1967 Ford Cortina MkII review
Just the thing to round out a small-Ford collection
1967 Ford Cortina MkII
Ford's tilt at a competition-focussed Cortina had very big shoes to fill, since the MkI had been such a monumental success, despite some initial reliability issue.
For a mix of reasons, this car had a much closer Ford involvement than the first, which meant that if nothing else it was going to be reliable. As it turned out, it shared much of its DNA with the legendary first car, including the high-spec twin-cam engine, a four-speed manual transmission, and disc/drum brakes.
The Lotus Cortina is a deceptively simple and engaging piece of machinery
A surprising departure was the cars left the factory without the famous green stripe down the flanks, but pretty much every car sold ended up with stripe being applied by the dealer.
This was the changeover year for the Cortina, and effectively the last of the series expected to take on a serious competition role. That particular torch was eventually handed over to the smaller and more nimble Escort range, again with a huge amount of initial success.
| Read next: Lotus Cortina review
Perhaps just as importantly, it comes with badges from various events and an extensive history file with information on previous owners, people who drove the car and events with results that the car participated in.
1967 Lotus Cortina
BODY: 2-door sedan – steel
ENGINE: DOHC 1558cc four
POWER: 86kW @ 5500rpm
TORQUE: 146Nm @ 4500rpm
TRANSMISSION:
4-speed manual
SUSPENSION: Front – indep. coils. Rear – live axle with leaf springs
BRAKES: Disc front and drum rear, power assist.
WEIGHT: Approx 900kg
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