TheFord Vedetteis a large car formerly manufactured byFord SAFin theirPoissy plantfrom 1948 to 1954.
Ford Vedette | |
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Overview | |
Manufacturer | Ford SAF |
Production | 1948–1954 |
Assembly | Poissy,Yvelines,France(Poissy Plant) |
Body and chassis | |
Class | Large car |
Body style | 4-doorhatchback 4-doorsaloon 4-doorlandaulet 5-doorestate 2-doorcoupé 2-doorcabriolet |
Layout | FR layout |
Related | Ford Comète Simca Vedette Ford Vendôme Simca Ariane Chrysler Esplanada |
Powertrain | |
Engine | 2.2 LAquilons/vV8 3.9 LMistrals/v V8[1] |
Transmission | 3-speedmanual[1] |
Dimensions | |
Wheelbase | 2,690 mm (105.9 in)[2] |
Length | 4,500 mm (177.2 in)[2] till 1952 4,670 mm (183.9 in)[3] from 1952 |
Width | 1,720 mm (67.7 in)[2] |
Height | 1,570 mm (61.8 in)[2] |
Curb weight | 1,180 kg (2,601 lb)[2] |
Chronology | |
Successor | Simca Vedette |
Originally conceived byEdsel Fordand Ford designer Eugene T. "Bob" Gregorie as a “light” Ford model, smaller than the1942 Ford.However, Edsel Ford died in 1943, and following the war Ford corporate felt the light car project would pull sales from the full size Ford. Additionally, Henry Ford II felt that Gregorie’s planned1949 Ford,which shared the same character lines as the Light Ford, was too large for its market, as was Gregorie’s proposed1949 Mercury.To that end, the planned Ford and Mercury lines were pushed to Mercury and Lincoln, and a contest held to design a Ford that would be at once smaller than the Mercury, but larger than the Light Ford. To recoup the cost of Light Ford, that car was transferred to Ford France.
Introduced at the 1948Salon de l'automobilein Paris, it was designed entirely in Detroit (resembling contemporaryMercurymodels) and featured the Poissy-made 2158 ccAquillonsidevalveV8 engineof Ford'sFlatheadengine family, the same as in pre-warMatfordcars.[1][4]It was the only French car of its time with a V8 engine.[3]
First years of production
editBecause the Poissy factory could not resume complete automobile production immediately afterWorld War IIand had nostamping equipment,many vital components had still to be made by various subcontractors, which reportedly had an adverse effect on the quality of the car and contributed to its limited popularity.[5]Over the six years in production, the Vedette was available in several body styles, ranging from the original four-doorfastback(with rearsuicide doors) through the later four-doorsaloon,aSunlinertwo-doorlandauletbased on the saloon (with a roll-down roof over the entire cabin), a two-doorCoupéand, based on it, theCabriolet Décapotable(a two-doorconvertible).[4][6]
1950s updates
editUnder the direction of the new company president, François Lehideux, Ford France refreshed the car for 1950, and again in 1952, when it finally received a one-piece windscreen, new interior and bumpers, better brakes, lengthened rear overhang and trunk, and a cigarette lighter. The 1953 OctoberMondial de l’Automobilealso saw a luxury version of the Vedette, theFord Vendôme,fitted with the bigger 3923 ccMistralV8engine, previously used in Ford France trucks.
Also updated in 1953 was the five-door, five-seatAbeille(French for "bee")estatewith a two-piecetailgate,advertised as both practical (with apayloadof 500 kg (1,100 lb)) and comfortable.[1][5][6][7]The Abeille, originally exhibited with little fanfare at the October 1951 Motor Show as a "farmer's car"(voiture agricole)and launched more formally as the "Ford Abeille" in June 1952,[8]was a "no frills" development of the Vedette with which it shared its wheel base and engine, but the rear overhang and therefore the overall length were shorter by 220 mm (8.7 in)[9]The interior surfaces of the Abeille were almost without exception of painted metal, and the front bench seat of the Vedette was replaced with two "rustic" seats apparently taken from a commercial van, but behind them the rear bench was easy to remove, allowing for the installation of a flat "false-floor" of timber planks, and facilitating the use of the car as a load carrier for farmers and small-scale traders.[8]At the October 1953Motor Showthe standard Abeille was listed at 845,000 francs as against 935,000 francs for the least expensive version of the Vedette.[9][10]
Sale of the Poissy factory
editFacing unsatisfactory sales results, as well as disruptive strikes at the Poissy plant at the turn of the decade, Ford had been trying to dispose of the factory since shortly after the end of the war. An opportunity arose in 1954, when Henri-Theodore Pigozzi, the founder of the increasingly successful French automakerSimca,was looking for a new plant to expand its operations. Ford France was merged into Simca with both the Poissy plant and the rights to all models manufactured there — including a newly designed Vedette. The new car had debuted in France under the name ofSimca Vedette,but was sold as the Ford Vedette in some markets (including Sweden, the Netherlands and Germany) at least until 1956.[1][5][7][11]
References
edit- ^abcde"Ford Vedette".Ford Oldtimer und Motorsport Club Cologne(in German).Retrieved2006-08-16.
- ^abcde"Free Car Brochures".Ford Vedette 1951 (Dutch brochure)(in Dutch). Archived fromthe originalon 2006-12-15.Retrieved2006-08-16.(technical data for 1951 Dutch-market saloon model)
- ^ab"Automobilia".Toutes les voitures françaises 1953 (Salon Paris oct 1952).14.Paris: Histoire & collections: 30. 2000.
- ^ab"Ford Vedette 1951".Phil Seed's Virtual Car museum.Archived fromthe originalon 2006-07-12.Retrieved2006-08-16.
- ^abc"Ford SAF".Ford Oldtimer und Motorsport Club Cologne(in German).Retrieved2006-08-16.
- ^ab"Ford Vedette 1953-1954".Phil Seed's Virtual Car museum.Archived fromthe originalon 2006-07-12.Retrieved2006-08-16.
- ^ab"SIMCA VEDETTE and SIMCA ARIANE".Simca Talbot Information Centre — Simca Club UK.Retrieved2006-08-12.
- ^ab"Automobilia".Toutes les voitures françaises 1952 (Salon [Paris Oct] 1951).20.Paris: Histoire & collections: 37. 2001.
- ^ab"Automobilia".Toutes les voitures françaises 1954 (Salon [Paris Oct] 1953).24.Paris: Histoire & collections: 31–33. 2002.
- ^"Ford Abeille".
- ^"Vedette (1955-1961)".Phil Seed's Virtual Car museum.Retrieved2006-08-13.
External links
edit- Club Vedette France(in French)
- Mademoiselle Ford @ Best Cars Web Site(in Portuguese)
- "The Ford Vedette de mon père", Patrick Lesueur, ETAI, Boulogne-Billancourt, France, 1997.(in Spanish)