Find or Sell Used Cars, Trucks, and SUVs in USA

1967 Ford Falcon Futura 302 Cu. In. on 2040-cars

US $15,000.00
Year:1967 Mileage:7000 Color: Yellow and Black /
 Yellow and Black
Location:

Vicksburg, Mississippi, United States

Vicksburg, Mississippi, United States
Advertising:
Transmission:Automatic
Body Type:U/K
Engine:4.7L 289Cu. In. V8 GAS Naturally Aspirated
Vehicle Title:Clear
Fuel Type:GAS
For Sale By:Private Seller
Year: 1967
Number of Cylinders: 8
Make: Ford
Model: Falcon
Trim: Futura
Warranty: Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty
Drive Type: U/K
Safety Features: Power Disc Brakes and Drums on Rear
Mileage: 7,000
Sub Model: 2 Door Sports Coupe
Disability Equipped: No
Exterior Color: Yellow and Black
Interior Color: Yellow and Black
Condition: Used: A vehicle is considered used if it has been registered and issued a title. Used vehicles have had at least one previous owner. The condition of the exterior, interior and engine can vary depending on the vehicle's history. See the seller's listing for full details and description of any imperfections. ... 

 Everything on the car has been replaced.  All new:

  • Ball joints
  • Upper and lower control arms
  • Rubbers, window seals, trunk seals, door seals
  • Interior: New seats, carpet, new headliner

Engine:

  • 302 Cu. In. polished intake manifold
  • Chrome alternator
  • Edlebrock carburetor 500 CFM
  • Headers
  • Exhaust pipes and mufflers
  • Aluminum radiator
  • New wheels
  • Wiper motor
This is a very sound car.  I have driven it once a year to the coast about 225 miles, one way, for the past 8 years.  Never had any problems.  Everything on this car has been repaired or replaced.  No rust on the car.  It has a strong 302 with a 3.53 rear end.  There were only 6,051 of these made.  There is some rust and chrome is flaking on the rear bumper and there is a scratch on the roof of the car.  It never runs hot and has never put me down.

Auto Services in Mississippi

Venable Glass Services LLC ★★★★★

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Address: 660 Highway 51, Pocahontas
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Ugly Bunch ★★★★★

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Address: 1811 11th St, Bailey
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Taylor Automotive Inc ★★★★★

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Address: 315 Clinton Blvd, Clinton
Phone: (601) 924-5914

Smith Body Shop & Towing Service ★★★★★

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Address: 5930 N State St, Jackson
Phone: (601) 957-0910

One Stop One Shop ★★★★★

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Address: 1780 Bartlett Rd, Mineral-Wells
Phone: (866) 595-6470

King`s Tires & Alignment ★★★★★

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Auto blog

BMW V8-powered Ford Model A is the definition of Hot Rod

Thu, 20 Jun 2013

Today, hotrodding has a pretty staid definition. Take one classic American car, add one classic American V8, sprinkle with tire smoke and you pretty much have every hot rod to roll out of a shop in the last 40 years. Mike Borroughs knows it wasn't always this way. Once upon a time, getting your bucket to go faster meant grabbing whatever parts were lazing about the yard, bolting them together with a bit of ingenuity and laughing your way down the quarter mile. It's in that spirit that Burroughs built his 1928 Ford Model A.
Rather than turn to the tired flathead or the common Chevrolet small block, Burroughs plucked a 4.0-liter V8 from a 1995 BMW 7 Series. With 300 horsepower and 300 pound-feet of torque, the engine has no trouble shuffling the old A around town. He had to build a custom chassis to get everything to cooperate, but the result is a 1,500-pound heathen that looks built to harass dry lake beds. You can check it out in the video below. Be warned, the soundtrack by Hanni el Khatib may not be safe for work - awesomeness of this caliber rarely is.

NHTSA closes Ford F-150 EcoBoost acceleration probe

Mon, 14 Apr 2014

Typically when we report on the findings of an investigation from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, it's because the government body has discovered a safety issue and prescribed a recall. In this case, however, NHTSA has closed an investigation into a reported performance deficit without ever getting to the recall stage.
The issue revolves around the Ford F-150 - specifically those equipped with the 3.5-liter EcoBoost engine - of which some 360,000 were built in the 2011, 2012 and 2013 model years. After receiving an initial 95 complaints, NHTSA opened an investigation last May - almost a year ago - into the reported issue of reduced engine power under hard acceleration. The agency has since received a total of 525 such complaints, and Ford itself reported receiving over 4,000.
Together, NHTSA and Ford determined that the problem resulted from cylinders misfiring, an issue itself stemming from water getting into the charge air cooler (CAC) mated to the turbochargers. In particularly humid or rainy conditions, water was found to get into the CAC, causing some of the cylinders to misfire, which in turn triggered the ECU to disable those cylinders in order to protect the catalytic converter from damage.

2016: The year of the autonomous-car promise

Mon, Jan 2 2017

About half of the news we covered this year related in some way to The Great Autonomous Future, or at least it seemed that way. If you listen to automakers, by 2020 everyone will be driving (riding?) around in self-driving cars. But what will they look like, how will we make the transition from driven to driverless, and how will laws and infrastructure adapt? We got very few answers to those questions, and instead were handed big promises, vague timelines, and a dose of misdirection by automakers. There has been a lot of talk, but we still don't know that much about these proposed vehicles, which are at least three years off. That's half a development cycle in this industry. We generally only start to get an idea of what a company will build about two years before it goes on sale. So instead of concrete information about autonomous cars, 2016 has brought us a lot of promises, many in the form of concept cars. They have popped up from just about every automaker accompanied by the CEO's pledge to deliver a Level 4 autonomous, all-electric model (usually a crossover) in a few years. It's very easy to say that a static design study sitting on a stage will be able to drive itself while projecting a movie on the windshield, but it's another thing entirely to make good on that promise. With a few exceptions, 2016 has been stuck in the promising stage. It's a strange thing, really; automakers are famous for responding with "we don't discuss future product" whenever we ask about models or variants known to be in the pipeline, yet when it comes to self-driving electric wondermobiles, companies have been falling all over themselves to let us know that theirs is coming soon, it'll be oh so great, and, hey, that makes them a mobility company now, not just an automaker. A lot of this is posturing and marketing, showing the public, shareholders, and the rest of the industry that "we're making one, too, we swear!" It has set off a domino effect – once a few companies make the guarantee, the rest feel forced to throw out a grandiose yet vague plan for an unknown future. And indeed there are usually scant details to go along with such announcements – an imprecise mileage estimate here, or a far-off, percentage-based goal there. Instead of useful discussion of future product, we get demonstrations of test mules, announcements of big R&D budgets and new test centers they'll fund, those futuristic concept cars, and, yeah, more promises.