69 mercury cyclone GT (value)
#1
Junior Member
SHOW GUEST
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 5
69 mercury cyclone GT (value)
i have 1969 mercury cyclone GT 390 automatic all original. has been sitting for years still runs paint is faded, interior is all there but rough (repairable)
it has fred jones signature on rear hatch. has blue and white dan gurney paint, hood scoop, and spoiler. i'm not really a ford guy and not finding a lot of information on this car. i do know the car is rare. if any has any idea what this car is worth or information i would appreciate it.
it has fred jones signature on rear hatch. has blue and white dan gurney paint, hood scoop, and spoiler. i'm not really a ford guy and not finding a lot of information on this car. i do know the car is rare. if any has any idea what this car is worth or information i would appreciate it.
#6
Cyclone
There were two styles of the limited cyclones. One blue and one red. It is a very collectible car.
Here is some info I found:
Description:
The Mercury Cyclone was the sister car to Ford's Torino. In 1969, Ford and Mercury released special "long-nose" versions of these cars to compete on the high banks of NASCAR (thus starting the famous Aero-Wars of the late '60s). The long-nose Torino was called the Talladega, while the Cyclone actually had two long-nose models: the Dan Gurney Special and the Cale Yarborough Special. The blue Gurney cars were intended for the east coast and the red Yarborough cars for the west but a great marketing strategy had Ford sending the cars to opposite coasts. Although originally claimed production numbers topped 500, only 353 cars actually exist because of an alleged slight of hand on behalf of Ford and Mercury.
In 1969, NASCAR required that a minimum of 500 cars be constructed to be eligible to race. It is said that due to the time required to build these special beauties, Ford was forced to mix a number of standard cyclones painted the same as these rare cyclone’s into a large parking area when NASCAR completed a visual count of the cars to verify that the minimum of 500 had actually been completed!
Here is some info I found:
Description:
The Mercury Cyclone was the sister car to Ford's Torino. In 1969, Ford and Mercury released special "long-nose" versions of these cars to compete on the high banks of NASCAR (thus starting the famous Aero-Wars of the late '60s). The long-nose Torino was called the Talladega, while the Cyclone actually had two long-nose models: the Dan Gurney Special and the Cale Yarborough Special. The blue Gurney cars were intended for the east coast and the red Yarborough cars for the west but a great marketing strategy had Ford sending the cars to opposite coasts. Although originally claimed production numbers topped 500, only 353 cars actually exist because of an alleged slight of hand on behalf of Ford and Mercury.
In 1969, NASCAR required that a minimum of 500 cars be constructed to be eligible to race. It is said that due to the time required to build these special beauties, Ford was forced to mix a number of standard cyclones painted the same as these rare cyclone’s into a large parking area when NASCAR completed a visual count of the cars to verify that the minimum of 500 had actually been completed!
#8
that's pretty cool. My Grandfather was the (Daniels) Lincoln Mercury sponsor for Bill Stroppe in 1963 until ?? with a Mercury Marauder. This was when Augusta, Ga had a NASCAR track. Boy were they stupid when they didn't want to build a new facility! But my dad drag raced a 69 Cyclone just like yours for a long time. wished a million times he didn't sell it. Sorry to hijack your thread, but the car brings back some good memories of my grandfather and my dads racing years!
#9
Administrator
RACING JUNKIE
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Maine,USA
Posts: 1,204
Originally Posted by jussmedley
how do you post pics?
http://forums.racingjunk.com/viewtopic.php?t=2876
__________________
There Is 1 Thing Better Than Cubic Inches,,,More Of Them
There Is 1 Thing Better Than Cubic Inches,,,More Of Them