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Findapart.co.uk are one of the UK's longest established online Ford used part search services.
Use Findapart.co.uk’s online used Cortina parts search and search our network of Cortina parts suppliers for used Cortina parts and spares delivered direct to your door. Our national network of specialist Cortina breakers and used parts suppliers supply all parts from recently broken stock vehicles.
Findapart.co.uk is the longest running online used Cortina parts database and offers some of the lowest priced parts available in the UK.
Established Since 1999 we have become the industry leader in sourcing used parts for all Ford models.
Our Ford used parts system instantly alerts all Ford breakers of your parts request, enabling them to offer a quick and efficient response for your Ford parts, usually within minutes.
Established since 1999, we have become the industry leader in sourcing used partss for Ford Cortinas.
Our Ford specialist breakers & dismantlers can have your Ford used parts delivered to your door the following day, ready to fit to your vehicle. Whether you need any part from a complete Ford engine or even a cheap Ford gearbox, all Ford parts are available through our Ford dismantlers at the lowest prices in the UK. Simply submit one form and wait for each of our supplying Ford parts specialists to call with the UK's cheapest online Ford used spares quotes.
Detroit Michigan was where Motown Records begun – MoTown? Read Motor Town and in a suburb called Dearborn is where the second largest automobile company: The Ford Motor Company is based. It all started with a to z as originally letters of the alphabet were used for early and differing models and “T” is the one we all remember the most. The mini revolution began in October 1908. That was the year Henry Ford famously introduced to the world ‘The Model T’ (with the steering wheel sited to the left) selling at $825 His unique factory and manufacturing plant created ‘moving assembly lines’ and a term coined ‘mass production’ had arrived. Pre formed drive shafts, transmissions, enclosed engines and block cylinders made the car not only cheap to assemble but also cheap to repair due to the quantities available. It was also simple to drive and by 1916 the basic model cost just $360. As a direct result, Ford wrote and famously said, “any customer can have a car painted any colour that he wants so long as it’s black” (due to paint drying time). Today colours are numerous as are the never ending supply of new products to fit all markets from hatchbacks to luxury vehicles such as Jaguar XJ, Volvo S40, Ford F-150 Focus C-MAX and Hybrids all helping to maintain the image of today’s Ford in the world from such humble beginnings - now a $164 billion multinational empire.
The Ford Cortina is a mid-sized family car built by Ford of Britain in various guises from 1962 to 1982. The Cortina was Ford's mass-market mid-sized car and sold in enormous numbers, making it common on British roads and was Britain's best-selling car of the 1970s. It was replaced in 1982 by the Ford Sierra. In other markets, particularly Asia and Australia, it was replaced by the Mazda 626-based Ford Telstar, though Ford New Zealand did import British-made CKD kits of the Ford Sierra estate for local assembly from 1984. The Cortina was produced in five generations (Mark I through to Mark V, although officially the last one was called the Cortina 80) from 1962 until 1982. From 1970 onward, it was almost identical to the German-market Ford Taunus (being built on the same platform) which was originally a different car model. This was part of a Ford attempt to unify its European operations. By 1976, when the revised Taunus was launched, the Cortina was identical. In fact, this new Taunus–Cortina used the doors and some panels from the 1970 Taunus. All variants of the Cortina sold over one million, with each successive model proving more popular than its predecessor. Such was its fame in the UK that the BBC Two documentary series Arena once devoted an edition to the car and its enthusiasts. [1]The model's name was inspired by the name of the Italian ski resort Cortina d'Ampezzo, site of the 1956 Winter Olympics. As a publicity stunt, several Cortinas were driven down the bobsled run at the resort.