1955 Ford F-100 Rust Free Tennesee Truck Cheap Fun!! on 2040-cars
Lansing, Michigan, United States
1955 Ford F-100 Many..many offers over the phone it will sell by the weekend..call me with your cash offer so far $13,500 I will sell for $14,000 no delivery for free I can deliver...for cost's Tennessee truck rust free All new paint bright red Updated interior All chrome has been rechromed or replaced with new...super sharp! 400 Small block Chevrolet that really thumps healthy cam starts perfect runs perfectly 4- speed Muncie transmission that shifts great its quiet, one a day it seems to pop out of 4th I really think the shifter needs a dab of tweeking Power steering drives perfect all gauges work Lights all work with the exception of the turn signals they have not been wired up yet Bed has been re done real sharp Trucks buy it now is $15,000 and I will deliver it for free up to 250 miles from 48911 Lansing,Mi. Need to go a dab farther??? call me for a quote Truck is being sold for my best friend, has some personal issues and I am helping him sell it, I have truck and free and clear title in hand Truck is being sold As-IS Questions????? text me or call me Pete 517-202-7207 |
Ford F-100 for Sale
- F1 shop truck patina hand painted pinstripes(US $13,900.00)
- 1980 ford f-100, 300+6 cylinder, clifford equipped!
- 1974 ford f-100 custom(US $3,800.00)
- 1955 ford f-100 original f100
- 1972 ford f 100 2wd short bed inline 6 cyl. 300c.i.
- 1971 ford f100 short bed pickup 351 windsor 500 hp hot rod(US $5,500.00)
Auto Services in Michigan
Xpert Automotive Repair ★★★★★
White`s Muffler & Brakes ★★★★★
Westwood Auto Parts ★★★★★
West Michigan Collision ★★★★★
Wells-Car-Go ★★★★★
Ward Eaton Towing ★★★★★
Auto blog
This woman owns the first Ford Mustang sold in the US
Wed, 11 Dec 2013As Ford celebrates the 50th anniversary of the Mustang with the unveiling of the all-new sixth-gen design, one Chicago women can lay claim to a piece of Mustang history. According to CBS Chicago, Gail Wise was the first person in the US to buy a Mustang in 1964, and she did so two days before the car was even unveiled to the public.
Wise, then a 22-year-old teacher, went into the Chicago Ford dealership wanting to buy a convertible, and a salesperson ushered her over to car covered by a tarp. That car was a baby blue Mustang convertible, which she still owns today - along with the documentation. After sitting for almost 30 years and undergoing a full restoration, the car now looks to be in original condition. The report says that this $3,400 purchase could be worth anywhere between $100,000 and $250,000. While this worked out well for Mrs. Wise, we wouldn't recommend anyone going into a dark, back room of a dealership hoping to get a jump on the purchase of a 2015 Mustang.
Scroll down to watch the video report.
Unrestored 1969 Shelby GT500 one of many classic barn finds going to auction
Wed, 19 Mar 2014We love a good barn find here at Autoblog. We like that there's a palpable excitement and sense of mystery surrounding barn finds. Each case has its own uniqueness to it, and this latest discovery is no different: an unrestored, one-owner 1969 Shelby GT500 with just 8,531 miles on it.
In the case of this particular barn find, many of the typical questions have already been answered. For example, we know who owned it - his name was Larry Brown. He recently passed away, and as he had no wife or children to inherit the estate, the car he purchased at Pennsylvania Ford dealer in May of 1969, will be auctioned off by Ron Gilligan Auctioneers.
The car was fastidiously maintained, having never been driven in the rain. In fact, Brown never even washed it, out of fear of it rusting. According to the auction website, the last time this car saw water was probably when it was detailed ahead of being delivered to Brown. If that doesn't sound like a fanatical sense of maintenance on the part of this GT500's owner, this next part will. The interior has been treated to a similarly painstaking attempt at preservation, with garbage bags covering the seats and two layers of floor mats over the carpets. The result is a car that, aesthetically, is in remarkable shape considering it's spent so long in a barn.
Ford considering return to Le Mans with new EcoBoost LMP2
Mon, 21 Jul 2014If you want to see a Ford racing prototype, you need look no further than the United SportsCar Championship, where the Blue Oval fields two Daytona Prototypes powered by an EcoBoost-branded 3.0-liter twin-turbo V6. But according to the latest rumors, that may not be enough for Ford, which has as much brand to promote overseas as it does back home.
That could be why Racer magazine is reporting that Ford may be poised to return to Le Mans in the coming years. As we all know, Ford competed at Le Mans in the mid-through-late '60s, bringing home four consecutive overall wins with the legendary GT40. The new program would not, according to Racer, seek to relive those glory days, but would instead compete for class wins in the LMP2 category.
Currently, LMP2 regulations are somewhat split between the United SportsCar Championship in North America on the one hand and ACO-sanctioned series like the European Le Mans Series, Asian Le Mans Series and FIA World Endurance Championship on the other, but plans are underway for the regulations to be unified in time for the 2017 season. That could be when Ford is targeting its return, allowing it to compete on both sides of the Atlantic to maximize its exposure.