Pinto Car Club of America
Shiny is Good! => General Pinto Talk => Topic started by: Wittsend on October 18, 2016, 05:30:39 PM
Dick started a post the other day regarding a convertible 1978 Mustang II. Dwayne did some research and found out the a company in Florida built 44 and they were sold through Ford dealers. That got me to thinking about the possibility of a convertible Pinto (obviously not from the factory). I did a Google search and found these:
That last picture is of a Ford prototype that never went to production. The others appear to be conversions.
Dwayne :)
Wonder why it never got into production, it's cool looking..
The 65-73 Mustang convertibles required a LOT of reinforcement to the unibody to be safe. I hope those conversions had that done.
Russ
I helped build a 54 Studebaker coupe into a convertible while I was in the service (1955 I think). Thing looked cool BUT evertime you hit a large bump the doors would fly open. We ended up welding a little bit on the doors to keep them shut. Didn't need them to get anyway. Girls loved it too. Good ole days!
Quote from: russosborne on October 19, 2016, 05:32:04 PM
The 65-73 Mustang convertibles required a LOT of reinforcement to the unibody to be safe. I hope those conversions had that done.
Russ
Pinto safety with regards to unibody?. If I cared, I'd be on a Volvo forum.
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