Mercury Cyclone CJ
Even though the Cyclone is not the first muscle car that pops into your head when you think of late 60s muscle cars, this Mercury was popular back in the day. However, people have forgotten it, along with the brand itself, which Ford discontinued a few years ago. And along with the compact Mustang-based Cougar, Mercury offered the Cyclone. Interestingly, it was an intermediate muscle car they built on the Ford Fairlane/Torino platform.
Since Mercury was an upscale brand, they appointed the Cyclone better than comparable products from Ford. However, the engine choices and performance were the same. Mercury presented the Cyclone in 1964 and it stayed on the market until 1971. But the best version most interesting to collectors is the Cyclone CJ.
Those two letters marked the presence of the famed 428 Cobra Jet engine. It was the first truly street-muscle engine Ford ever built. With 7.0-liters of displacement and an advertised 335 HP, the Cobra Jet made over 400 HP in real life. The Cyclone CJ was a serious street racing contender that significantly upped the performance.
Along with Ford, Mercury was active in NASCAR racing during the late 60s. The Cyclone CJ played its part in their racing efforts. Sadly, they produced less than 3,500 Cyclones CJ in 1969 because the regular Cyclones without the Cobra Jet option were more popular.