Английская Википедия:Facel Vega FV

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Шаблон:Infobox automobile

The Facel Vega FV/FVS is a car produced by French automaker Facel from 1954 until 1959. It continued to be built until 1962 as the HK500.

History

FV

The Facel "Vega" was launched at the 1954 Paris Salon, although the first prototype had been completed in October 1953. Originally the model name was "Vega", but they gradually became "Facel Vega" with "FV" followed by a number indicating the iteration.[1] By 1956, the cars were called FVS (for Facel Vega Sport) in the United States.Шаблон:Sfn The 1954 versions of the Facel were fitted with a DeSoto Firedome (Chrysler) 4.5 litre Hemi V8 engine, paired with either Chrysler's two-speed Powerflite automatic transmission or, at extra cost, a four-speed manual made by Pont-à-Mousson.Шаблон:Sfn At this stage, the Шаблон:Cvt FV was capable of a top speed from Шаблон:Convert, depending on which rear axle ratio was installed. The chassis, designed by Lance Macklin, was tubular framed, featuring coil springs and double wishbones at the front, with a leaf-sprung live rear axle.Шаблон:Sfn The styling, by Daninos himself, was somewhat American and perhaps a bit heavyШаблон:Citation needed, with rudimentary tail fins. The body was an expanded version of the earlier, Facel-bodied Simca/Ford Comète. An abundance of stainless steel brightwork was fitted.

The dashboard was aircraft-inspired, and one of the first to feature a middle console over the gearbox.Шаблон:Citation needed On FV and FV1 models, the dashboard was entirely upholstered in leather. The rear seats folded flat to provide a luggage platform and additional access to the boot.Шаблон:Sfn In 1955 the engine capacity increased to 4.8 litres and Шаблон:Cvt (FV1). The FV1 was also Шаблон:Cvt longer than the original design47 of these early FVs were built in 1954 and 1955. Seven were convertibles, but as these suffered from rigidity troubles all but a handful of the rest of the large two-door Facels were pillarless coupés.[2]Шаблон:Sfn

FVS

Introduced in October 1955, the FV2 featured a panoramic (aka wrap-around) windshield. The trompe-l'œil dashboard was metal, hand painted to look like burled wood by Marcel Bigot, the head of Facel's paint department.[3] Referred to as the FVS in the United States, the car featured the same 4.8-litre engine as in the FV1, albeit now offering Шаблон:Cvt.[2] During 1956, the 5.4-litre FV2B appeared, with Шаблон:Cvt and substantial added torque.[1] One single FV2 convertible was built and exhibited at the company's stand at the 1955 Paris Salon, while two FV2B convertibles were built in 1956 for customers in the United States.[4] One FV3 convertible was also finished, in spite of Daninos' reluctance to offer the bodystyle due to its lack of rigidity.[2]

The FVS was also offered with a three-speed automatic, and front disc brakes were available from 1958. At some point a reworked, more harmonious front end was introduced for the FV3 model, featuring what looked like twin stacked headlights but what were actually headlamps on top and auxiliaries beneath. Plymouth's Polyspheric 4.5-litre "277 Power Pack" engine replaced the DeSoto Hemi unit; maximum power was down to Шаблон:Cvt.[1] Power steering and power brakes were both standard as of 1957.Шаблон:Sfn As Plymouth replaced the 277 engine with the bigger-bore 301 for the 1957 model year, Facel did the same and called the resulting model the FV3B. In addition to the new Шаблон:Cvt engine, the FV3B also received new, slightly longer and wider bodywork on cars built after the first batch of twelve cars had been completed in March 1957.[1] For 1958, the engine grew to 5.8 litres (FV4) and Шаблон:Cvt, although the earlier 4.5 and a 4.9 (FV3/FV3B) were still listed as available and the three models were built alongside each other. In total, 357 FVs and FVSs were built.Шаблон:Sfn

A four-door version, called the Excellence, was added to the lineup in 1958, but was even more rarefied than the two-door version.

French publisher Michel Gallimard was driving his FV2 on January 4, 1960, when he lost control and crashed outside of Villeblevin. The crash killed him and one of his passengers, Nobel laureate Albert Camus. Some have speculated that the driver was not familiar with the car's handling and weight, and that contributed to the severity of the crash.[5]

HK500

Файл:FacelVegaHK500.jpg
Facel Vega HK500

For 1959, the Facel Vega HK500[6] was introduced. Essentially, it was just a renamed, upgraded FVS. Equipped at first with the Шаблон:Cvt 5.8-litre V8 from the FVS, the HK500 soon received a Шаблон:Cvt 6.3 litre Chrysler V8, giving it a top speed of 147 mph (237 km/h). It could accelerate from 0-60 mph (97 km/h) in 8.5 seconds.Шаблон:Sfn Initially, disc brakes were optional, becoming standard in April, 1960.Шаблон:Sfn The Facel Vega II replaced the HK500 in 1962, after 489 had been built. One was a specially made convertible. Total FV/HK production was 842,Шаблон:Sfn or 846 depending on the source.Шаблон:Citation needed

Production[7]
1954-1955 47 (FV)
1955-1956 107 (FVS)
1957 118 (FVS)
1958 85 (FVS)
71 (HK500)
1959 190 (HK500)
1960 202 (HK500)
1961 66 (split between
HK500 and Facel II)

Notes

Шаблон:Reflist

References

Шаблон:Facel timeline 1954-1964