#1961 thunderbird driver
The Thunderbird had as an option in 1961 and was standard in 19 with a swing away steering wheel where the entire steering column swung toward the center console making it easier for the driver to enter or exit out of Thunderbird. Leather seats were on the option list along with a lot of other luxury options. Bucket seats were standard and so was a beautiful sculpted center console which complimented the great looking dash design and layout. Overall the Thunderbird had an ultra modern design theme which also included the interior. It was the Thunderbird Landau that made popular the vinyl top car option. The Landau coupe was standard with a very upscale looking vinyl top. The Roadster also didn’t have Thunderbird’s standard rear fender skirts which opened up the rear wheel wheels to give the Thunderbird a sports car look. The Roadster was standard with sporty Kelsey-Hayes wheels, and a few other additions. The roadster was a tribute to the 2-seat 1955-1957 Ford Thunderbird. The Sport Roadster added a fiberglass tonneau cover over the area where the backseats normally resided to convert the Thunderbird into a 2-seat sports car. Starting in 1962 a 2-door Sport Roadster and a 2-door Landau coupe were added to the Thunderbird lineup. The 1961-1963 Thunderbird was available in the following body styles: 2-door hardtop coupe and 2-door convertible.
It was also a very popular car among celebrities, corporate executives, and even sports stars. The 1961-1963 Thunderbird was the in car to own especially in Southern California, owning one was a way to show others you were somebody special. As a comparison the 1964 1/2 Mustang only had a base price of $2,368. The 1961-1963 Thunderbird was out of reach for most young buyers since its base price started out at $4,170-4,445 and if loaded with options it was well over $5,000. It was the Thunderbird’s heavy weight kept the Thunderbird from being a performance car. It was the perfect upscale sporty car to cruise around town or drive on the highway. This gave the Thunderbird a nice luxury car ride and an overall feel that it floated on air especially on the highway. It had plenty of engine power under the hood but it was a medium-sized car with a heavy curb weight of around 4,200 lbs which at the time was what a much larger full-size car weighed. It wasn’t a performance car and it wasn’t the typical conventional luxury car, it was something in between.
The 1961-1963 Thunderbird didn’t fit into any of the different automotive classifications at the time.
#1961 thunderbird windows
The 1961 Thunderbird along with the 1961 Lincoln Continental were the first passenger cars to have curved side windows which added to the Thunderbird’s modern streamlined look. The Thunderbird would not get an exterior redesign until the 1964 model year. It was such a great looking design that Ford only made very slight exterior trim changes for 19. Ironically if Ford had used the 1961-1963 Thunderbird on the NASCAR racing circuit back in the day, it would have dominated with its superior aerodynamics when compared to most squarish cars of its day. The Thunderbird had a low stance and its aerodynamic streamlined front end with 4 round headlights gave the impression it was made for high speed racing. The Thunderbird’s perfectly shaped round rear taillights personified the jet age. It had very subtle tail fins that were part of the stylish upper body panel crease on each side of the car that started from the front-end and ended right above the rear taillight area. The Thunderbird instead had a streamlined space age look with aerodynamic curved body panels. Most cars by 1961 were starting to phase out tall tail fins and move to an overall more squarish exterior design. The 1961 Thunderbird had artistic futuristic styling that was ahead of its time. However Ford engineers took styling to the next level for the 1961 model year when the third generation of the Ford Thunderbird was released. The Thunderbird was always on the leading edge of styling.
It started off for the 1955 model year as a sporty 2-seat car that competed with the Chevrolet Corvette and by the late-1950s had evolved into a sporty car with seating for four. Ford’s crown jewel car of the 1950s was the Thunderbird or sometimes called T-bird.