The 1969 Mercury Cyclone Spoiler II was another muscle car born of the need to qualify a production design for racing.
Its source was the "aero wars" of the 1969-70 NASCAR racing season, when Ford and Chrysler locked horns in a game of high-stakes one-upsmanship. The rivals' hunger for big-time racing victories resulted in the 1969 Dodge Charger 500 and Charger Daytona, the 1970 Plymouth Superbird, the 1969 Ford Talladega, and the rarest and most obscure aero warrior of all, the Cyclone Spoiler II.
Mercury's entry into the aero-car sweepstakes was a streamlined-version of its fastback Cyclone intermediate. The Cyclone Spoiler II was identical in concept to the 1969 Ford Torino Talladega: both cars employed a stretched, tapered nose and a flush-mounted grille for ideal aerodynamics at superspeedway velocities.
On the track, the NASCAR Cyclone Spoiler race cars were actually a couple mph faster than their Talladega cousins due to their slightly longer bodies and subtle aerodynamic differences. On the street, the showroom versions were slower; the Mercurys had to make do with a 290-bhp 351-cid V-8 hooked to an FMX three-speed automatic transmission, while Talladegas got a 428 Cobra Jet/C6 three-speed automatic combo.
However, the Mercury offered a bit more visual pizzazz than the Ford. Cyclone Spoilers were offered in two paint schemes named after Mercury's best NASCAR drivers. The Dan Gurney Specials were Presidental Blue over Wimbledon White with blue vinyl interiors, while the Cale Yarborough Specials sported Candyapple Red roofs and red vinyl interiors.
Cyclone Spoiler II street models came with this 290-bhp 351-cid V-8. A 335-bhp 429 was optional. NASCAR versions had Ford's racing 427s and 429s.
The rocker panels were "re-rolled," raising them one inch so the race cars could be lowered correspondingly without violating NASCAR's ride height requirements. Despite all this effort, Mercury released the cars with virtually no fanfare. To make matters more confusing, Mercury also built standard-nose models with the same Gurney and Yarborough graphics and called them Cyclone Spoilers; the droop-snoot models were called Cyclone Spoiler IIs.
The Cyclone Spoiler II was similar to the Ford Talladega, but the Mercury's nose was longer and slightly lower. This is the blue and white Dan Gurney replica model. Cale Yarborough specials were red and white.
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