Meteor (automobile)
Meteor was a marque of automobiles offered by Ford Motor Company of Canada from 1949 to 1961 and from 1964 to 1976. It succeeded the Mercury 114, a Canadian-market Mercury based on the Ford, the "114" name being taken from the car's wheelbase.
The Meteor was introduced to complement the Mercury and to give Canadian Mercury-Lincoln dealers a car to sell in the low-price market, against the Canadian Pontiac. Similarly, Canadian Ford dealers offered the Monarch, a line of cars based on the Mercury models, to compete against the Oldsmobile. This was due to the dealer structure in Canada, where smaller communities might have only a single dealer that was expected to carry a full line of models in both the low- and mid-price classes. From 1949–1959, Meteor typically ran fourth in overall sales, behind Chevrolet, Ford, and Pontiac. The make was retired for the 1962 and 1963 model years. In these years the name was used for the Mercury Meteor which was sold in Canada and the United States. From 1970, the Meteor was referred to as the Mercury Meteor.
History
The initial 1949 Meteor was introduced on June 25, 1948, at the same time the Ford Deluxe and Custom series were introduced across North America, and shared the new postwar full-sized Ford bodies, chassis, and powertrains but with unique trim. It used a Mercury grille and was powered by a, 239 CID flathead V8 similar to that used in 1946–1953 U.S. Ford passenger cars. Meteor, as well as the Canadian Ford, kept the flathead V8 engine through 1954. The new OHV V8 which US Fords offered beginning in 1954 was not introduced in Canada until the 1955 model year. The following year, Ford of Canada introduced a six-cylinder engine for Canadian Ford cars. Meteor models continued to use the Ford body with unique items such as grilles, taillights, and moldings. From 1952 Meteor models used Ford's new Mainline, Customline, and Crestline model names. The 1952–1954 Meteors used Mercury instrument panels and dashboards. In mid-1954, some Niagara and Rideau models began using Ford instrument panels and dashes. These cars were named Niagara Special and Rideau Special and were priced around C$67 less than regular Niagaras or Rideaus.For 1954, Meteors no longer shared their model names with Ford models. The entry-level Meteor Mainline was discontinued and the new base model did not have a specific model name. The mid-level Meteor Customline was replaced with the Meteor Niagara and the top trim level Meteor Crestline was replaced with the Meteor Rideau.
A rebadged, Canadian-built version of the Ford Ranchero was added in 1957, and continued to be produced until 1959 as the "Meteor Ranchero." The Montcalm series was added in mid-1959 as a counterpart to Ford's new Galaxie models.
Meteor was discontinued as a brand name after 1961 for a number of reasons. The Meteor name was selected for a new vehicle introduced in the Mercury line, the intermediate sized Mercury Meteor, beginning in 1962, and the entire Mercury line had already been dropped down in price due to slow Mercury sales and the discontinuation of the Edsel brand.
Model names
378,463 were built in model years 1949 through 1961, using the following model names:- De Luxe / Deluxe
- Custom
- Custom Deluxe
- Custom Deluxe Victoria
- Mainline
- Customline
- Customline Victoria
- Sedan Delivery
- Crestline Victoria
- Meteor
- Niagara/Niagara 300
- Rideau/Rideau 500
- Rideau Skyliner
- Rideau Victoria
- Rideau Crown Victoria
- Ranchero
- Montcalm
- Country Sedan
- Ranch Wagon
- Meteor
- Custom
- Rideau/Rideau 500
- Montcalm
- Montego
- LeMoyne