The Holden FB is an automobile produced by Holden in Australia from 1960 to 1961.[2] Introduced on 14 January 1960,[1] the FB series replaced the Holden FC range.[2]
| Holden FB | |
|---|---|
Holden Special Station Sedan | |
| Overview | |
| Manufacturer | Holden (General Motors) |
| Also called | Holden Standard Holden Special Holden Utility Holden Panel Van |
| Production | January 1960 – May 1961 |
| Body and chassis | |
| Body style | 4-door sedan 5-door station wagon 2-door coupé utility 2-door panel van |
| Layout | FR layout |
| Powertrain | |
| Engine | 2.3L GMH '138' I6 |
| Transmission | 3-speed manual[1] |
| Dimensions | |
| Wheelbase | 105.0 inches (2667 mm)[1] |
| Length | 181.5 inches (4610 mm)[1] |
| Width | 67.0 inches (1703 mm)[1] |
| Height | 60.0 inches (1521 mm)[1] |
| Curb weight | Standard Sedan: 2473 lb (1122 kg)[1] |
| Chronology | |
| Predecessor | Holden FC |
| Successor | Holden EK |
The FB range consisted of four-door sedans in two trim levels, five-door station wagons in two trim levels,[3] a two-door coupe utility and a two-door panel van.[4] The six models were marketed as follows:
The Holden Business Sedan, which had been marketed as part of the FC range, was not carried over to the FB series.[2]
The FB was promoted as being longer, lower, more spacious and more powerful than the FC model, but in reality it was only slightly so on each count.[5] Overall length was 5.5 inches (140 mm) greater, although the wheelbase remained the same.[5] The engine bore was still 3 inches (76 mm), the last model with that specification. Engine capacity remained at 132 cubic inches (2.16 L) but the compression ratio was raised. However, the resulting extra 4 brake horsepower (3 kW) of power did not compensate for the greater weight of the FB, so performance was inferior to that of its predecessor.[6] Changes were also made to the brakes, front coil springs, air cleaner and clutch.[2]
Obvious styling differences were the lower bonnet, finned rear mudguards with new taillights (on the sedans and wagons only) and a wrap-around windscreen.[5] Seating was improved, as was the instrument panel.[5]
Notably, the FB was the first Holden model to also be produced in left-hand drive form, those vehicles being destined for export markets.[2]
All FB models were powered by a 132-cubic-inch (2.16 L) inline six-cylinder engine, the last to have the 3-inch (76 mm) bore size, producing 75 brake horsepower (56 kW).[6]
After a production run of 147,747 vehicles,[1] the FB was replaced by the Holden EK series in May 1961.[7]
Holden, a marque of General Motors, automobile timeline, 1948–2021 | |
|---|---|
List of Holden vehicles † HQ–WB Statesmans not marketed under the "Holden" brand, but rather the separate "Statesman" brand. |