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Junkyard Gem: 1966 Ford Galaxie 500 4-Door Sedan

Junkyard Gem: 1966 Ford Galaxie 500 4-Door Sedan


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During the middle 1960s, the affordable full-size car was king of Detroit. Chevrolet alone moved well past a million Biscaynes, Bel Airs and Impalas every year then, while Ford wasn't far behind in sales from its line of big, comfortable rides. In 1966, the full-sized Ford line in the United States had the stripped-down Custom and Custom 500 at the bottom, with the Galaxie 500 a step higher and the snazzy LTD sitting at the very top of the big Ford pyramid. The Galaxie 500 was the biggest seller of the four, with sales about evenly split between the rakish two-door fastback and the sensible four-door post sedan. Here's one of those sedans, spied recently in a self-service yard just south of Denver.

This family-owned yard has an off-limits-to-public storage lot next door to the pull-parts-yourself area, full of interesting old cars. To make room for more interesting stuff, they sometimes auction off excess inventory from their private-reserve area (which often get purchased by other junkyards and put in their parts inventories). Other times, they'll just move some of the special cars into the regular parts-yanking yard. A good dozen of them just appeared there, including the Mustang II and Mercury Montego MX Brougham you see flanking today's Junkyard Gem in the above photo, plus a 1959 Studebaker Lark VIII, a 1965 Chevy Biscayne with six-cylinder and three-on-the-tree manual, a big-block '71 Impala coupe and some other cars I'll share later.

List price on this car started at $2,784, which amounts to something like $26,425 in 2023 dollars. This particular example is packed with costly options, as you'll see, so its out-the-door price was likely a lot higher.

First of all, there's this 352-cubic-inch (5.8-liter) big-block "Interceptor" V8 engine, rated at 250 horsepower. This engine is a member of the fabled FE family, which included the better-known 390, 427 and 428 engines that went into the wilder Mustangs and muscle cars.

The 352 had been around since 1958 and was last used in 1967 F-Series trucks. Yes, I bought this emblem for my garage wall.

The base engine in all but the ritziest 1966 full-size Fords was a 240-cubic-inch straight-six rated at 140 horsepower, but Dearborn had you well covered if you wanted to pay for more power that year. There were V8s of 289, 390, 427 and 428 cubic inches available, with power ratings going all the way up to 425 horsepower (that twin-four-barrel 427 Cobra had insane-for-the-time 11.1:1 compression and a drag-race-grade lumpy cam and proved to be a stalling, overheating nightmare in ordinary stop-and-go driving).