2008
07.17

Good afternoon everyone, Big_Blocker here for the newest installment of Muscle Car of the Week. In recent weeks I have noticed that I have been giving a lot of attention to General Motors and MOPAR muscle cars, but what about those Blue Oval guys? Not being much of a Ford fan myself, I do appreciate what Ford brought to the table in the muscle car age and have decided to feature one of my favorite Ford’s this week: the 1969 Ford Fairlane Torino Cobra. Hit the jump to read more about this budget racer powered by the beefy 428 cubic inch Cobra Jet V8.

The Fairlane has a long history, dating back to the mid-1950’s if you can believe that, and was Ford’s main mid-size car for some time. However, with the introduction of the GTO in 1964 and the beginning of the muscle car wars, Ford began beefing up the car. Ford introduced bigger and more powerful V8’s as the decade wore on which ranged from 390 cubes all the way up to the famous 427 Side-Oilers and 428 Cobra Jets. The Fairlane was restyled in 1968 and performance packages were available by simply checking off appropriate options at the dealership. As was a common theme in the late 1960’s, the Fairlane was fitted with a sportier fastback roof design and a recessed grill. The Torino line was added as a no-frills version of the preexisting GT package and featured bucket seats, badging, decal package and a special lighting package.

For the 1969 model year, Ford rolled out the Torino Cobra package which was less decorated than the sporty GT package but did feature the trademark snake emblem that Ford still uses on the new Shelby GT 500 KR. The 428 Cobra Jet that came standard was factory rated by Ford at 335 horsepower but in reality put out around 400. Automakers were notorious for rating engines well below their true output due to rising insurance premiums that would eventually spell disaster for the muscle car era. Torque output was a staggering 440 lb feet at 3400 rpm, good for hard launches especially if equipped with the gas eating 4:30-1 gears in the rear end. With all the performance goodies the Torino Cobra hustled from zero to sixty in 5.5 seconds and flew down the quarter mile in 14.4 at just over 100 miles per hour. Also included in the Cobra package were bucket seats, wider tires and a stiffer suspension.

Hope you enjoyed a look at a lesser known muscle car, be sure to catch next week’s installment when we take a look at a car that peaked the muscle car era…can anyone say Hemi? This is Big_Blocker signing off.

9 comments so far

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  1. A truly awsome car, one of which I owned back in 1970 when I was in high school. Have owned many muscle cars through the years, but the best of times were the days with my 428 SCJ Fairlane Cobra. Thanks for the memories

  2. hi.i am looking for a nice 69 torino formal roof,a/t,p/s car.

    thanks

    • I have one with 94.000 orignal miles completly restored custom. custom wheels and interior custom . Paint spedex candy apple red. It has won tropheys in car shows.

      • I have one that needs restored. Live in Los Angeles area. Can you give me an idea of what it cost you to restore? Did you do it all at once, or over a long period of time? If you live in area, do you know of any restorers in area. Has less than 60,000 miles on it and would love to get it up and running again. Thanks for any info.

        • It cost about eleven thousand. It took me about 2 years to do. A year to track the parts and the other year putting it together. I lived in Salt Lake at the time. I lived in St George Utah. I had suthelands do the body work and paint it and I had the bumpers taken off and rechromed and another company did the interior. Rags to Riches. It was about four thousand for the paint and body and about 3200.00 on the interior and all the other misc things I did to it like the wheels and mechanics and all that. I really don:t know any restorers. That was back in 1996 when I had all that done. I hope you find some one. Karen

  3. I’m familiar with the 69 cobrajet. I used to run a mildley modify 69 roadrunner , and even than i could not out run one of those things. I was realy impress with them

  4. I bought a new 67 GTA Fairlane with the 390 engine. It was fun to drive with a lot of torque. It was black and red interior. In those days if you got 40,000 miles on one it was time to buy another. So I ordered what I thought was one of a few of the new Mach One’s. Wromg!!! There was a million of us out there.

  5. A friend had one of these in high school. With the c-6, punch it at 60mph and the front would pop up and flat out scat. I had a GTX, and it was very similar when the 440 kicked in at that speed.

  6. I had a 69 hardtop Cobra, (thats the only identifer that was on the cars). It was puchased new from the son of Cooper Ford dealership in Clinton S.C. It was a drag pack car with a heater,am radio,bench seat colum shift. No power steering,power brakes,no air… well you get the picture. It had 428SCJ,C6, and 430 nodular detriot locker. It was whicked. I sold it to buy a 69 fast back, 428SCJ, 4 speed,drag pack,p. steering,p. brakes. great car but no where as fast as the hardtop.both cars had under 60k miles we I got them in 76,78 respectively.still my favorites. I have a 69 hardtop gt, and a 69 fasteback gt.now.