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Driving the 1971 Ford Maverick From Fast Five

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  • Driving the 1971 Ford Maverick From Fast Five

    Here in the United States the Ford Maverick is remembered, if it's remembered at all, as the car that replaced Ford's original compact, the Falcon, back in 1970. | April 28, 2011

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Driving the 1971 Ford Maverick From Fast Five

Exclusive Drive of the 1971 Ford Maverick From Fast Five

    12 Ratings

    Here in the United States the Ford Maverick is remembered, if it's remembered at all, as the car that replaced Ford's original compact, the Falcon, back in 1970 and stayed in production through 1977. But in Brazil, where it was built between 1973 and 1979 it became something of a muscle car icon. The Maverick is to Brazil what the Mustang has been to the United States.

    "I pushed to get a Maverick into Fast Five," explains Fast Five's Picture Car Coordinator Dennis McCarthy. "A lot of the film's action takes place in Rio de Janeiro and they're nuts for the Maverick down in Brazil. So it only made sense that one of the guys in the film would be driving one. It didn't get as much screen time as I hoped it would, but the character Han (Sung Kang) does have a Maverick."

    But it's not pretty.

    Simplicity
    Despite its fastback body and pointed prow, the Maverick is very much an old Falcon under the skin. That's not completely terrible; after all, every Mustang Ford built through '73 was Falcon-based, too, but it's hardly the most robust automotive structure. And it's simple in the extreme with a lightweight A-arm front suspension in front and a solid axle on leaf springs in back.

    The Falcon front structure also results in a notoriously narrow engine bay. "I usually like to put GM crate motors in all the cars," says McCarthy. "But it was too much of a hassle in the Maverick. So this one has, if I remember, a 5.0-liter Ford V8 out of an '83 Mustang and the T5 five-speed manual transmission that came with it. We added a Ford 9-inch rear end and added rear disc brakes." The Maverick wears the same 18-by-9-inch Coy's C-67 Gun Metal wheels that were used on the 1972 Torino featured in 2009's Fast & Furious. The tires are P255/45R18 Continental Sport Contacts.

    Except for the addition of a fiberglass "Grabber" hood, the sheet metal on this car is as original as the day it left Ford's Wayne, Michigan, assembly plant in 1970.

    Screw the Windshield
    In Fast Five the generally decrepit condition of the Maverick is played for laughs. But let's be clear, the decrepitude here runs deep. From the hole chunked out of the transmission tunnel for the shifter to poke through, to the shelving paper atop the dashboard, the interior is a disaster zone. In fact, compared to other parts of the interior, the stock vinyl-covered front bench seat is a paragon of comfort.

    So it's a bit, well, ripe inside this Maverick.

    That isn't, however, what's most striking about this car. It's whatever that's coming into the car through where the windshield should be that's most likely to strike you.

    Removed for filming, there's never since been any reason to replace this car's front glass. And the Maverick had been sitting outside during one of Southern California's wettest winters ever. So it's a bit, well, ripe inside this Maverick.

    The Beater of Beaters
    Start the 5.0-liter in the Maverick and the whole car starts shaking. And rattling. And clanking. But it's kind of amusing to watch the hood shift around on the posts for the hood pins.

    Unfortunately, the first time we took the Maverick out there weren't any actual hood pins on the car. So the first blast up the straightaway at Willow resulted in a flight test for the hood. It has some nice lift ability, but kind of lacks directional control. Fortunately, no other car ran over the hood, so it was replaced and secured with a couple of pins swiped off the '70 Charger.

    The 1983 Mustang 5.0-liter engine was only rated at 175 horsepower way back 28 years ago, but it's a sweet and eager runner with quick response from its four-barrel carburetor. No speed records are in danger of falling with this car, but it actually moves pretty well.

    However, the steering is indistinct, uncommunicative and sloppy. The brakes have the same feel you'd get slamming your foot into a plate of rigatoni with marinara sauce. And the bench seat seems designed to have no adhesion with the driver's butt whatsoever.

    Plus, of course, there's no windshield.

    Proof of Concept
    All that said, there's a neat hot rod buried in this car somewhere. It's easy to imagine picking up a Maverick for about a grand, then getting a 5.0-liter Mustang for not much more, and mixing and matching the parts to produce a unique and interesting daily driver.

    But this Maverick, one of two built for the film, isn't likely to get such a resurrection.

    NBC Universal loaned Edmunds.com this vehicle for evaluation.

    Sort By:

    johnr1 says:

    02:12 PM, 05/10/2011

    I see a very nice Maverick on the street here in San Francisco:

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/johnriley/5642204152/in/set-72157626258870075

    cz_75 says:

    12:20 AM, 05/03/2011

    More bought and paid for publicity for the movie studios - I notice my comments about the Maverick keep disappearing.  I guess I should say I love FF5, that it's better than CATS and I'm going to see it again and again so IL gets their full ad revenue dollars for these promotional pieces about some of the worst films to ever come out of Hollyweird.  

    leftoflane says:

    12:40 PM, 04/30/2011

    Love it. As a teenager in the 80s, we had a college student living in our house. She drove a Maverick Grabber with the sweet hood and loud exhaust. I had just got my driver's license and she would let me take that car out on occasion. What a treat that was. Hit the loud pedal and that 302 would make sweet music to my 15 year old years. I never could figure out why the Maverick wasn't a bigger hit in the US. Reading the posts here, seems like a lot of folks have experiences surrounding this beast. I think I know what I'm going to comb Craigslist for now. I have a track Miata, but so does everybody. Time for something different.

    konecsra says:

    06:10 PM, 04/29/2011

    Wow - talk about a small world!  I too had a 73 Grabber with a 302 Windsor converted to a Boss (351 C 4-V heads), I had a toploader behind it with a 9" and 3.55s, tho I did toss 4.11s in for the heck of it one weekend!  Went good too - smoked some dude in a 72 Cougar XR7 with a 351 C in it....

    coke069 says:

    03:44 PM, 04/29/2011

    Oh the old Maverick!!!! Had a '73 Grabber, 302, crane cam, sidepipes, edelbrock intake....good times, then convert windsor to Boss....tons of fun.

    coke069 says:

    03:41 PM, 04/29/2011

    AAAHHHH the good old Maverick!!! Brings back great memories!!!! Had a '73 Grabber, converted the 302 windsor to a Boss 302 using 351C heads, what a blast!

    dgmail says:

    03:31 AM, 04/29/2011

    I'm sure there are way more 1970's Ford Mavericks on the road than any Honda from the same time frame.

    grabrr says:

    11:04 AM, 04/28/2011

    Love it!!

    cdyer says:

    10:30 AM, 04/28/2011

    I bloody love this thing. The beater the better.

    blueprint1 says:

    09:59 AM, 04/28/2011

    As a kid, my aunt had a late-model Maverick coupe, a top-end Ghia version, but with the straight-six, three speed auto, no power brakes, no power steering.  Weird combo, but no need for gym membership.  Just park the thing!

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