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Ford Skyliner
How the dreams of youth become the mundane remnants of middle age. Modern hardtops galoreMitsubishi was the car company that started the latest retractable top trend. It began selling its 3000 GT Spyder with its ever-so-tiny folding hardtop in 1994. Mercedes-Benz then threw its vaunted engineering prowess into the fray with its SLK, which came into the market in 1996. Lexus began offering its SC 430, and the floodgates seemed to open up. The marketing geniuses at Chevrolet (Chevrolet?) decided that a disappearing hardtop pickup truck was just what General Motors needed to buoy its dipping fortunes, while Cadillac topped its version of the Corvette (called XLR) with a collapsing hardtop. That the American car makers latched onto the retractable hardtop is not surprising when one considers that it was Expensive addition was meant for Lincoln ContinentalActually, the retractable roof idea had originally been floated at Ford Motor Company design staff as a good gimmick for Lincoln, which was in need of a distinguishing feature to battle Cadillac's tailfins. A considerable amount of work (and an estimated $2 million) went into the project, including the construction of a Continental Mark II with a servo-operated retractable roof. The thing worked great, but the Continental Mark II was already priced beyond mid-Fifties reason, so the project was shelved. But not for long, as it turned out, because in the summer of 1955 Ford and arch-rival Chevrolet were locked in a dog-eat-dog battle for the U.S. sales championship. And each company was prepared to pull out all the stops to gain bragging rights and market share. Witness the birth of the Ford Thunderbird, Chevrolet Corvette, Chevrolet Nomad, and Chevrolet Cameo over a few short years. None of these vehicular extravaganzas promised to make their respective divisions much money, but each of them sure got people talking...and visiting showrooms. So Ford brass decided to pull the trigger on the ultimate showroom "loss leader" in the form of a retractable hardtop they called the Skyliner. Ironically, it was built on the chassis of another traffic-builder, the Ford Sunliner, with its Space Age transparent top. Enormous engines still struggledIn everything but its roof mechanism the Skyliner was a very conventional American car of the mid-Fifties era. Its finned body sat on a muscular frame that featured an independent front suspension and a live rear axle located by leaf springs, not unlike a Ford F150 pickup truck of today. Also like the current Ford pickup, it sported a V-8 engine. Initially, the Skyliner offered a 272 cubic inch overhead-valve V-8. A 292 cubic inch V-8 was the standard powerplant in 1958 and 1959, and engine options included 312, 332 and 352 cubic inch marvels of cast iron. The 272 cubic inch engine delivered 190 horsepower, and at the other end of the chain the 352 offered an even 300. Even packing 300 horsepower, though, the heavy Skyliner was no speed demon. The lope from zero to 60 miles per hour took a leisurely 10 seconds. But nobody bought the Skyliner for its on-road performance. The only performance most buyers were interested in was the one they could demonstrate in their own driveway. By flicking a switch they could activate 10 power relays, 10 limit switches, four lock motors, three drive motors, and eight circuit breakers all attached with a staggering 610 feet of electrical wire. This is what made that big steel top vanish into the outsized, rear-hinged trunk or come back out again. Ridiculously small cargo spaceAs befitting the top of the Ford line, the Fairlane 500 Skyliner was well-finished inside with luxurious Amazingly, 20,766 souls purchased 1957 Skyliners, considerably more than purchased 1957 Corvettes. Perhaps on the strength of the publicity generated by the Skyliner, Ford beat Chevrolet for the sales leadership title that model year, despite the fact that '57 Chevies are now considered prized possessions, while most collectors look askance at the '57 Fords. The exception to that rule is the Skyliner, which has gained a significant cult following. For the next model year, the Skyliner was revised with quad headlights, the big new-wave feature of 1958, but its styling was arguably less appealing than the '57. Apparently buyers thought so, because sales dropped to just 14,713. More styling tweaks and an even more awkward name were the big changes for 1959. The car was called the Ford Fairlane 500 Galaxie Skyliner, but even with more names for the money sales fell yet again to 12,915. By that time Ford execs were convinced the genie was out of the bottle as far as the Skyliner was concerned, so they pulled the plug on the expensive-to-build wonder. And so, in three short years the Skyliner retractable hardtop had run its course, proving yet again the wisdom of the old saying, just because you can do something, doesn't mean you should do something. But still, as the inspiration of countless school boy dreams, the Ford Skyliner reverberates through the decades as an example of American ingenuity taken to its illogical extreme. World's Top Classic Cars on UsedCars.biz
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