65 Ford F100 on 2040-cars
Fiskdale, Massachusetts, United States
Body Type:Pickup Truck
Engine:5.0
Vehicle Title:Clear
Number of Cylinders: 8
Make: Ford
Model: F-100
Mileage: 5,000
Trim: 2 door pick up
Exterior Color: Burgundy
Drive Type: 2wd
Interior Color: Burgundy
65 ford f100 for sale has a rebuilt 302 with less than 5000 miles on it. c6 auto transmission. truck has a small dent in passenger side front fender and slight rust is starting on drivers side bed. also missing a headliner. other than these small cosmetic issues the truck is all there runs great sounds great with headers and dual exhaust.Truck also has power steering and power brakes
Ford F-100 for Sale
1956 ford f100 custom pick up gorgeous show truck 351
1949 ford f-1 pickup 302 fi restoration started
1967 ford f100 ranger pickup with vintage camper(US $2,800.00)
1956 ford f-100 & 1997 mark viii parts car
1967 ford ranger f100(US $7,400.00)
1967 ford f100 shortbed truck !! very nice . 360v8 manual(US $6,500.00)
Auto Services in Massachusetts
Tiny & Sons Glass ★★★★★
T & S Autobody ★★★★★
Patrick Subaru ★★★★★
Paradise Auto Service ★★★★★
Paradise Auto Service ★★★★★
Musicarro Auto Sound ★★★★★
Auto blog
Which is more fuel efficient, driving with a pickup's tailgate up or down?
Tue, 26 Aug 2014
Thanks to the smoke wand in the wind tunnel, you can actually see the difference in our video.
Should you drive with your pickup truck's tailgate up or down? It's an age-old controversy that's divided drivers for decades. Traditionalists will swear you should leave the tailgate down. Makes sense, right? It would seem to let the air flow more cleanly over the body and through the bed. But there's also a school of thought that argues trucks are designed to look and operate in a specific manner, and modern design techniques can help channel the airflow properly. So don't mess with all of that: Leave the tailgate up.
Ford paying $750 million just to close plant in Belgium
Thu, 21 Mar 2013According to a report from Reuters, Ford is shelling out $750 million in a severance deal that will see the automaker close its facility in Genk, Belgium. The automaker reached this deal with the 4,000 hourly workers employed at the plant last week, which means the company will pay out an average of $187,500 per worker.
Ford is still negotiating with the 300 salaried workers at the factory, which currently produces the Mondeo sedan. All told, Ford expects to lose around $2 billion in Europe thanks in no small part to the region's ongoing economic downturn, and two more plants are scheduled to be shut down in Europe this year. The company will log its $750 million payout under "special items" for this quarter.
As you may recall, Ford took a similar path in the US back in 2009 when the domestic market took a spill. Back then, the company shelled out around $50,000 per employee with at least one year of experience, plus either $25,000 toward a new car or an extra cash payment of $20,000. It would seem the cost of closing plants in Belgium is a much harder pill to swallow than in the States...
Woman reunited with stolen Mustang after 28 years
Sun, Dec 28 2014An enthusiast Christmas story: Salinas, California resident Lynda Alsip bought a 1967 Ford Mustang in 1984 when she was 17 years old, having saved $800 after a summer of toil at a grocery store. She got a vanity plate that read "LYNDA67," for the year she was born, but she only got to enjoy the car for two years: in 1986, after a night out, someone stole it from her apartment complex. She hadn't seen it since. Then a man – another Salinas resident – tried to register the car at the DMV this year. He said he bought it as a project car in 1991, yet the DMV couldn't find any record of it. The DMV office sent the case of the untraceable car to the California Highway Patrol, where Officer Christopher Menchen dug into the records, and his search paid off. The officer located Alsip's stolen record report from 1986 and connected the Mustang to it's registered owner in 1986, who was Alsip's mother. The CHP found the forest green Mustang in the man's garage, and they figure it's been there since 1991. After waiting through the still-ongoing three-month investigation, the CHP reunited Alsip – now a wife and a mother of two – with her car on December 22. It's undriveable, but her original vanity plate is back on and she plans to restore it. The video above has the story. News Source: USA Today, NBC Bay Area Government/Legal Ford Coupe Classics Videos California stolen car 1967 ford mustang