1929 Model A Roadster Hot Rod on 2040-cars
Mays Landing, New Jersey, United States
Vehicle Title:Clear
Make: Ford
Drive Type: automatic
Model: Model A
Mileage: 100,000
Trim: Good
Up for sale is my 1929 Roadster. Very dependable, straight driving and straight braking. I've had this car for over 10 years and it's time to sell and finish the other car I'm working on. It's an original steel body and frame with a 400 inch chevy motor a th350 trans and a 8" ford rear. Disc brakes up front and drum brakes on the rear. There is an 11 gallon Moon fuel tank in the trunk. Hilborn fuel injection with a Haltech F10 ECU. This car gets up and goes. The car is chanelled and the doors are welded up. The gauges are Stewart and Warner Wings Series and all work except for the tach, the tach is not compatable with the MSD Ignition System. This car was turned into a hot rod in the early 70's. And tweeked ever since.
Ford Model A for Sale
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Auto Services in New Jersey
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Auto blog
Weekly Recap: Auto execs face life in prison for recall delays under proposed legislation
Sat, 09 Aug 2014
The stiff punishments are part of broader transportation legislation, but clearly McCaskill has automakers in her sights.
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Mon, 23 Sep 2013Ford is in a bit of a pickle for importing and selling Turkey-built Transit Connect cargo vans as passenger vehicles in the US, then converting them to commercial-vehicle specification stateside in an effort to bypass a 25-percent tax imposed on vehicles imported for commercial use. Automakers are required to pay a 2.5-percent tax on imported passenger vehicles.
The Blue Oval got into trouble for this in a January ruling in which U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials asked Ford to stop the practice of importing the Transit Connect vehicles with passenger seats, then removing and shredding them. Now Automotive News reports that Ford is appealing the ruling. The 25-percent "Chicken Tax," as the tariff is often called, is 50 years old and was enacted as a response to a German tariff on chickens. Like Ford, Chrysler bypasses the higher tariff, but it does so in a different manner. It partially disassembles Sprinter cargo vans before shipping them to the US, then rebuilds them at a plant in South Carolina.
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Justin Lapriore was there, and seemingly everywhere, getting footage of the various wares on display on the lawns and the sand and the runway. The resulting video, Born of a Blue Sky, is a 16-minute survey of some of the finer sights and plenty of engine sounds. Check it out below.