get rid of my rear drums for disc brakes all around.
     
  12. Krash Kadillak

    Krash Kadillak Well-Known Member

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    .......................................................................
    The bucket seats were part of the "LDO" option package. starting around MY '73 I think.. From Wikepedia........

    The Maverick's styling featured a long hood, fastback roof, and short deck on a 103-inch wheelbase — and featured simple and inexpensive to manufacture pop-out rear side windows rather than roll-down windows.
    Internal and external resistance to a "Mustang replacement" meant that the Maverick would actually be replacing the Ford Falcon. The Falcon's sales had already been decimated by the introduction of the Mustang in 1964, and despite a redesign in 1966, the Falcon was left without a place in the Ford lineup. The Falcon was discontinued early in the 1970 model year after a few thousand units were produced as basically warmed over 1969 models, but the Falcon name was used on stripped down versions of the mid-sized Ford Torino during the second half of the 1970 model run.
    Nearly 579,000 Mavericks were produced in its first year.[citation needed] This rivaled the record-setting first year of Mustang sales (nearly 619,000[1]), and easily outpaced the Mustang's sales of less than 200,000 in 1970.[2]

    [edit] Trim packages and variants

    The Maverick had several different models. Initially, only the standard coupe was available. Early models lacked a true glove box to save on costs, but the glove box was added in 1973. A four-door sedan on a 109-inch wheelbase was introduced in 1971 and was also well received despite lacking the distinctive fastback of the coupe, as it had significantly more room in the back seat and roll-down rear door windows. A rare station wagon version of the Maverick was introduced in Brazil in 1975, not as a regular option, but at a local dealer who made it from the four-door sedan.
    Some of the exterior paint options had unusual names, such as Anti-Establish Mint, Hulla Blue, Original Cinnamon, Freudian Gilt, Thanks Vermillion, Black Jade, Champagne Gold, Gulfstream Aqua, Meadowlark Yellow, Brittany Blue, Lime Gold, Dresden Blue, Raven Black, Wimbledon White, and Candyapple Red.
    In the first half of production for the 1970 model, there were only two available engine options, a 170 CID I6 and a 200 CID I6. A 250 CID I6 was added mid-year. Commercials compared it to the smaller Volkswagen Beetle for $1,995,[citation needed] even though the Ford Pinto would later be Ford's real subcompact entry.
    The four-door model was introduced in 1971. Also available was a vinyl roof. Mercury also revived the Mercury Comet as a mechanical clone of the Maverick. A 210-horsepower 302 CID V8 was also introduced for both the Comet and the Maverick. The Comet featured a new grille, taillights borrowed from the Mercury Montego, trim, and hood.
    The muscle car-themed Grabber trim package was introduced in mid-1970. The package included special graphics and trim, including a spoiler. It was offered from 1970-1975. In 1971 and 1972, the Grabber came with a special "Dual Dome" hood. A similar package for the Mercury Comet, the Comet GT, was also offered from 1971-1975 and had "muscle car" trim akin to the Maverick Grabber, plus its own distinctive hood scoop.
    A Sprint package was offered in 1972. The Sprint had a special red, white, and blue paint job with a matching interior. Similar packages were offered on the Pinto and the Mustang. The one year trim package was said to have been a patriotic theme for the 1972 Olympics. U.S. versions were given a stylized U.S. flag made into a badge decal on the rear quarter panels. The badge was very much in the vein of Olympic symbols, but without being too close, to avoid stepping on copyrights. As an interesting side note, the Sprints sold in Canada were still red, white, and blue, but had a quarter badge styled from the Canadian flag!
    A new "Luxury Decor Option" (LDO) trim level was introduced late in the 1972 model year that included reclining bucket seats in a soft vinyl material, plush carpeting, woodgrained instrument panel trim, radial tires with body-color deluxe wheel covers and a vinyl roof. The Maverick LDO option (also offered on the Mercury Comet) was one of the first American compacts to be marketed as a lower-priced (and domestic) alternative to the more expensive European luxury/touring sedans from Mercedes-Benz, BMW, Audi and other makes.
    Minor changes were made from 1973-1975. In 1973, the 170 CID engine was dropped, making the 200 CID I6 the standard engine. Additionally, improved brakes and a previously optional chrome grille became standard. An AM/FM stereo, aluminum wheels and a new front bumper were added (the latter to comply with new federal regulations). In 1974, the Maverick was unchanged except for rear federal bumpers and larger trunk with a higher deck. Jumping gas prices and increasing demand for smaller cars resulting from the Arab Oil embargo did cause the Maverick to grow in popularity, selling 10,000 more units than the year before. Production of the Maverick and Comet dropped in 1975 with the release of the Ford Granada and Mercury Monarch as true Euro-style luxury compacts. The Maverick received minor trim changes for 1975 that included new grilles and the replacement of Maverick nameplates on the hood and trunklid with FORD nameplates spelled out in block letters.
    In 1976 the Grabber was dropped, and a Stallion package was introduced. The Stallion option came with special paint and trim. Like the Sprint package four years earlier, Ford offered the Stallion option on several models, this time including the Pinto and the new Mustang II. The Comet GT was also discontinued. Standard Mavericks received another new grille and gained front disc brakes as standard equipment along with a new foot-operated parking brake that replaced the old under-dash T-handle unit. Production continued to drop.
    1977 was the final year for both the Maverick and Comet. Both cars remained unchanged except for a police package on the Maverick which was not sufficiently upgraded for police work and sold less than 400 units. The Maverick was produced in Brazil until 1979. Maverick's place in the North American Ford lineup was essentially taken by the 1978 Fairmont.
    The Maverick and Comet saw no significant changes towards the end of their lifespan since they were originally meant to be replaced in 1975 by the Granada and Monarch. However, Ford decided to keep selling both sets of cars until the 1978 model year introduction of the Ford Fairmont and Mercury Zephyr, which were built on an all-new "Fox" platform that would serve as the basic platform for many Ford/Mercury/Lincoln designs through the mid-1980s.

    ----------------------
    Here's what the "LDO" option package looked like on the 4-door:
    [​IMG]
     
    Last edited: Nov 30, 2008
  13. Taranau

    Taranau Well-Known Member

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    disc brakes

    My brother-in-law,the VW repairman,has been asked many times if it's possible to put discs all around,on older VW's.The answer is yes,but to do it properly,one needs to add a booster to the old system or replace the system with a booster included master cylinder---or you get more rear brakefade with discs in back than with drums in back.Going discs all around is a go all the way thing,no half ways.
    Oh,those wacky seventies.MBZ got rid of Plymouth,complaining of too much duplication.They should've see Ford and GM in the seventies...Well,they probably did.That's why they waited to buy an American car company.
     
  14. wagonmaster

    wagonmaster Administrator Staff Member Moderator

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  15. wagonmaster

    wagonmaster Administrator Staff Member Moderator

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    I believe it was a 1972 option...
     

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