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Ford Taunus P4

Ford Taunus 12M
Ford Taunus P4 12m BW 1.JPG
Overview
Manufacturer Ford Germany
Also called Ford Taunus P4
“Ford Cardinal“
Production 1962–1966
Assembly Cologne-Niehl, Germany
Genk, Belgium
Body and chassis
Class Small family car (C)
Body style 2-door or 4-door saloon
3-door “Kombi” estate car
2-door coupé
3-door sedan delivery
2-door coach-built () cabriolet
Powertrain
Engine 1183 cc V4 cylinder water-cooled
1498 cc V4 cylinder water-cooled
Transmission 4-speed all-synchromesh manual with column-mounted gear change lever
Dimensions
Wheelbase 2,527 mm (99.5 in)
Length 4,248 mm (167.2 in)
Width 1,594 mm (62.8 in)
Height 1,458 mm (57.4 in)
Curb weight 860–870 kg (1,896–1,918 lb)
Chronology
Predecessor Ford Taunus 12M P1
Successor Ford (Taunus) 12M/15M P6

The Ford Taunus 12 M is a small family car that was produced by Ford Germany between September 1962 and August 1966.

The Taunus 12M name had been used for the car’s predecessor and it would apply also to subsequent Ford models which is why the 12M introduced in 1962 is usually identified, in retrospect, as the Ford Taunus P4. It was the fourth newly designed German Ford to be launched after the war and for this reason it was from inception known within the company as Ford Project 4 (P4) or the Ford Taunus P4.

More unusually, the car was originally designed not for production in Germany but to be produced in North America and sold as the Ford Cardinal, a home-grown competitor for the Volkswagen. A last minute change of strategy saw the US production plans cancelled, and in 1960 Ford of Germany received a fully developed modern new design which they adapted for German conditions in order to replace their own by now badly outdated Ford Taunus P1.

The 1952 Ford Taunus had received a stylish new body, but its engine was little changed from the (originally British designed) unit fitted in 1935 to the Ford Eifel and other underpinnings, including its rear axle and suspension, were little changed from those of the 1939 Ford Taunus G93A. By contrast, the P4, originally designed for large scale manufacture in North America, was technically innovative, featuring a newly developed compact V4 engine which would provide the basis for engines designed and produced by Ford of Germany for twenty years. The Taunus P4 was also a front-wheel drive design at a time when other German auto-makers were still avoiding what was then seen as an unnecessarily complicated lay-out.

The decision, taken only after the new model had been prepared for production, not to build the Ford Cardinal in North America was the result of a review of “marketing opportunities” in the US market. In 1960 a prototype was delivered to Ford in Cologne. The form of the model that emerged from the production line at Koeln-Niehl two years later would be unchanged. The single all-red rear light cluster was seen as a tell-tale sign of the car’s US provenance at a time when independent (from brake lights) amber direction indicators were increasingly common on European cars. The dished steering wheel was another feature not normally found in European designs of the time.


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Wikipedia

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