1963 Ford Falcon Sprint - Jay Leno's Garage
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- čas přidán 29. 07. 2012
- 1963 Ford Falcon Sprint. After years of looking at the magazine ad for the Falcon, Jay final got his hands on one.
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1963 Ford Falcon Sprint - Jay Leno's Garage
• 1963 Ford Falcon Sprin...
Jay Leno's Garage
/ jaylenosgarage - Auta a dopravní prostředky
Just inherited a 63' falcon from my mamma-in-law who passed away on 12/12/23. Love her forever and always have. Been with her beautiful daughter for 41 years this January 9th, and never had a cross word between us. No argument, no disagreement, no ill wishes in 41 years. She was a special lady and a true angel that walked among us humans. Cant wait to charge the battery, air up the tires and enjoy this classic the way it should be enjoyed. Cruising the roadways with great admiration. Loved the video.....
I realize this is an older post, however, this one almost had me in tears. With Jay owning any car he wants, just a simple Ford Falcon to be one of Jays Must Have cars. I love that. Would be extremely grateful to be on Jay"s automotive team.
Oh my God yes I do too bro absolutely no problem at all with that plan sounds fantastic and completely incredible to have happen to you right brother? But I haven't been chosen yet? What is going on here?
here here
Tears??? Ummmm....its not THAT big of a deal.
I was laying on the ground kicking and screaming when I saw this episode
My first car was a 1963 Falcon and I wish I still had it. Thanks to Jay for helping me remember a great part of my youth.
I inherited my dads after he passed. In the process if doing some repairs to it. Super excited!
The body style of those old Falcons still looks pretty cool today.
One of my favorite cars and episodes. What an honest car.
Without question, one of the best cars in Jay's large collection. Love the sound of that small block Ford V-8.
i would agree, but only with its original V8. whomever planted that 289 in it, did no favors for anybody but themselves. ford used the engine number in the car ID, so thats the shame of it. if you do a motor swap on a 260- you use the cleveland motor with the boss heads (remember- First On Race Day). and it will take a bucketful of c-notes! If youre gonna do a motor swap in a collectable car, go with the 'sit-down, shut up, and hold on' motor.
The Cobra had a 289 in it.
The 302 (5.0) roller short block would be fine with me--they rev so much nicer! I would go with webber look-alike fuel injection heaven help me! I'd keep the quiet mufflers too!@@tommurphy4307
I always loved the look of the Falcon Sprints, at a 3/4 view it almost looks like a downsized Galaxie 500 and the early 60s interior always have so much cool metal and chrome accenting. This is a perfect build
The interior was pretty similar to the 65 Mustang, which I foolishly sold.
Wow like Jay I too was born in 1950. My first car was a 60 Falcon and so was my second. At 16 in 66 I was thrilled to own one. Mine were both 6 cyl automatics. Lot of great memories driving the streets of Detroit.
My first car was a white 1960 w/auto trans. The car had very few options and so the interior was basic. Still, the interior grabbed me, particularly the clear plastic shifter indicator which was shaped like a curved bar. Red needle behind it. So cool. I'll get one eventually, just not sure when!
I was born in Detroit too, in 62’. My first car was a 66 Mustang with a 289. Great memories indeed.
@@djquinn11 Had a '65 fastback mustang ralleypack gauges 289 Holley 650 double pumper solid lifter cam headers 4.56 posi Trac top loader 4speed. It was a beast!! No problem taking down roadrunners and 396 Chevelle SS cars. But most satisfying was beating Ronnie Bale's 57 Bel-Air 2door hardtop with the built 350 4speed. He had taken down every other hot car around at the sat. Night drags. So he was bragging how he was gonna blow my doors off! He got whipped by 3 car lengths and had to hand over a hundred dollar bet. Lol he got a Paxton supercharger and tried again . Narrowed it down to half a car length but I still got him!! Sorry bout your luck Ronnie! You could've got a crane cam too. But of course you had no idea how my pony got it's balls. Lol
@@1normondo : Loved those classic Mustangs George, awesome story!
That Falcon is a work of art Jay, the Cragar Mags absolutely make the car, and what beautiful condition its in. BRAVO!!
Not Cragar. American Racing Torque-Thrust D.
That was one of the most pleasant 10 minutes I have ever had. I love cars like that. It reminds me of driving those cars around with my buddies. I love the old dashes. The engine sounds nice. It reminds me of simpler times.
BEST EPISODE SO FAR.. JAY'S GETTING EMOTIONAL ON THAT ONE..
I guess we have similar taste in cars because that Falcon Sprint was always one of my favorites too. My older brother had one when I was 15, Black with Red interior and I thought that was the prettiest car ever made, and still do. He had put a good set of duel exhaust and it sounded great, especially going through the gears. I also loved its big brother, the 63 1/2 Galaxy. My other brother had one of those. 390 4sp. White with Blue interior. Love those.
I'm not an American, I don't live in the States so I am not really hooked on this guy TV fame but I do like the man's love for cars. It is so contagious and makes his videos so much enjoyable.
Thanks for recognizing and appreciating Jay's love for cars. I'm a car collector also, and in The States, Jay is really idolized for his love and knowledge. He often refers to himself as " a steward " of the cars he collects. This, not comedy, is his true passion in life.
Alfonso Llana so true.
I was never impressed with his standup nor his hosting position on The Tonight Show , but this car series makes him a kindred spirit , a car brother ,to me .
I'm an American and I'm more familiar with Jay's car passion than with all else he's done on TV. Honestly.
americans agree, notma funny guy but a hell of a automotive enthusiast, historian and preservationist. must have made someine laugh to have the moolah to do what he has done. in the future, once he has gone on, his will be oce of the greatest museums on earth.
I love how Jay is so knowledgeable and he gives you so much backstory to the point where you really get a good understanding of what you're looking and that in turn gives you a greater appreciation for whatever vehicle he's talking about!
The US had some great variations on pillarless styles of cars. Sadly where I live we didn't get the great US styling yet we have a Ute version (or pickup as some call). Yep the old engine bays were magic, before they got packed out with emission control crap & huge plastic covers to make it all look pretty. I'm sure Jay stayed within the speed limit for a small amount of filming
In Argentina, this generation of Falcon was in production for 30 years with few changes except occasional interior and exterior facelifts. By the time production ended in 1991 it looked pretty ridiculous, an obviously 1960s car with an 80s front fascia and rear treatment... but I would still love to get my hands on one.
In Australia these were everywhere when I was growing up. The Sprint was a real nice car. 179 6cylinder.
The 179ci was a GM-Holden motor. You were probably thinking of the 170ci when the typo occurred. (0 and 9 are beside each other on the keyboard)
@@stuart8663 Yeah, the 6 banger back in the day was either a 144 ci or a 170. Those engines lasted forever. I had a '63 Ford Econoline that had a 170 in it. Good gas mileage, enough power, but a dog in the mountains.
I love Jay's genuine sense of humor.
One of a kind.
Keep coming with that "useless information". That's why we love ya Jay. Because you know so much and pass along that knowledge.
I excel in "useless information" (but not of cars like Jay). That's why no one wanted to play Trivial Pursuit with me back when it was a popular game. Sometimes I'd go three against one (me). :D
I’ve loved Falcons since I was a kid in the 60s ... and I love reading all the enthusiastic comments on this video!
The sound of that engine, beautiful. Fast becoming my favourite classic.
I definitely agree with Jay, in regards to the wheels on his Falcon. They are the best looking old school wheels out there.
Torque Flites I think they were called! Look good on all cars especially the Mopars of the 60's! My personal favorites were the Crager Mags, all shiny!
& ford usually has the ugliest oem rims out there😳
@@ronschlorff7089American Racing torque thrust
@@matthewklein9225 right, torqueflite is a mopar transmission, had a nice sound on my uncle's 64 Dodge Polara back in the day!!:D
@@ronschlorff7089 Brother you said it! CRAGAR SS WHEELS RULE!🗽🎶🍺🎵
Back in the 70's I owned the Ranchero version with the factory 260 and 3 speed trans and 5 lug wheels. Loved that car.
70 Ranchero 302,w 3 speed. Put a F150 clutch set in, bigger diameter- durability., fork and bell crank too * stronger. Pedal feel.
Thanks Jay for putting this out there. Always one of my favorites from our generation!!
Jay, what can I say, “You have one off the best show ‘s on TV”. This story of the Falcons brings back so many good and one painful memory. The girl I took to the ‘Senior Prom’ drove a 1963 ‘Powder Blue’ Falcon “Sprint”. I had a 1966 GTO (with those ‘iconic’ “American Racing Mags’”). Keep it up Mr. Leno your the greatest.
My grandmother was a Falcon Fanatic! Not sure how many she owned over the years. But i remember her having a new one of every color. Every other year. And she drove them like she was in the Indy 500! 😂
8:15 Jay Leno quote " Ya know Ford, ya fix it with a hammer!"
yup, and screw driver(s), channel locks, crescent and socket wrench set and you are good to go!!
That was how you adjusted valve clearance on a Russian car. Put a sickle in between then hit it with a hammer..
Since I grew up as a "Chevy guy," we used to tease Ford owners by saying FORD means Fix Or Replace Daily.
@@penboyasgod6103 The chemical symbol for iron is Fe. The symbol for rust is FeO3. The symbol for scrap metal is FORD.
I come back to this video yearly.. It brings back great memories..My DAD bought me a 1960 2 dr with a simple str8 6 for my 16th birthday in 86' and my GRANDPA and I spent an entire summer with a JC WHITNEY catalog Sporting up the engine and re-doing the enterior in DOVE Gray after Painting the entire car GLOSS BLACK.. Learned how to INSTALL a C.B. and Radio and Speakers and even cutting and placing the Carpet and Panels and learned a little about upholstery.... My G-Pa and Dad agreed that the Falcon was a great car to learn how to drive due to the DURABILITY and EASE of working on the engine...!! The looks and responses and comments I would get on the road from the Older folk were always positive and it seemed to seamlessly close a GENERATION GAP!!!
Jay, it's always a pleasure to view these videos when you feature cars that we grew up with in the neighborhoods around the USA. The exotics are great but there is something special about the cars from our youth. That Falcon Sprint is a beauty.
My folks had one, a lot of good memories here. Dad had the '63 Ford Falcon, Mom had the "64 Plymouth Valiant
Slant 6. Great engine.
Love the Falcon's ❤
I always liked the 312 from 1957 and the latter 289.
Tough engines 👍
Grandad taught me how to drive and shift on a frozen lake in an old red Falcon wagon.
When i was growing up, i ran around with an older kid that had a 1965 GTO. A friend of his had a 1963 Ford Falcon Sprint. It was red with a white convertible top. The length long indent on the side was also white with black lace flames. I loved that car. Thanks for bringing back some great memories.
My grandmother owned a Falcon convertible. I can still remember the little things about it like the ashtrays in the back seats (cause I always rode in the back), the chrome liners, and even the way the car roof smelled. Funny story- My older brother was so in love with my grandma's car, and made it known to grandma for years. On his 16th birthday, my grandma gave him a Ford keyring, but with no car key on it. To say he was heartbroken would be an understatement. After her death he eventually took ownership of the car though.
Love it, my mom had one. I slammed my toes in the passenger door when I was a kid. I never forgot it. The car, not the toes. Lol. Thanks for posting.
I love the pic with Jay hugging his Falcon
When the Falcon was first introduced in Australia, there were some intial problems with the suspension, that earned the knickname of "Foul-Can"!
My dad had one but it was just a little 6 cyl. I learned to drive on our 63 with a 3 speed shifter. Great car.
Love this car. This is the car my parents had when I was a kid, had my sights on this being my first car until my mom blew a stop sign and totaled the car. Then dad put a 1968 Lincoln around her after that. Side note my friends in elementary school always wanted to ride with me and my mom in this car on field trips, and yes she would do burnouts when no other parents were watching.
In the 70s I used to think the Falcon was the ugliest car, I was GM all the way, but looking at it now, it's a good looking car.
Thanks
Yes it is. The Sprint version helps. But Jay's right, this is basically a Ford Mustang.
I had one . Great car for a throwaway car. And I had it in college in the 80s. Mine of course had the small engine bummer.still loved it.
Rode in some 289 falcons back in the day. They were great performers. Would love to see Jays falcon take on a 66 nova L79. Pretty even match on paper. It would probably come down to the driver. Those mid sixty compacts with stout small block power were sure fun!
I tend to be more of a Ford guy, but I'm thinking the L79 wins that match by a bit more than a smidge.
That car has an amazing exhaust sound!
Love the history you teach.
Hi Jay. My Grandpa had a 1965 Ford Falcon. I loved riding in that car when I was a kid. Watching you driving brought back a lot of great memories. Thank you. He was my hero. He also had a '63 Ford Econoline pickup. I loved that pick up. Would love 2 have one of them someday. Have a blessed night.
My first car was a 60 Falcon. 144 was the engine available. Mine gave out and we put a 200 in it with a floor shifter ( the column shifter broke). Painted it gulfstream aqua put 66 mustang hubcaps on it a 65 Falcon front bench seat (you sat up higher in it) 14 inch tires and drove the hell out of it for 8 years (thru college) gave it to my sister who wrecked it a year later. It was basic transportation but was gutsy with that bigger six cylinder in it.
I had a '60 Ranchero with the 200 ci replacement engine, three on the tree, with the "wide ovals" on the stock 13in wheels. It was QUICK❗
I raced a friend and his brand new 440, 6 pack, Challenger. Stop light to stop light, I hit 75 (max speed) and hit the brakes for the next light. Beat him for four lights❗
We came to a light with two blocks to the next one. He went by me, just past the first block, at about 120 mph! Good thing he had disks or he never would have gotten it stopped.
First few blocks, he was steaming! All that big money and big power and couldn't even beat a little old six-banger work truck. Good thing the two block light came up or he might have been trading it in the next day, lol❗
Wow this is almost identical to the XP Falcons built in Australia in the same period. Lovely car.
Where did you think the aussie one came from??
And the XP Futura was a 2 door, no V8 though, took us a few more years!
In 1971, I bought my first car. A 1963 Ford Falcon Sprint. 260 V-8, 4 on the floor. I bought it from a guy who rebuilt the engine, put a better cam in it, Hurst Shifter. Sun Tach. I took the Autolite 4bbl carb off of it and I put a Holy 500 2bbl. It was almost too much carb for it. I cut the rear wheel wells out of it and put bigger tires on it, front and rear. I kept that car in my parents garage while I was in the Navy for 6 years, then held on to it until about 1987-88. It was Teal Blue inside and out. I had to sell it, was moving from Denver to Charlotte, NC. I sure miss that car. My kids still refer to it as "The Race Car".... we also called it "The Blue Streak"..... Maybe some day I'll have another one...
additude obx p
Так а зачем продал то
U still live in Charlotte?
I'm in Gaffney.....
I hope you do get another one..!!
Put the Same Holley 500,Nicknamed " Dirt Track 2 Barr." on My 71 AMX360,w/ Oversized 600 jets,After Warr.was Expired & Added Lakewood Traction Bars.Made it a Red Lite To Red Lite Screamer, & w/ out the Traction Bars,a Pretty Good top end Muscle!!!
I have a top five dream cars and the 1963 Falcon is in that list. My Dad’s first new car was a ‘63 Futura four door. It’s the car I remember. My Dad passed away last month and I’ve had that old Falcon on my mind. Thanks for this great episode.❤️😎
Jay, I had a 1963 Falcon that we dropped a Ford 292 engine into, it screamed!!! Loved that car so much. Was growing up, sold it, and the guy totaled it. I've thought of it many times and then I caught this video. You captured my mineset of yesteryear. Thank you so much! Please give her a tap on the dash and tell her Joe thinks of her often.
This was an iconic car. We used to build these in Australia, they were the XP falcon (and the XM falcon). Ford and GM-Holden in Australia usually designed and built their own cars but this US model was copied completely (not imported, but copied and manufactured). There might have been a few minor design changes but its pretty much the same. The falcon name was used for different models from the 60's right up to 2016-17, which will be the last Ford Australia built falcon car.....both Ford and Holden are closing their plants in Australia by 2017. Its a real shame.
The XK was the US model assembled in Oz. By XP Ford Australia had fixed the problems with the US models. The US cars got the improvements from the Aussie engineeers.
XK still had US spec. ball joints. Went to bigger stronger ball joints on later Australian models as our roads were mostly unsealed. Small joints wore out in no time.
You might like my 63 1/2 Ranchero? see at thatladycarguy-trucktuesday#9 Dave
And you guys built some very fast Falcons
Crazy man, there's endless waves of 3rd world immigrants coming into our countries, and then endless propaganda to not have kids yourself. Meanwhile jobs for young people are disappearing and going offshore or onshore to immigrants. No upward mobility in society to even start a family
I love how at 9:45 Jay simultaneously tachs the motor out between gears while nonchalantly chatting about the virtues of his Falcon. I swear we came from the same parents.
As far as I'm concerned, Jay, you are living the life every car guy dreams of.
Drive hard but drive safe, and keep them coming!
I learned to drive in a 1960 Falcon, straight 6, 3 speed on the column. Looked very much like this one.
That is just the coolest! My Father bought Falcons,he had 62,63,64.The 64 Futura,is one of my favorites also.Thanks Jay for putting a smile on my face today! Cheers!
First car I ever drove my Dads 60 falcon 6cyl 3 on the tree, silver color drove all over the farm, second car was a 64 white custom red interior.
Wow that Falcon is a beauty ! And it sounds great too .
Good to see Falcons still on the road!
My first car was a 1961 Falcon Station Wagon, black, (with a lot of rust) red interior, electric rear window, 177 ci engine, had about 48,000 miles on it in 1974. It made a great surf mobile in North Carolina. It was a very tuff car. At one time would have made Cheech & Chong proud.
Another time I bought an old junker 1964 Falcon to get back and forth to work. When I’d pull up to a stoplight, other people would avoid me and get into another lane so as to not get stuck behind a slow car. On the green, I would push down on the accelerator with no squealing and nothing but smooooth shifting from the automatic transmission, and leave everybody behind. One morning a guy pulled up beside me and said “that can’t be the original engine “ and I told him that it wasn’t but about the same size. It was the “Sweet” transmission that just clicked through the gears
My first car was a 1962 Falcon. No bells or whistles. But bullet proof. Miss the Ol Gal!
what an absolutely beautiful car. I'm English so I dont get to see many of these American classics, that rear quarter profile with them lights is just drop dead sexy. Its a shame in Europe we have to cluster all different kinds of lights such as indicators etc at the back, the single red tail light is just so cool.
Jay nice car colletion really beautiful. Bobby from colorado
That "single red light" did have a few bulbs, for brake, night lights, turn signal however!
Carry over from some 1950's T-Bird styling.
The rear tail lights apparently were fashioned to resemble a falcon's eyes.
of all his cars this one is the one I'd most like to own.
this or the CITREON
@Terry Bruce Then you could buy a fabulous house,... and a very nice car! :D
@Terry Bruce Right, depends on location. Here in so Ariz still can find a nice one for that. Even out in the country with acres of land (desert) and a nice quonset hut to put your collector cars in! :D
yea it is really a true classic car. the ford falcon with the small V-8!
Nice, cute car, but I'd rather have an 100% original AC Cobra 289 or 427. Or a Mustang GT 350 or 500.
I never thought that all these years later… That I could love a falcon this much. What a great car from the past, and Jay, demonstrates to all of us how many there are. I’m driving a brand new L3 stingray these days, but I still love classic cars.
289 + 4 speed 360 hp. I love this Ford Falcon. Thanks Jay you introduced this car .
Thanks again Jay. I love the old falcons both body styles.
I was a couple of years out of high school and got a job at a gas station, which was "full" serve back then. An early Falcon would come in from time to time, and the back was smashed in. That is where the gas filler was located. Good God it would take forever to fill. I think I finally told them to get the hell back there and do it themselves.
I learned to drive in my Grandma's 61 Falcon, same body style but an inline 6 cylinder. Engine was tough and durable. I remember sliding off a dirt road and hit a tree but no damage to the car. It drove like a tractor, I could only imagine having a fast one at age 16.
Jay Leno, you don’t need to dream anymore. Most of your dreams all came true. Lol!😂👍Johnny from Montreal Canada!
Jay is the epitome Automotive Ambassador.
The falcon is a great design, and the 289 is my favorite engine of all time. Back in the 90's I ran into a man outside of a Radio Shack who stopped me to ask about my 64' Custom with a 289. He informed me that he used to work at Ford and that the 289 was an icon even among the builders who called it the "Gentleman's Jewel" because of how versatile and reliable it was.
UnknownUzer--Yes the 289 Engine was almost indestructible--I had a friend that drag raced his 64 comet with a 289 nearly every night, that engine just would not give up-I think he finally wrecked it...
@@randybeard6040 I've owned a dozen 289s in my lifetime. They are very stout until you start modifying them. In stock form, the timing chain was the weakest link after 100K miles. If you mod one, you need to change out rod bolts. They are weak w/ high compression & r.p.m.
I learned how to drive when I was 13 in my father's 1968 4 door Falcon (Argentine spec, similar to the US '63 but with a 187 inline 6, 3-on-the-tree manual transmission). Good memories!
Argentina is a beautiful country with interesting politics! The land and ranches remind me of the Midwest USA.
In 67 I had a 62 2door with the 170 and three on the tree. About 72 I got a 64 sprint with the 2 speed auto
Had to sell the 62 when I went in the Navy and got rid of the 64 when the engine rotted out. Loved those cars, but liked the 62 better. Great memories. I should get another one.
This was my grandfather's fave, he had the two-door and station wagon.
I love these early episodes with the burnouts. I understand why he stopped doing that but man that looked fun.
With the Ford "Traction-Lok®" rear end! (Ford's posi-traction differential)
I was at the Concours d'Elegance, in Pebble Beach, CA. the most prestigious car show in the world, the year Jay was hosting it. He had just bought this, his dream car Falcon. Adding it to his world class, multi-million dollar collection. It just so happens l had driven to the show in my 1963 Ford Falcon Sprint V8. Just like his, but mine is a convertible. I've had mine for 44 years.
Great car, great looks. The air intake on the hood is so nice.
I always enjoy watching your videos Jay, you make cars fun, and you have a ton of great ones, plus know a ton about them, please keep them rolling.
My friend Bill used to take his sister's 260 Sprint (with 221 heads!!) to the drag strip every weekend and at the end of the year he'd earned a huge trophy for most class wins over the season. The race day routine was to get up early and have a diner breakfast, drive the Sprint about 70 miles, stop at a Sunoco station near the track and get the highest octane available (only available at the station nearest the track), pull into the pits, dump floor mats and spare tire, twist spring spacers into the front springs to raise the front end ... and go out and blow away some Corvairs. Bill went on to campaign a AA/C and a Ford Thunderbolt, I often wonder if he stayed in racing,
My buddy had a 64 w/289 back in high school('91) and he used to smoke fox body 'stangs and iroc z's during lunch break. The only car that beat him was a kid that had a '72 el Camino w/350 4bbl Holley dual cherry bombs and a th350 tranny w/hurst shifter that was a beast. And of course I would smoke 'em all with my '81 cb750f w/kerker 4into1 pipe rejetted carbs and K&N pod air filters(air box delete). It seems like yesterday but it's been over 25yrs ago. Man those were some fun fun times!!!
We had Falcons here in New Zealand right up until 2016 when Australian production ceased.They still had the 4 litre straight 6 with cast iron block in the basic versions right till the end;but of course with a modern overhead cam set up and fuel injection etc.I think that they made them for a long time in Argentina too.
The Argentinian one was more like an oversized Cortina
Love it Jay brings back good memories
I have had two cars that I miss. A '69 1/2 Cougar with a 428 and a 68 Galaxy with a 390 4 speed. Loved those cars. Now that I am older, I am looking to buy the same cars back. Ironic.
Ironic, or iconic?
@@jaimepowell5033 Both, I guess!
@@strider8933 I had mine too. '60 Impala with the 348 and Powerslip, white over red inside & out. '64 5/8 ton GMC long step-side 292 inline 6, 3 speed with compound low. A bare bones special order farm truck, but with under dash a/c. Last but not least '67 Chevelle coupe. Rat motor with 4 speed and the station wagon trailer package under it for handling.
It's funny. They were so easy to get you just thought you could always get another. But,.......
The Cougars were beautiful cars.
Chevy guy here.When 14 the older neighbor kid bought a Sprint 260 with a 4speed brand new.Never forget riding in that red over red falcon,loved it.
My Dad had 4 door Falcon back in early 60's. This had a 3 speed box mated to Straight 6 motor. ( Cannot remember cu in). We traveled from Durban to Cape town a couple of times towing a Sprite Alpine caravan with 2 Adults and 4 kids.Not a moments trouble and pulling power to spare. Every time I see one of these I just think of how proud he was of that car. 😁.
I've lost my leg and would love to have a auto/ 302 in a four door our two,but just dream for now! Nice to see you appreciate a simple car,I need no power on power! thanks!
Larry Napier funny you say that my dad and I have exactly that in black lol
We had Ford Falcons down here in Argentina, and we also had the Sprint, but not THIS one... Also, it was manufactured until 1992 or so.. with just a few changes! Jay, I invite you to check that out. Argentina has a great Ford Falcon Fans club.
Wow, talk about bringing back memories! The 1963 Ford Falcon Sprint is the first car I drove to my first full time job interview in 1971 after graduating high school. It was red on red with a black convertible top, 289 ci with 3 speed on the floor. Even though I didn't have a drivers license at the time, my cousin's boyfriend thought enough of me to let me borrow it. Needless to say, I got got the job, dropped the top and on the way back home it was fun, fun, fun! Thanks for the trip down memory lane Jay!! You're the Best!!
My first car was a '63 Ford Falcon Futura, with bucket seats, white with red interior just like the one in the poster. But it was just a 170/6. Nice lines, but not very fast. At 16, I was thrilled to have any wheels. A Sprint - wow that would be a gift from god at that age!
I love this car! I also love those old Torq Thrust wheels - they've always been my favorite, too!
I had 62' Falcon in this color but with a 6 cylinder and 3 on the tree. But still this video still bring back memorys . I traded this Falcon for a new 73 AMC Javelin. Those were the days!!
You said it Ron; "Those were the days!"
My 6 cylinder three on the tree '64 Falcon (first car purchased in 1975) was a most dependable all around 'first' car. I can't remember why exactly except that the car had been a fleet car for a local power company and then was used by a Fuller Brush salesman so the miles on the odometer must have been on the second go around ergo my dad helped me get a rebuilt exchange that together one weekend we wrangled the worn engine out, the rebuilt in replacing the original engine with a extraordinarily decent rebuild from a local shop. I was so proud to work with my dad on that job. Yeah you never forget where you learned to curse when that wrench slipped, It was great helping 'Pop' that weekend . My father as an auto refinisher (he spray painted cars for a living) and he let me choose any color he could get and he and I dressed it out, retouched that wedge in a deep metal flaked dark blue with a final clear coat you could see your reflection in well enough to comb a straight part in your 70's disco era stylized 'bein coif' and I will never forget 'those days' my friend... Never ever forget!
A special shout out to you and your memories and thanks to Mr. Leno for sharing his fond memories from those days so long ago.
The Falcon Sprint was really something. Jay could have been speaking for me as we are the same age. My ex-racer stepdad bought a new Falcon Sprint, I think I was 16-17 and he actually let me take it out a few times and I loved it immediately. It was night and day compared to the standard Falcon with a six cylinder. Ours was a metallic bronze-gold color with lighter gold vinyl interior. The Falcon Sprint really was a true sport expression of an otherwise mostly mundane economy car. The hardtop lines and bucket seats made it very attractive. I remember my step dad built a Heath-kit FM radio and added the stereo-multiplex with twin speakers mounted in the rear package tray. FM radio at that time was fairly rare and I remember the first time I drove it under a Freeway bridge and the FM radio signal stayed exactly the same and did not drop out with static like AM radio. It sounded like a miracle, especially with the full audio frequency range of FM. Totally fun car to drive, especially with the V8.
My family's first "almost new car" was a 63 Falcon wagon that my Dad bought in 1965. This was an exciting time for me since we had never owned a car this new. Unfortunately, a couple of months into ownership, a drunk driver crashed into the Falcon and totaled it, (the car was parked with no one in it). A week later my Dad came home with a brand new, 1965 red Plymouth Fury II station wagon. My 7 year-old mind quickly forgot about the Falcon after seeing that new, shiny, Fury II. Thanks for another great video.
Love the Hells fog lights! Like a rally car
Love these shows. That's a cool Falcon.
Dang I wish some cars would be done like family recipes! Other words held on to forever and let us make another dish again fresh!
My Dad owned a 1963 Ford Falcon. Took out a telephone pole on an ice covered road one morning on his way to work.
He loved that car.
Yeah, I know those sneaky little Falcons. I was 16 and I had a new '65 gold Plymouth Satellite, 2-door, bucket seats, 383 Commando, 727 torque flight, had that suspension you could jack it to the sky. I thought I was bad, but I thought I knew my limits as for as running other cars. I knew how to power brake it and get the jump off the line (2 car). Sunday was open racing at the drag strip. I pull up and who should appear in the other lane but a red '63 Falcon Sprint, 289. I could hear the exhaust and hum of the engine. No problem. Jumped him a car and half off the line and was pulling away. But not like I was supposed to. Half way down the track (1/4 mile) I had him by 2 cars. Then that Falcon started pulling on me and 3/4 of the way down the track he was about even. How? He ended up beating me by a car. I wanted some more. He beat me by 2 cars the next time. A 289 !!!! I mean I had been outrunning 396/325 and anything equal or near me. Falcon. 289. Dang. I talked to the owner of the Falcon. He had done a "little" work to it but nothing major. I did a "little" work to mine after that. Never lost to another red Falcon or any other colored Falcon but I sure was leary of them from then on.
I regularly beat Chevelle 396’s and Mopar 383’s with my little holly dual feed 289 Hi Po Mustang ( dual Mallory ignition, traction bars and a little concrete poured in the trunk). The stock Mustang or Falcon’s main issue was they were too light in the rear. But the little 289’s would really wind up tight....took em a few seconds to catch their ‘breath’, lol
Man, you guys really had it good in your youth.
The falcon an mustangs like to wheel hop. Traction bars would fix the problem but I don't think they look very good. You can hear Jay Leno's falcon starting to wheel hop on this burnout. My father was into Ford's an one of his cars was a 63 falcon 260 V8 an 3spd on the column. It had some power but ran out early.
how do you afford a brand new car at 16 years of age?
Old School Yes. Those little 289 HiPo’s were totally under rated. They would would wind up so quick. A friend of mine had one in a 64 Fairlane and he would always want me to drive when we raced someone because I could shift better. The factory shifter was pretty loose. We beat a lot of cars with that little Fairlane and made a lot of people mad.
Awesome,love those old Fords.those little Windsors run like a Swiss watch.
A schoolmate back in 64 had one of these, white with a red interior, and, it was a convertible! Great ride!
LOVE this car, my foster dad had a convertible 63 1/2 Falcon Sprint. God, I loved to drive it.
I love that car . Even has my favorite rims on it .
Jay what can I say I LOVE these videos and you know your stuff.
My dad had a1962 Futura... looked just like this one. It was his daily driver for many years. Bought it new at South Shore Ford in Quincy, Mass. That was my first memory of going into an auto dealer showroom.
After 15years of bugging my old man to sell me his old 62 Falcon Futura. Well, just recently it finally happened and I’ve been enjoying it since.
Love you dad!
Damn Leno and his collection. I wonder if one could work at his garage, no payment, just keeping all these beautiful cars clean.