1954 Ford TV Commercials

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2015
  • Advertisements for 1954 Ford cars

Комментарии • 495

  • @briancoogan4660
    @briancoogan4660 4 года назад +34

    As a 7 year old, I excitedly recall the day my proud parents took delivery of a brand new blue 1954 Zephyr from the local GM Jackson Ford dealership in Launceston Tasmania. Back then, most Fords in Australia were imported from England in crates for local assembly and distribution. The new car smell, especially the red leather seats, has remained with me to this day. Cherished memories indeed.

    • @timfordfalconxf7714
      @timfordfalconxf7714 4 месяца назад

      Hood to see a fellow Aussie here. As a 27 year old. I grew up with XF. I remember and lust over a Mk1 Zephyr or Pilot

  • @19553129
    @19553129 5 лет назад +47

    I really love the way they explained the engineering features in these ads. Now they blast you with entertainment distractions.

    • @michaelmartinez1345
      @michaelmartinez1345 2 года назад +1

      @Jerry Olson , Back then , many people previously worked in factory assembly lines... Women and Young adults as well as older people did that assembly line work for the previous War Effort... These people that became buyers of cars & trucks were very astute with how things worked and understood the mechanical importance of good basic designs and bright engineering... The commercials and info-mercials reflect this.... This is one of the reasons that these people became to be known as the 'Greatest Generation'....

    • @aqvamarek5316
      @aqvamarek5316 2 года назад +4

      Education were better in America during that time and before, so the audiance actually understand the topic and details. Today, you get entertainment, so that people do not get confused and think about there education.

    • @tommurphy4307
      @tommurphy4307 2 года назад

      @@aqvamarek5316 wow.

  • @littlegp18
    @littlegp18 2 года назад +18

    Amazing video. 2 ford family. One could get a job, raise a family, the husband works while the wife stays home with the kids and runs errands, affords 2 new Fords, those were the days...

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад +3

      And if the wife DID work, and both were UNION MEMBERS, they were almost rich!

    • @ronnieblack7726
      @ronnieblack7726 2 года назад +1

      Taxes were too high for both to work. Baby care extra clothes extra travel. They made less

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад

      @@ronnieblack7726 When bring home more money, it is more, regardless of the taxes. $5.00 is more than $2.00.

    • @ms.annthrope415
      @ms.annthrope415 2 года назад +1

      Most families could only afford 1 car, 1 TV that everyone crowded around, tyoical annual pay was perhaps $7,000.

    • @angelitavaldellon7600
      @angelitavaldellon7600 2 года назад +1

      @@ms.annthrope415 But more and more people were becoming 2 car families, thanks to the Labor Movement.

  • @jackkreighbaum783
    @jackkreighbaum783 3 года назад +10

    I had a '54 Ford 4-door many years ago and had installed a '57 engine from a junkyard. Served me well for several years.

  • @mr.goatman4024
    @mr.goatman4024 3 года назад +9

    Have my father's 1954 Ford Mercury Monterey, with Merc -o- matic. Bittersweet orange, with white roof. My favorite car and always will be. So many good memories

  • @supersami7748
    @supersami7748 2 года назад +10

    I love these old commercials as it’s explained they had a high compression engine. If I remember correctly the 239 was around 7.5:1, which in 1954 was a big upgrade.

  • @peterbrook329
    @peterbrook329 2 года назад +7

    My first car was a 1954 Ford, loved it.

    • @tedwalker1370
      @tedwalker1370 8 месяцев назад

      My first car was a 1954 Ford also. wish I still had it.

  • @franklinnorth7708
    @franklinnorth7708 10 месяцев назад +1

    Grandpa bought a 54 Ford Wagon, in Socal, it was modified with Weiand Heads on the 292 V8. That was my Surf Wagon in the 60's.

  • @utah133
    @utah133 7 лет назад +68

    My grandpa got a 1954 Ford. He didn't trust the new tubeless tires, though. He had tubes installed right off. He was also the first guy in our remote rocky mountain valley to get a TV. It had a towering antenna, but was still snowy. We picked up one channel, sort of. Idaho Falls. I loved watching Lone Ranger, Superman and Sky King!

    • @USCG.Brennan
      @USCG.Brennan 5 лет назад +5

      Don't forget Fury and RinTinTin!! ;-)

    • @torque3022
      @torque3022 3 года назад +1

      Reach for Nabisco!

    • @wesleynash2598
      @wesleynash2598 2 года назад +4

      I have a 54 four door sedan factory v8 car and AC

    • @auggie803
      @auggie803 2 года назад +3

      -If you run over a nail with a tire with a tube in it you Will have a flat tire in a few seconds. Run over a nail with a tubeless tire The nail will act as a plug and will not go flat or just have a very slow leak That will at lease hold you over till you get to a service station.----Old gramps just can't figure this out He is to set in his old ways. Like talking to a brick wall So you just as well say nothing.

    • @michaelchapman4955
      @michaelchapman4955 Год назад +1

      Superman was filmed in part around the corner from My Grandparents' LA, Hollywood N Bronson Ave home at 'RKO Gower Pictures on der 40 acre backlot where many classic movies and TV series were filmed... & I rarely missed an episode of Superman on KTTV Ch 11 in LA

  • @emptynester7985
    @emptynester7985 7 лет назад +30

    A relative owned one from 1955 - 1968. A basic 4 door sedan 6, manual trans, radio & that was it. He drove that car on a lot of road trips across the country, very reliable, reasonably good fuel economy for the day. I always thought that the speedometer was so cool with it's heads up design. That speedometer was on the '55 T-Bird too.

    • @drpoundsign
      @drpoundsign 4 года назад +2

      I thought they already had mostly automatics???

    • @aaronwilliams6989
      @aaronwilliams6989 3 года назад +4

      @@drpoundsign Those models offered both transmissions

    • @TheOzthewiz
      @TheOzthewiz 3 года назад +3

      @@drpoundsign MANY folks bought 6 cyl cars with 3-speed MANUAL transmissions1

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 3 года назад

      And other 55 Fords too!

    • @tommurphy4307
      @tommurphy4307 2 года назад

      all death traps compared to today's vehicles....

  • @textech4056
    @textech4056 3 года назад +4

    Drove one from LA to Houston in 72, through the desert. That car was so hot I could not keep my hand on the dash. That old Ford purred right on past a Sedan Deville with hood up and Steam blowing.

  • @williamdavis8161
    @williamdavis8161 Год назад +1

    Brings back memories of a family trip to Florida in my dad's 54 Ranch wagon. Rode a lot of miles in the rear facing 3rd seat.

  • @buddyroeginocchio9105
    @buddyroeginocchio9105 6 лет назад +25

    I'm sold! Going out to buy a 1954 Ford before dinner.
    Actually, manufacturers in the 1950's did a more thorough job explaining engineering features than we see today. Economics of ownership is also explained in detail.
    Ford's claims, of course, can be argued well by their competition. But the details of these commercials seem to be more informative than anything offered today.
    Just as a historical perspective, these ads are (mostly) for 1954 Fords. One of the top features was power steering, something we take for granted today as a standard feature. Chrysler was the first to offer power steering in 1951, it worked fine but was an old design where the patent had expired. Buick and Cadillac offered the most advanced patented power steering design in 1952 and by 1954 Ford is selling it as a low price option. A lot of lug nuts have rolled under the bridge since then but it was an exciting time of technical and novelty competition. Ah to be young again in 1954.

    • @machobunny1
      @machobunny1 6 лет назад +2

      I was going to say exactly the same thing. Thanks.

    • @radioguy1620
      @radioguy1620 6 лет назад +6

      there is a pretty good one on the 64 merc comet, even explains why moly filled top rings were good, never knew why , the moly metal in the ring retains oil , helping of course with wear and friction

    • @radioguy1620
      @radioguy1620 6 лет назад +3

      its actually a slide show on 65 Comet features

    • @buddyroeginocchio9105
      @buddyroeginocchio9105 6 лет назад +2

      Quite right. It was a wonderful time to mature through. Our suppliers in those days felt it important to detail technical advantages. In decades since the approach was been to assume the viewer is technologically ignorant.

    • @buddyroeginocchio9105
      @buddyroeginocchio9105 6 лет назад +1

      Nonsense, this presentation is nowhere near 1965

  • @ManiaMusicChannel
    @ManiaMusicChannel 2 года назад +5

    She parallel parked and no mirrors, she's a beast

  • @jimmarshall8926
    @jimmarshall8926 6 лет назад +14

    My Dad had a new 54 Ford Customline 2 dr sedan that he let me use when I started driving. It had the I Block 6 and Fordomatic.

  • @streetkingsoftexas2202
    @streetkingsoftexas2202 6 лет назад +72

    Cars were so beautiful back then

    • @autobug2
      @autobug2 4 года назад +3

      Roomy, smooth ride, nice features, quite, colorful, and fantastic styling.

    • @CrossOfBayonne
      @CrossOfBayonne 4 года назад +4

      @@autobug2 The 50's was basically the future and cars reflected this with aesthetic being that of a thousand years and even now still hold up in looks.

    • @larryretana1976
      @larryretana1976 4 года назад +2

      ture

    • @AR-zq9hq
      @AR-zq9hq 3 года назад +1

      Handling and safety though...

    • @larryretana1976
      @larryretana1976 3 года назад +3

      @Kenny Smith shut the fuck up

  • @TPOrchestra
    @TPOrchestra 6 лет назад +6

    Our family had a '54 Ford.when I was about eight. I remember that dashboard with the clear speedometer dome as if it were yesterday. It was an used driver training car with a extra brake pedal on the passenger side. It was a little dangerous because we kids sometimes had our feet resting under it and could interfere with the braking.

  • @lloydc3742
    @lloydc3742 3 года назад +5

    My dad bought a brand new Y block 1954 Ford. He drove it from San Angelo, Texas to Kansas City and the engine burnt up. Ford refused to fix it. Came out later that the first year top end lubrication channels in the heads and block were too small and with non-detergent oil at the time they quickly plugged up. My dad became a lifelong Ford hater. His next car was a V8 Chevrolet and he never looked back. The Y block lubrication eventually got fixed and hot rodders liked this engine because it sat low.

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад

      It is easy to fix that problem with the early Y block. Just use a later-model camshaft with a grooved center journal, or have a groove machined in an earlier one.

  • @michaelmartinez1345
    @michaelmartinez1345 4 года назад +8

    The ball-joints were a great innovation... They became more reliable, when the ball joint that carried the weight of that part of the car (usually the lower) were positively loaded, rather than negatively loaded... The positively loaded ball-joints were the ones that pressed the ball into the socket (lower control arm above the steering knuckle fitting) vs. The negatively loaded ball joint, that pulled the ball, in it's socket (lower control arm below the steering knuckle fitting)... The negatively loaded ball joints tended to pull out of the socket when they became worn...This caused a sudden complete failure of the suspension support, on that front wheel, which often caused catastrophic accidents...

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад +2

      I always felt that king pins were safer and more durable.

    • @michaelmartinez1345
      @michaelmartinez1345 2 года назад +2

      @@michaelbenardo5695 Yes, kingpins are very durable, which explains WHY they are still used in heavy trucks and heavy off-highway construction equipment... But for cars & light trucks, un-equal length control arms and ball joints, and McPherson Strut type of suspension systems work the best... They are much more responsive and give smooth-controlable handling...

    • @msquaretheoriginal
      @msquaretheoriginal Год назад

      @@michaelbenardo5695 but the front ends shook like crazy when they wore out, which was faster than with ball joints, and were much more difficult to repair. Ball joints improved ride and handling because they could move in any direction to absorb bumps.

  • @stayblessedalways
    @stayblessedalways 5 лет назад +8

    America's R & D was top notch back then. Truly fabulous.

    • @tomsvenkesen2476
      @tomsvenkesen2476 5 лет назад +3

      Madhav Prasad yes its is. I em from Norway . I have driven that 1954 Ford with power seats and power steering, and I can tell you with normal driving is better than new car today. suspensjon is more soft than new Cars, because new Cars is so wery stif not confortable. For me I dont like new Cars today. prefer old Cars.

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад +1

      @@tomsvenkesen2476 Amen, amen, amen! Today's cars are all in the Japanoid mold, so they act just like Japanese cars - rough ride, small and cramped, easily rusted, etc.

    • @jamesrecknor6752
      @jamesrecknor6752 Год назад

      @@michaelbenardo5695 And have the silly styled, angry Samurai eyes headlights.

    • @msquaretheoriginal
      @msquaretheoriginal Год назад

      @@michaelbenardo5695 easily rusted? After five years in the Northeast, you could put your foot through the floor of one of these 1954 Fords. Modern cars don't rust through at all except maybe in Canada where they salt the roads almost year round.

  • @EddieMillerStudios
    @EddieMillerStudios 5 лет назад +8

    I have a hubcap from a 1954 Ford. My grandpa gave it to me to hang in my room.

  • @fido139
    @fido139 7 лет назад +11

    I had 1956, I LOVED it!!

  • @FawleyJude
    @FawleyJude 4 года назад +6

    My grandmother had one of these, bright canary yellow. I really used to like it because it was kind of exotic, it was 10 years old and auto styling had moved on from the bulbous-looking cars of the mid-50s.

  • @pcno2832
    @pcno2832 2 года назад +2

    6:36 That's impressive. There are a lot of cars on the road today that don't have space-saver hinges in the trunk.

  • @nickk7769
    @nickk7769 7 лет назад +12

    I Love The 1954 Ford Car! I Also Love This 1950 Ford Style!

  • @djdon60
    @djdon60 6 лет назад +6

    I enjoyed the video, a lot; the accurate closed-captioning, even more!(I've hearing loss.) Thank-you.

  • @russellhancock9765
    @russellhancock9765 3 года назад +2

    My Grandpa drove a 1953 Custom that He bought used for years. It was a tough car. It was before Automatic Transmissions and Power steering. It was a still Great driving car. I learned how to drive a Straight Gear car without power steering or an Automatic Transmission.

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад

      53 Fords did indeed have optional Automatic Transmission and Power Steering.

  • @stephendavidbailey2743
    @stephendavidbailey2743 4 года назад +2

    I still remember this ad: Great, New, '55 Ford, Coming November 12! On the only TV station in Waco in 1954.

  • @jamesbarisitz4794
    @jamesbarisitz4794 2 года назад +1

    Love these old spots! Thanks. 👍

  • @shaggydogg3786
    @shaggydogg3786 5 лет назад +8

    Johnny gets the station wagon for dates?! Way to go mom and dad!

    • @kxp.1496
      @kxp.1496 4 года назад +2

      Jonny stained the seats again

    • @roadmaster720
      @roadmaster720 4 года назад +2

      johnny just knocked up his girl in the station wagon. now mom and dad's grandson is on the way and a shotgun wedding for johnny and his girl. johnny joins the army for a paycheck to support his new family. that's how it happened in 1954 with the old school rules back then.

    • @michaelmartinez1345
      @michaelmartinez1345 2 года назад

      @Shaggy Dogg, 😂And let me guess, Johnny's folks wondered why the footprints were on the ceiling and headliner after coming home from the Drive-In movies from the previous night!!! Right?😂

  • @guinness77100
    @guinness77100 4 года назад +6

    This was back in the days when manufacturers told you WHY their products worked. Nowdays it's all a sales pitch about how COOL you are to use their product. Ego doesn't keep you dry all day long people. Pride doesn't keep the bank account in the plus.

    • @michaelmartinez1345
      @michaelmartinez1345 2 года назад

      @ Guinness77100, Great observation!!! Even though the styling of the cars in the mid 50's to the early 70's was very good, the vehicles were usually extremely easy to work on, had decent reliability and easy to find parts for because of the high degree of interchangability of the parts between many models.... Wonderful vehicles, they were!!!

  • @eneidaparra3727
    @eneidaparra3727 3 года назад +5

    Esas son joyas sobre ruedas , que nunca mas se fabricaran, por eso amo los autos clasicos Americanos.

  • @ftjax
    @ftjax 3 года назад +5

    Wow a 2 Ford family....today I can't afford one

  • @adoreslaurel
    @adoreslaurel 4 года назад +3

    We got a Ford like that in '54 down under, probably a face lifted earlier model with a flat head engine. probably left over unsellable stuff in the USA. No ball joint suspension or OHV till the new Model in 55.

  • @2degreesos
    @2degreesos 8 месяцев назад

    What an incredible post. Thank you.

  • @createdeccentricities6620
    @createdeccentricities6620 3 года назад +3

    The Little Lady sure knows how to press buttons!

  • @williamg2552
    @williamg2552 5 лет назад +11

    14 DIFFERENT BODY STYLES !! And THAT'S just for FORD ALONE !!
    All we basically get TODAY are lousy 4-DOOR-SEDANS and SUV'S !!!
    Few Convertibles and coupes ...and NO 2 or 4 Door PILLARLESS HARDTOPS, STATION WAGONS , or OTHER VARIATIONS . Most cars today Only come in 5 Basic COLORS : BLACK, WHITE, RED, SILVER, and DARK GRAY !!! Back in the 50's & '60's ? 20 to 30 different color combinations...with even some 2 tone and 3 tone colors available ...and a wide variety of engines and interior choices !!
    And American Car Companies WONDER why cars AREN'T SELLING !!!

    • @WitchKing-Of-Angmar
      @WitchKing-Of-Angmar 2 года назад +1

      People don't deserve these automobiles they we had in the 1950's after all the harassment and shit they put on them out of pure jealously. Lousy people deserve hideous lousy computer appliance chip cars. How many goddamn lies I've heard about how their inefficient and unsafe and don't work and rust and can't drive faster than 50 or can't turn, falls apart after two years, bad manufacturing, slavery, racism, sexism, bad ideals...honestly it never ends, the things these kids come up with is so unrealistic to anything, but of course when they read the internet for all their questions, their biased and the modern platforms egotistical response will offer both negatives and false given information that they all believe wily nilly.

  • @radioguy1620
    @radioguy1620 6 лет назад +45

    I miss the old color combos in the interiors you could get , today most are grey , booorrring !!

    • @ericthememoriesman
      @ericthememoriesman 5 лет назад +11

      Amen! I also love the Chrome, the real chrome plate, not the plastic chrome.

    • @MazichMusic
      @MazichMusic 3 года назад +1

      Black interiors, too. I was looking at Honda Odysseys last fall and there are 4 or 5 interior colors. More than most companies.

  • @ahmedbaig7279
    @ahmedbaig7279 5 лет назад +3

    The cars were luxury and people who were enjoying high status has those cars. Gasoline was cheap and cars were heavy. The 1954 Ford was beautiful and stylish.

    • @mikecastellon4545
      @mikecastellon4545 4 года назад +1

      People with status never bought these cheap rattle traps . They bought Buick’s ,Lincoln’s , olds and Chrysler. Fords were for clerks, civil servants and truck drivers

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад

      Fords, Chevys, and Plymouths were in no way a luxury. They were cars for the common man.

  • @georgeharris7181
    @georgeharris7181 2 года назад +3

    Wish ford would bring back those old school round tail lights I thought those were cool

  • @Tropia
    @Tropia 4 года назад +10

    Loved them 54' spring seats until I got a hemorrhoid, then I only loved Preparation H.

  • @captlarry-3525
    @captlarry-3525 7 лет назад +7

    if you are a gear head... you will find some interesting technical explanations here.Unfortunately, 1954 was the first year for the Overhead Valve V8... which had lubrication problems in the valve train. the cure was running an external oil line to the rocker boxes, to provide more oil. One has to wonder if the 52 or 53 which had the same body and transmissions, isn't a better bet.. that engine having benefited from continuous development since 1932 ? These certainly were comfortable and well made cars, and in the hard top and convertible models.. pretty good looking compared to the other cars of 1952-54. Today many of us morn the passing of the station wagon.

    • @Disques13Swing
      @Disques13Swing 6 лет назад +1

      The entire Y Block family had the lubrication problem; 239-256-272-292-312 engines. One of the main reason for the problem was the oil passages at the top of the engine were too small. The crankshaft got all the oil it needed but the valve gear ended up starving over time, something not helped by the lower quality oils of the time. The Lincoln Y Block did not have this problem. The correction you mentioned was an aftermarket solution and Ford ever really fixed the problem at the factory even though the Y Block stayed in production until 1964 in the USA.

    • @oldgysgt
      @oldgysgt 6 лет назад

      We made a lot of money installing rocker arm oilers on "Y" block Fords in my father's garage. We also made money adjusting the valve tappets because they were manually adjusted, and not hydraulic like on GM cars. If they weren't adjusted every few months, the engine sounded like a Jack Ass in a tin barn. That "Y" block 8 was the worst thing Ford ever invented.

    • @lorenreece1665
      @lorenreece1665 5 лет назад +2

      My first car was a 4 year old 1949 Ford V8 Flathead. Being a teenager, i beat the crap out of it and that motor didn't fail me in any way. Yes, they were built FORD TOUGH !!

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад

      Actually, you don't need external oilers. Just replace the cam with a later one with a grooved center journal, or have a machinist groove yours, and plug that oil tube that dumps some of the oil out so that it drains through the return holes. That way, the oil supply to the rockers will be continuous instead of intermittant.

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад

      @@oldgysgt Many ChryCo engines also had solid lifters, not just Ford engines.

  • @huntercarl8961
    @huntercarl8961 2 года назад +1

    pretty neat how these old commercials actually show the new mechanical improvements and have cut in half models or stripped the cars instead of just showing new interior features

    • @iraqiimmigrant2908
      @iraqiimmigrant2908 Год назад

      A sign that their civilization must have appealed more to intelligence and less to emotion today’s civilization?

  • @gildariosenabarreto3898
    @gildariosenabarreto3898 4 года назад +6

    Muito bom o vídeo! Bem feito pra época.

  • @MikeVieira
    @MikeVieira 7 месяцев назад

    I love how they always say "...in it's field." haha!

  • @TPOrchestra
    @TPOrchestra 5 лет назад +3

    (13:01) Bill Kennedy, narrator of the famous Superman introduction ("Faster than a speeding bullet!") and Detroit movie host for over twenty-five years.

  • @fairfaxcat1312
    @fairfaxcat1312 4 года назад +3

    Here we have a video documentary of the Ford Motor Company’s planning efforts to sell new automobiles to the public. Ford is one of the “Big Three.” The big three is group of the three largest traditionally US based automakers. Ford is named after Henry Ford who is generally credited for implementing the assembly line production method which made possible delivery of large numbers of automobiles at a relatively affordable price.

  • @robinj.9329
    @robinj.9329 Год назад

    In 1962 my entire family migrated from New England to South California. We drove in 2 cars and the trip too over 9 days. One car was a 1947 Chrysler. A huge, powerful Luxury car in every sense. The second car was a 1955 Ford sedan. The Chrysler made the trip without so much as a hick-up. But that 7 year old Ford kept breaking down! Thus the nearly 10 days for what should have been a 5 day trip!
    Not that I've got anything against Fords, no. I've driven many of them. But, my Uncle may just have had the only "Lemon" to leave the plant that year!
    😉

  • @SammyM00782
    @SammyM00782 5 лет назад +32

    14 different body styles.......14! You can barely get 3 now, and you'll pay 40k minimum. Sad thing is, I swear these guys put in WAY more engineering than they do today. It was a race for advancement back then, now it's a race to replacement.

    • @JackF99
      @JackF99 3 года назад +6

      I would say in the '50's they put way more into "styling" than they did engineering. Seems like underneath the skin cars had hardly progressed from the late 1930's to the late '50's.

    • @21stcenturyfossil7
      @21stcenturyfossil7 3 года назад

      Fewer body styles but more cars, very different cars, all at the same dealer.

    • @markdraper3469
      @markdraper3469 3 года назад +1

      @@JackF99 Stretch that out to the 80's

    • @WitchKing-Of-Angmar
      @WitchKing-Of-Angmar 2 года назад

      @@21stcenturyfossil7 17 body styles, 6 different companies at the same dealer in-company, 20 colors including the middle price choices and high price (20$-40$). Sometimes 25 for the special series that they generously sometimes applied to other models such as the Iridescent Dark red of a Lincoln, onto a Ford coupe/sedan. Now I'm not done yet modern consumer, because there was as well different spoke wires, and hubcaps, beautifully designed tires that worked wonders in the snow compared to now ( why do you think tires were thin for 100 years until the 2000s) with imperial beauties in its design. Choice of a black wall or white wall. Interior color choices all up to you, but not just that..also a lost trait: interior design. Spaceship triangles lining the seating all in iridescent cape blue, with a dark satin midnight blue under striped pattern. Meticulous cloth and material picking. Fibreglass dashboard, calm mellow lighting, a beauty of pure calm quietness as soon as one enters the automobile. And room, handling why even manual steering felt just like modern days power steering while back in say 1950, $100 dollars extra and you could get a offered power steering put into your motor vehicle which made turning as tender as cutting a rich steak, infact my mother would pinky drive at 40 miles per hour when she would cruise on the roadway. They are superior in almost every way, and you fools have been reviewing them 70 years after their debut hahaha.

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад

      @@JackF99 From the late 30s to the EARLY 50s, that was true of many, but soon, engineering took off, so that by the late 50s, early 50s cars seemed ancient by comparison.

  • @jamnee
    @jamnee 2 года назад +6

    For the 1954 Ford, having power steering, power brakes and an automatic transmission was a big deal, especially in a regular car! Plus the first year of the overhead valve engine. Also the instrument panel was new. Best year of the 1952-54 Ford series.

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад

      Actually, the 54 was more a prototype for the 55, rather than a continuation of the 52 - 53, despite the carryover styling.

  • @billymule961
    @billymule961 Год назад

    Yea, I'm from Texas too, and I never go anywhere without my trusty branding iron. Whether I'm leaning against my fence, or pointing out the insignia on my car, my branding iron never leaves my side. I don't leave home without it.

  • @RS-pe5hp
    @RS-pe5hp 3 года назад +1

    Just after I finnish my time machine, first stop will be 1954 to buy atleast 3 Fords :D ....

  • @baronoflivonia.3512
    @baronoflivonia.3512 5 лет назад +3

    I see some of these commercials were filmed in new subdivisions in north west Detroit. Man has area changed,

  • @mikewasfaret9563
    @mikewasfaret9563 4 года назад

    My first vehicle was a 56 Ford PU with the 292 Y block. Ran very smooth, but was a gutless wonder. I could leave a black patch on the road...in reverse.

  • @hanschenk2708
    @hanschenk2708 8 лет назад +9

    GREAT VIDEO ONE OF THE BEST

  • @michaelchapman4955
    @michaelchapman4955 Год назад

    My LA Dad bought a 53 Ford Brand New from an LA Dealership for about $2500. 'Was a Nice Ride...

  • @arnaldosandoval453
    @arnaldosandoval453 5 лет назад +2

    When automobile manufactures invested good money in advertising their products, highlighting their features, and pushing for two cars families, when only one of them was the bread winner.
    Compare them with today's cars, most of them are 4 wheels boxes, similar interiors and zero advertisement.

  • @ontarioguy2738
    @ontarioguy2738 5 лет назад +7

    I was built in 54!

  • @Johnny53kgb-nsa
    @Johnny53kgb-nsa Год назад

    My brother had a 1953 Chevy, and my Mom had a 1957 Ford, black/white.

  • @srtjhsrzdfhkgdf9961
    @srtjhsrzdfhkgdf9961 2 года назад

    どの車もカッチョイイですね。後ろに出たテールライトが好きです

  • @burtvincent1278
    @burtvincent1278 4 года назад +2

    I have a 1954 ford custom line coupe waiting for restoration or more likely a conversion to a classical old school gasser.

  • @lancelotlink3907
    @lancelotlink3907 3 года назад +1

    Dad had a early 50s Ford 2 door. I remember the passenger door use to swing open all by itself on left turns.

    • @glennso47
      @glennso47 2 года назад

      My dad had a Plymouth that did that. It was a car on loan for a few days while his Chevy was in the shop.

    • @lancelotlink3907
      @lancelotlink3907 2 года назад

      @@glennso47 Yeah those cars were not the safest compared to todays cars. I remember sitting next to the back window in a 63 chevy station-wagon and hitting the metal dash board when mom hit the brakes. I really like how they explained new features in their commercials though.

  • @istp1967
    @istp1967 Год назад

    Now I want one 😁👍👍👍

  • @harrycallahan692
    @harrycallahan692 4 года назад +14

    This era was the real America!

    • @chrisn7259
      @chrisn7259 3 года назад +3

      For you maybe.

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад +1

      @@chrisn7259 As far as life was for people who weren't White, that is very true, but cars were WAY nicer then.

  • @wesleynash2598
    @wesleynash2598 3 года назад +2

    Just got a 54 ford crestline

  • @stanleysullivan4257
    @stanleysullivan4257 5 лет назад +7

    Everyone looks very wholesome and clean.

    • @tommytruth7595
      @tommytruth7595 5 лет назад +3

      I know. It is a bad reflection on today's society when that is evident.

    • @karp6130
      @karp6130 3 года назад +1

      Wot no African Americans! Really weird commercials. Jim Crow laws collaboration.

    • @TheOzthewiz
      @TheOzthewiz 3 года назад

      @curbozer Boomer What do you mean, "they rebelled so much in the next decade"? They rebelled in the '50s! Ever heard of "Rebel Without a Cause", a 1955 movie?

    • @desertbob6835
      @desertbob6835 2 года назад

      Brainwashed Republicans.

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад

      @@karp6130 Black folks didn't start appearing on commercials, and I don't mean Uncle Ben's rice or Aunt Jemima Pancake mix, until about 1968. Soon after the Trumpster was in office, though, most commercials returned to Lilly White.

  • @michaellawrence5492
    @michaellawrence5492 2 года назад +2

    Ideals explained to public is a good thing. Today this is not so much done or presented well.

  • @jeffteyrosado9966
    @jeffteyrosado9966 Год назад +1

    Beauty and the beast

  • @graybailey6015
    @graybailey6015 2 года назад +1

    Back when Ford was proud to make good affordable cars in America .Wish they still did.

  • @trainroomgary
    @trainroomgary 5 лет назад +1

    Like / Gary from Michigan 🚂

  • @critchley3819
    @critchley3819 7 лет назад +4

    54 was a big turning for Ford , the body did not change but the release of the Y block, ball joint & many options made them great low price cars The best looking 50s Ford is a toss up between 56 & 59..

    • @observant98
      @observant98 7 лет назад +1

      brian critchley My first car was a used '53 Customline....that I bought in 1962z. My in-laws had a 53 Chevrolet that for a starter had a poor heater. The Ford was a much better car all round. I didn't known until watching the video that Ford went to a ball joint suspension in '54. I had to replace the king pins. Dealer told me that previous owner didn't grease the car frequently and it was driven on gravel roads.

    • @critchley3819
      @critchley3819 6 лет назад +1

      My first car was FX Holden, the most pathetic pile of junk ever made, I then had a MK11 Zepher six it was better but I then bought a 55 Ford This was a real car..

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад

      @@observant98 He was probably telling you the truth. Most people hardly ever greased the front end, then blamed the car for the resulting problems.

  • @rrice1705
    @rrice1705 2 года назад +1

    I like how, toward the end, they specify that the competitor's car is equipped with a heater. Weird to think those were optional back then.

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад +1

      Heaters remained optional through most of the 60s. Almost all cars had one, but they dinged you for it.

  • @curiousity4killer
    @curiousity4killer 3 года назад +1

    This is so hypnotic... I need a ford for 54 with the new y block v8... Need to go to my ford dealer. I need 2 fords.

  • @Couchflyer-NY
    @Couchflyer-NY 22 часа назад

    It seems like almost everything was an option on a ‘54 Ford. Even turn signals were still optional. Evidently, my mom drove a 2 door, V8 in maroon. I wouldn’t be born for another 3 years.

  • @Slimjim260
    @Slimjim260 2 года назад

    28 models,,, amazing!

  • @Peter78730
    @Peter78730 4 года назад +7

    I was 13 years old in 1954 and got my driver's license a year later. Those were NOT the good old days in the world of automobiles.
    Points, plugs, condensers, carburetor cleaning, oil baths for filters required frequent maintenance or replacement.
    Mufflers were not a long-term item. No catalytic converters, so exhaust fumes were a way of life.
    Seat covers had to be replaced, and seat-cover businesses were almost on every corner! .
    Cars had to be greased on a regular basis, which involved putting the vehicle on a lift and squirting grease into special nipples.
    Radial tires had not come out, so factory tires could last perhaps 12,000 miles at the most.
    No air-conditioning except in luxury brands. You could order an optional under-the-dash unit, which eliminated any thought of sitting in the middle seat (cars did not have bucket seats then).
    No. safety belts, crush zones, or any of the safety features on today's vehicles. A major wreck then was likely fatal; today we can open a door and step out. No padded dash. Interior surfaces such as dashboard and door sills were steel. Chevrolet actually had a pointed steering column aimed right at your chest!
    Ball joints began to develop 'play' at about 45,000 miles if you were lucky. Wheel alignment was a normal maintenance item.
    Radios were AM only, although FM radio was offered as early as 1952. But it was the 1970s before FM surpassed AM in audience acceptance.
    What do I dislike about today's cars: Total lack of styling. And black interiors! Confining and depressing.

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад

      I don't mind the dual points on my 54 New Yorker. If you greased the chassis at recommended intervals, the ball joints would last about 75,000 miles, but most people did not. You could indeed get AC starting in 53 or 54, but only the well to do commonly did, as it cost about $500.00 or more, which was a lot of money then. Oil bath air cleaners are great for the engine, but they are more work to maintain. Front-end alignment then and now is mostly a huge racket. If you keep your front end greased, the alignment will not change for a long time, unless you slam through a huge pot hole or something. Today's cars are too ugly, too cramped inside, too small, too complicated, to non-adjustable, and too hard to work on. (I do my own work).

  • @senorsenor2665
    @senorsenor2665 4 года назад +2

    The real American car stuff and good

  • @senorsenor2665
    @senorsenor2665 4 года назад +1

    They were number one at that.TIME

  • @barrydee587
    @barrydee587 4 года назад +2

    Outside Rearview Mirror: Optional. Ford put ball joints on my 2000 Grand Marquis that had no grease fittings. THE LEFT FRONT WHEEL BROKE OFF!

    • @lorenjohnson7488
      @lorenjohnson7488 4 года назад +1

      So what

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад

      I would have replaced the little plugs with grease fittings. It is easy. "Greasless" front ends are bad, but most motorists hardly ever grease the front end anyway.

  • @rickatica
    @rickatica 4 года назад +3

    I learned to drive in a 54 Ford.

  • @charlieirvin5423
    @charlieirvin5423 5 лет назад +2

    My dad Had a 1950 Ford woody wagon a 1954 ford and 56 mercury

    • @commando340
      @commando340 4 года назад

      Mercury was a better car in every way.

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад

      @@commando340 It was much nicer, and probably less likely to have any "bugs", but in most years, it was a puffed-up Ford. 49 - 51 and 57 - 60 being the notable exceptions to that.

  • @lion_dragon
    @lion_dragon 5 лет назад +1

    Good shit Maynard!

  • @timmitzlaff8960
    @timmitzlaff8960 6 лет назад +14

    I bet your oldest boy Johnny loves the station wagon for dates. 😜

    • @lorenreece1665
      @lorenreece1665 5 лет назад +4

      Tim Mitzlaff girls loved the large backseats in those old cars. Plenty of room to romp. Lol

    • @davidcampbell1899
      @davidcampbell1899 5 лет назад +3

      Yea, you better hope old Johnny doesn't get any shot spots on those fancy seats! Not to mention the sins he could probably commit in the back of the station wagon.

    • @robmastro8620
      @robmastro8620 4 года назад +4

      Lol I caught that. Poor Mom doesnt know what Johnnys doing in the back of that Ranch Wagon

    • @fairfaxcat1312
      @fairfaxcat1312 4 года назад +2

      OAT351 Slick Willy was impeached for cheating in a civil rights lawsuit after the Supreme Court unanimously allowed it to go forward. Trump at this point has never had a credible charge of actual rape brought against him. I realize I might be setting the Trump bar fairly low but it is hard to walk away from the allegation of rape lodged by an erudite former nursing home executive who has very credibly claimed Clinton raped her when he was the Attorney General of Arkansas. And the big story is that, aside from the Myers’ interview which was very reluctantly aired by NBC, the slimestream media have generally said “nothing to see here.” George Stephanopoulos, who participated with Hillary Clinton in destroying the reputations of Slick Willy’s victims, was seamlessly rewarded to the position of the public face of ABC “News.” To this day the slimestream media rub the face of Stephanopoulos’ eventual successor in the new Bush Administration, Karl Rove, in the mud. It’s the ultimate media double standard.

    • @herrunsinn774
      @herrunsinn774 4 года назад

      @@fairfaxcat1312 Oh for God's sake... Are you STILL using the childish nicknames for Clinton? Get over it! You must really be a grumpy old fart.

  • @beb5816
    @beb5816 6 лет назад +1

    My first car in 1966, a black 54 Ford Customline. King pin system in front (replaced them). Did 100mph with marvelous V8 burble. Fitted 4 people across the seats (slept in it too). Sat on the mudguard with my feet in the engine bay while I removed the heads. Try doing that on a modern car !

    • @beb5816
      @beb5816 3 года назад

      @silverbird58 Yes, noted that. Mine registered as a '54 in Australia. Maybe a bit behind the US version ? I still have a king pin in my toolbox.

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад

      Sure it was a 54?

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад

      @@beb5816 If it was built in Canada, the early 54s had king pins and a flathead engine, late 54s had ball joints and an OHV engine.

  • @petergil7748
    @petergil7748 3 года назад +1

    amazing ! i like the ad instead of splitting the car in 2 buy 2 cars one for him and one for her!
    my father bought one 54 new thanks for posting!

  • @Drummed
    @Drummed 6 лет назад +1

    The thing is. When did 'John Q Public' ever have the opportunity to watch these advertising boosters ? I have no recollection other maybe a national car show. If I knew where to view this in 1954 I probably would have been sold on buying one. I like the hidden safety features & advancements belonging to Ford here.

    • @baronoflivonia.3512
      @baronoflivonia.3512 5 лет назад +3

      in the 1950's car companies sponsored a lot of TV shows. Desoto and You Bet Your Life come to mind.

    • @carlosportini1979
      @carlosportini1979 5 лет назад

      You are correct. Very few families had a television in 53=54. I never saw this at the movies, but I was more interested in the cartoons.

    • @tommytruth7595
      @tommytruth7595 5 лет назад +1

      @@carlosportini1979 Actually quite a few did have TV then.

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад

      @@carlosportini1979 Not so. Lots of people had TVs by then. Not many had a COLOR TV.

  • @hudsond3984
    @hudsond3984 3 года назад +1

    I wasn’t born then but damn these look nice

  • @actact21
    @actact21 2 года назад +1

    Now I realize why Jan. 6 is so popular today

  • @shawfifty
    @shawfifty 4 года назад +1

    I bought the 54 convertible brand new. It burned a bout a quart of oil in about every week from the time I bought it. I went to the dealer and was told I would have to call the Ford hq in New Jersey ( I lived on Long Island NY). I was told that I would have to live with the problem because the car was equipped with Overhead Cams which they said was experimental. There was no warranty back then. It had vinyl seats and in the summer you could burn your rear end if the top was down on a sunny day. Just the opposite in the winter. Them seats got real cold. Other than that as Jersey Joe says you knew it was a Ford. I think I paid about $1600 out the door.

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 2 года назад

      Things like that persisted up to the 90s. I love American cars and don't like Japanese ones, but they sure treat the buyer better than Detroit does.

    • @smexTTS
      @smexTTS 2 года назад

      im 82 --i owned one just like this --before i finished making the payments it was in the junk yard. the car was 2 years old when i bought it -the payments were for three years -- what a piece of iron. ---thank you ford.

  • @rickroberts1198
    @rickroberts1198 2 года назад +2

    In the day when a family could buy 2new cars and make a house payment on just 1 paycheck. Forget about it now.

    • @jerrycraig6522
      @jerrycraig6522 2 года назад

      My dad worked for the phone company, every two years he bought a new pick up truck and mom had a new car, on just dad's paycheck!!!

  • @jerrycaughron7378
    @jerrycaughron7378 5 лет назад +1

    Freddie Mertz special, The 1954 Ford (I love Lucy) ..

    • @TheOzthewiz
      @TheOzthewiz 3 года назад

      They used a '54 Pontiac!

    • @larrymcclain8874
      @larrymcclain8874 3 года назад

      When they went to California? That was a 1955 Pontiac Star Chief convertible. I believe Fred bought a 1918 Cadillac.

  • @downloadmusic4free1
    @downloadmusic4free1 2 года назад

    My first car was a 54' ford manual 3 speed and a 6 cyl. oil burner.

  • @paulsullivan229
    @paulsullivan229 3 года назад +1

    Bought a second hand sunliner when I travelled back in time...picked it up at a steal..$315.00.Couldn't get it back thru the portal tho.

  • @rollingtones1
    @rollingtones1 6 лет назад +3

    Good old Shoebox Fords.

  • @dlwatib
    @dlwatib 6 лет назад +6

    Not to be outdone, Chevy answered with their own V8 in a newly restyled lineup the next year (1955). They even added a Plus-Power Package to bump the horsepower up to 180. After that, it was all over for any independent that couldn't come up with their own hot V8 to follow suit. Packard brought out a V8 in 1955 too, but paired to their Ultramatic transmission it was sluggish off the line, and the Ultramatic wasn't designed to handle that much torque either.

    • @lorenreece1665
      @lorenreece1665 5 лет назад +2

      dlwatib Chevy engines in those days loved oil. It wasn't pleasent to have to be behind them in traffic.

  • @JohnDoe-wo1jd
    @JohnDoe-wo1jd 2 года назад

    how about the Edsel ?! ... back in the early 70s my older brother bought from a private owner, cheap price , 56 Ford in real good shape . Manual transmission , shifter on the steering column and no radio . good solid car . When he lent it to me i'd bring my portable radio .

  • @melaniec.t7709
    @melaniec.t7709 6 лет назад +1

    i dont know why but my dad was watching this xD

  • @rd8370
    @rd8370 2 года назад

    Good sales pitch, I’m going to test drive one.

  • @billfeld5883
    @billfeld5883 3 года назад +2

    The great generation, raising babyboomer's, first car I can remember is a 1948 Packet Clipper

  • @erickzabala4343
    @erickzabala4343 5 лет назад +2

    Estos son los verdaderos autos.............