1929 Ford Model A 2 Door Sedan Steel, 1934 Style Wheels on 2040-cars
Florence, Alabama, United States
1929 Ford Model A 2 Door All steel
except fiberglass front fenders 289 Ford
engine Automatic
Transmission 4” dropped
axle front end 8” Ford
rear end w/ ladder bars and coil overs Steel
wheels with stainless steel center caps and trim rings B.F.
Goodrich radial tires Tilt
steering Lecarra
steering wheel Billet dash
knobs Phone/ GPS
charger in dash Stewart
Warner gauges Nice tweed
interior Saddle gas
tanks 1939 Ford
LED tail lights Billet tag
bracket Billet 3rd
brake light in rear window Rear tail
panel which houses license plate NSRA safety
inspected Custom pinstriping Slick Wild
Strawberry basecoat/ clearcoat paint This car runs and drives great. It is well-built and has been driven 33,000 miles so paint has some chips and the rear fenders have been lightly bumped (see photos). The paint
is still very slick and the car is also very straight. The car is ready for
summer cruises and car shows. The car is priced to sell and it would be hard to
find a better price on a quality built car that this car is. Feel free to have
the car inspected or come see and drive the car for yourself . For serious inquiries only, call |
Ford Model A for Sale
Auto Services in Alabama
Waldrop Motor Inc ★★★★★
Super Lube-301 ★★★★★
Stephens Service Station ★★★★★
Samz Auto Service Center ★★★★★
Sales Ford Lincoln Mercury Inc ★★★★★
River Park Transmission ★★★★★
Auto blog
Ford to add more than 2,000 jobs in Kansas City
Thu, 02 May 2013Continued high demand for the Ford F-150, along with the addition of the all-new Transit series of commercial vehicles, has led Ford to announce that it will add over 2,000 jobs at its Kansas City Assembly Plant. At the time of the announcement, the plant boasts 2,450 hourly employees working on two shifts. All told, Ford will invest $1.1 billion in the Kansas City plant to expand truck production and begin producing the Transit series.
According to the automaker, fullsize truck sales are up 19 percent through April of 2013, leading to an additional 900 workers and a third shift of production for the F-150. Production of the Transit series will begin in the fourth quarter of this year, requiring an additional 1,100 workers. In addition, Ford estimates that a total of 18,000 jobs will be created by suppliers to its Kansas City plant to support the additional vehicle production.
Want to know more? Scroll down for the complete press release.
70% of pickups could use aluminum by 2025
Wed, 11 Jun 2014In the next decade, the auto industry will see an explosion in its use of aluminum to cut weight and increase fuel economy, according to a study from market analysts Ducker Worldwide cited by The Detroit News. We are already seeing the lightweight metal show up extensively in luxury models from Europe, but with the impending launch of aluminum-intensive 2015 Ford F-150 (pictured above), North America is using it even more, as well. The report predicts 70 percent of US pickups to have aluminum bodies by 2025.
It won't just be pickups that see the benefit, though. The average amount of aluminum in US vehicles is forecasted by the study to grow from an average of 350 pounds in 2013 to about 550 pounds by 2025. The most common parts to use it will be hoods, doors and - to some extent - roofs, as well.
The massive increase in pickups' aluminum content hardly seems surprising. The F-150 is predicted to use so much that it might cause a short-term shortage, according to one earlier report. At the same time General Motors is heavily rumored to be negotiating with suppliers for the next generation Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra. Ram is the last holdout of the Big Three, but the study predicts that not to last.
Ford cuts 950 Russian jobs on weak demand
Thu, 03 Apr 2014The Russian auto market, in decline for the past year and further hit by the declining value of the ruble and recent sanctions over its annexation of Crimea, has forced Ford to cut jobs and shifts at two of its joint venture plants there. Around 700 of the 2,700 total workers who build the Russian-market Focus and Mondeo will be cut at the plant in Vsevolozhsk, near St. Petersburg as it drops to a single production shift. A second plant about 700 miles away in Yelabuga, in the Tartarstan region, will lose 250 workers. That plant builds seven vehicles, including the Explorer, Kuga and Edge.
The Moscow Times says Ford has been especially hit by the market decline, the overall market losing 5.5 percent in 2013 compared to the year before, but Ford sales dropping 18 percent in 2013 year-on-year. This year isn't going any better, with The Blue Oval posting a 21-percent decline through the first two months of 2014. That's why, though the Yelabuga plant builds the CUVs that customers are moving into, even it is facing cuts.
The job cuts in Vsevolozhsk come on top four-week plant shutdown planned so that the paint and body shops can go to one shift. In a statement, the company said, "Ford Sollers remains absolutely committed to the Russian market and is confident it has the right product plan, people and assets to deliver long-term profitable growth."