Back to the future.
The Ford Heritage Vault is one of the finest sources of publicly available archive information provided by any car maker – and it just keeps getting better. In a recent update, many previously unseen images of concept cars have been added, bringing the total to nearly 2000.
We can’t show them all here, but what we can do is take you through 50 Ford concepts, many (if not most) of which you might never have heard of. We’re presenting them in chronological order, starting with one which dates from over 70 years ago.
FX-Atmos (1954)
The name of the FX-Atmos (including a hyphen in Ford literature of its time, though not in the Vault) stood for “future experimental atmospheric”. According to Ford vice-president Lewis Crusoe (1895-1973), the concept “is not proposed as a future production vehicle, and for that reason, no engineering considerations have been involved in its development”.
Crusoe added, however, that the FX-Atmos “represents one of many avenues which styling could take in the future”. Sure enough, while bubble canopies and sharp spikes protruding from the front never really caught on, tailfins and extended rear lights, not yet common in 1954, soon would be.
La Galaxie (1957)
Unveiled, like the FX-Atmos, in Chicago, the La Galaxie six-seat luxury concept was slightly less futuristic. The cowled headlights were unusual, but the reverse-angle rear window and very long trunk were already becoming available in the Mercury Turnpike Cruiser, and would appear in the last-generation British Ford Anglia before the end of the decade.
A windscreen which continued over the heads over the front passengers was more unusual, though. The car also “envisions”, as Ford put it, “an electronic proximity warning device that would stop the car automatically if it came dangerously close to another vehicle or object in its path”, an idea which would not reach production for many years.
Cougar 406 (1962)
According to a Ford press release issued on 16 February 1962, the day before the opening of that year’s Chicago Auto Show, the Cougar 406 “embodies design features to excite the hardiest sports car fan, along with the comfort and style required in a personal car”. Among the most notable of these features were gullwing doors which, unlike those already seen on the Mercedes 300SL, were electrically operated.
The concept’s name referred partly to a new engine from Ford’s FE V8 family which measured 406 cubic inches, or 6.7 litres.
Ghia Selene II (1962)
The Heritage Vault includes concepts produced by Ghia long before Ford bought the Italian design house. One example is the Selene II, a radical sports car with an extreme cab-forward design unlikely to score highly in a modern crash test.
Since there was clearly no room up front for an engine, this would have been mounted in the rear. Passengers at that end faced backwards, so they could see where they had been rather than where they were going.
Allegro (1963)
