Everything about Meteor Car totally explained
Meteor was a brand of
automobiles offered for sale by
Ford in
Canada from the 1949 to the 1976 model years. The name was retired for the 1962 and 1963 model years, when the mid-size
Mercury Meteor was available. It succeeded the
Mercury 114, a Canadian-market Mercury based on the
Ford - thus the "114" for the wheelbase.
The word 'Meteor' usually appeared on the bonnet and was considered a marque, rather than a model, in Canada. It complemented
Mercury and gave Canadian Mercury-Lincoln dealers a car to sell in the low-price market, against
Ford,
Chevrolet, and
Plymouth. Similarly, Canadian
Ford dealers had the
Monarch, a car based on the
Mercury. The Meteor generally ran 4th in overall sales, behind Chevrolet, Pontiac and Ford.
The Meteor was introduced on
June 25,
1948. It used a Ford body with a Mercury grille and was powered by a 100 bhp, 239 in³ V8. Meteor, as well as the Canadian Ford, kept the flathead V8 engine through 1954, and introduced the new OHV V8 for the 1955 model year. The following year Ford of Canada introduced a 6-cylinder engine for Canadian Ford and Meteor cars. The Meteor continued to use the Ford body with unique items such as grilles, taillights and moldings until its demise after the 1961 model year.
Due to dealer pressures, Ford released a low-priced "Mercury 400" in 1963 that stood in the price bracket formerly occupied by the Meteor. When the midsized Mercury Meteor was dropped after 1963, Ford of Canada relaunched Meteor as a standalone make in 1964, and dropped Mercury's Monterey series in Canada. The 1964 Meteor looked nearly identical to the 1964 Mercury, save for its Ford dashboard and interior. For 1965, the full range of model names that had existed in 1961 returned:
Rideau, Rideau 500 and
Montcalm. The
Montego was added as a top
range model for 1967, but when that name was selected for use by Mercury in the U.S. beginning in 1968, it was renamed
LeMoyne, and continued through 1970. A sport themed
Montcalm S-33 model was available from 1966-70.
Although Meteor was still considered as a separate marque through 1976, after 1968 the cars also carried Mercury badging and were advertised as the "Mercury Meteor". After 1976, the Rideau and Montcalm names as well as the unique trim items were dropped. The Meteor name was then used on a lower priced variant of the
Mercury Marquis, called the Mercury Marquis Meteor, built until 1981. The final Marquis Meteors were built in the US and shipped north.
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