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1964 Ford Galaxie Country Sedan Wagon on 2040-cars

Year:1964 Mileage:33427 Color: turquoise /
 turquoise
Location:

Caldwell, New Jersey, United States

Caldwell, New Jersey, United States
Transmission:Automatic
Vehicle Title:Clear
Engine:352 V8
Fuel Type:Gasoline
For Sale By:Private Seller
VIN: 004P74X181441 Year: 1964
Interior Color: turquoise
Make: Ford
Number of Cylinders: 8
Model: Galaxie
Trim: 9 passenger Station Wagon
Drive Type: Rear wheel drive
Mileage: 33,427
Disability Equipped: No
Exterior Color: turquoise
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. ... 

Here we have a 1964 Ford Galaxie Country Sedan Station Wagon. This car is a very rare 9 Passenger sedan. Do you remember saying I WANT TO SIT IN THE WAY BACK, well here is your chance. This car is a North Dakota car that some how made its way to Jersey. The car is VERY VERY SOLID no rust in the floors or rockers. There is some very minor bondo in the right rear quarter but that's it. The 352 V8 runs very strong with know knocks or taps or smoke.  The transmission shifts well and the car drive straight. Mechanically the car has a rear brake grabbing but the car does stop with a nice hard pedal, the power steering is leaking a little and the rear power window will need some help, and of course it will need tires, Other then that this is a mechanically sound car. As you can see the car could use paint and some of the stainless has been foolishly screwed on. All the glass is in excellent condition. the interior has a cover on the front seat but the rest of the interior is in very nice shape. This is a great car to restore.  It would make a great winter project,  and easy to put back on the road. Please email with any question . Inspection is available by appointment.  

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Auto blog

eBay Find of the Day: Mk1 Ford GT40 with interesting history

Sat, 03 May 2014

You might expect a rare Ford GT40 to cross the block at some sort of prestigious auto auction from RM or Gooding, not show up on eBay for over $2 million. However, that's exactly what we have here. The seller claims the car is a late-build Mk1 GT40 from 1969, and it's currently owned by the director of the Hublot watch company in Switzerland.
According to the listing, GT40 #P1108 started life as Mk1 car that was built from factory spares in 1969 and was first sold in 1971. However, the auction is somewhat confusing. According to an image in its gallery, the vehicle was actually built from one of the seven spare Mk3 tubs when production of the iconic racers ended.
This GT40 was never built as a racecar - it lived on the streets its whole life. After assembly finished, it was sent to Germany and was eventually registered for the road. The first owner kept the car until 2005 and sold it with 7,300 miles on the odometer. The current owner bought it in 2012.

Project Ugly Horse: Part V

Mon, 11 Feb 2013

The Slippery Slope
I've had a healthy appreciation for cars that stop since one truly unfortunate incident with a runaway 1971 Lincoln Continental.
It's funny how quickly a party can turn from, "We're all having blast" to "What happened to the front of the house, and how many stitches do you think this is going to take?" Standing in a Mustang salvage shop in Kodak, Tennessee, I couldn't help but feel I had strayed into the latter territory with Ugly Horse. There was a supercharged 5.4-liter V8 plucked from a rear-ended Cobra sitting off to my left. The shelves were lined with second-hand Roush and SVT components galore, but I couldn't stop staring at a set of rotors with the approximate diameter of my chest.

EPA says fuel economy test for hybrids is accurate

Mon, 26 Aug 2013


The EPA says it stands behind its fuel economy test for hybrid vehicles following controversy about the testing process after Ford C-Max Hybrid customers and automotive journalists alike struggled to achieve 47 miles per gallon, the advertised mpg number, Automotive News reports. Ford responded to the issue almost two weeks ago by claiming that a 1970s-era EPA general label rule was responsible for the inaccurate mileage numbers, rerating the C-Max Hybrid's mpg numbers and offering customers rebates. Ford later said it didn't overstate the C-Max Hybrid's fuel economy and that it was surprised by the low numbers.
Ford technically didn't do anything wrong because it was following the general label rule, but agency regulator Christopher Grundler says the automaker was exploiting a loophole when it came up with the hybrid C-Max numbers, and that the testing process remains accurate. The general label rule allows vehicles that use the same engine and transmission and are in the same weight class to share fuel economy numbers, but it doesn't take into account other factors such as aerodynamic efficiency, which affects hybrids more drastically than non-hybrid vehicles. Ford originally used the Fusion Hybrid economy figures for the C-Max Hybrid and claimed the engineers didn't realize that its aerodynamic efficiency would affect fuel economy as much as it did.