Body Type:Pickup Truck
Vehicle Title:Clear
Engine:Flat Head V8
For Sale By:Private Seller
Number of Cylinders: 8
Make: Ford
Model: F-100
Trim: 2 door
Drive Type: 4 Speed on floor
Warranty: Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty
Mileage: 0
Not very common is this F100 with flathead V8 & manual 4 on the floor. Most F100's have 3 on the column. I believe motor is seized and is also missing some parts. Body pretty solid due to this truck being in a pole barn many years in a little town outside of Kansas City Missouri. In terms of rust, it has a couple spots that need small patches. Original radiator, fan and shroud is also with truck. I have clear Missouri tittle.
Ford F-100 for Sale
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Auto blog
Watch the Hennessey Ford GT makes its record run at Texas Mile
Wed, 27 Mar 2013We said they'd probably be out with an official video, we did not lie. The Hennessey-powered camouflage Ford GT sat at one end of the runway at the Texas Mile sitting still. At the other end of the runway it had broken its own speed record, the twin-turbo 5.7-liter V8 pushing the aerodynamic supercar up to 267.6 miles per hour, a 4.3-mph improvement over the old mark.
There's not much in the video you haven't already seen, this just makes it official. That said, who doesn't want to see a twin-turbo Ford GT set an incredible speed record? You can watch it below.
Ford car-camo artist works his craft on Australia's new Falcon XR8
Fri, 25 Jul 2014Ford is among the kings of concealment when it comes to test cars. On one recent Mustang SVT mule, the automaker went to the extreme of putting baffles over the exhausts to hide how many there were. Sounds like a lot of work, right? In a new video, the Blue Oval has decided to take fans behind the scenes to show them what it takes to camouflage a prototype. In this case the subject was the recently unveiled 2014 Falcon XR8 for Australia.
Ford's prototype build coordinator Down Under has the very appropriate name of Neil Trickey, and it's his job to obfuscate the important bits of test cars to keep them out of spy shooters' camera lenses. Trickey calls his job a "dark art," and he shows off some of the tricks of his trade in the video. It turns out that the fabric we often see on mules is a type of lycra, but his team isn't above getting out a can of spray paint to conceal parts, too.
Scroll down to watch a video about a man who you probably wish could be a little worse at his job.
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