1960 Ford F100 Truck Styleside Low Reserve on 2040-cars
Lincoln, Nebraska, United States
Vehicle Title:Clear
Make: Ford
Drive Type: Rwd
Model: F-100
Mileage: 68,000
Trim: 292 V8
This F100 is in pretty good shape considering the year. A couple small rust spots but none visible. There is a golf ball size rust spot on fender where it attaches to the body by the hood. Then on back of cab on the bottom. It has 68,000 miles as the odometer reads. It has the 292 V8 that looks original to me. It runs and drives good. The seat has been recently upholstered. Also the previous owner installed CD player. If you have any questions please call me at 760-815-7346
Ford F-100 for Sale
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Motorweek goes retro with '80s hot hatch shootout
Mon, 03 Nov 2014Motorweek's decades of history on television make it the perfect medium to look back into the automotive past and see how things are different now. It recently added old road test videos to its YouTube channel of the Acura NSX and Toyota Supra, as well as the Ferrari F40. For one of its newest flashback clips, Motorweek has exhumed an affordable five-car challenge of 1986's premiere hot hatches.
By today's standards, this is an eclectic field that features fondly remembered classics like the Volkswagen GTI 16-valve and Acura Integra. However, it also throws in some nearly forgotten contenders like the Dodge Colt Turbo and Ford Escort GT. The angular Toyota Corolla FX16 GT-S rounds out the group.
It's fascinating to watch Motorweek run the quintet through the slalom, down the drag strip and on various roads. What's most striking in this clip is the difference in the definition of a performance car between then and now. With its 16-valve, 1.8-liter four-cylinder, the GTI is the burliest of the contenders with 123 horsepower, but it still takes 8.8 seconds to reach 60 miles per hour. By today's standards, that would make it a plain-jane economy car, and not even a particularly quick one.
'84 MotorWeek Cherokee, Bronco and Blazer comparison indulges your SUV nostalgia
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Former Ford president, Jaguar chairman Nick Scheele dead at 70
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Nick Scheele was born in the UK in 1944 and joined the Ford Motor Company upon graduating from the University of Durham in 1966, staying within the Blue Oval's portfolio for the entirety of his career. After moving to North America in 1978, he rose through the ranks to become president of Ford's Mexican operations in 1988. After acquiring Jaguar, Ford appointed Scheele as its chairman.
Scheele subsequently acted as chairman of all of Ford's European operations, making difficult decisions to take the division out of the red and into the black. He briefly headed up Ford's North American division before he was appointed in 2001 as president and chief operating officer of the global automaker, working under CEO Bill Ford following the departure of Jacques Nasser departure and retaining the role until his retirement in 2005.