Ford F-100 Ranger Xlt Shortbed, Automatic (c-6) , 360 Engine on 2040-cars
Malta, Montana, United States
Body Type:Pickup Truck
Engine:360 FE
Vehicle Title:Clear
Interior Color: Blue/White
Make: Ford
Number of Cylinders: 8
Model: F-100
Trim: XLT Ranger
Cab Type (For Trucks Only): Regular Cab
Drive Type: Automatic
Mileage: 90,001
Options: CD Player
Sub Model: XLT Ranger
Power Options: Air Conditioning
Exterior Color: Blue/White
Excellent Shortbed. Paint and body are good. Been repainted original colors. Some small dings on the tailgate trim (Minimal). Runs Excellent no problems just drove it 400 miles this weekend. Good sounding aftermarket stereo system. Has dealer installed Air Condition, the compressor is new but not hooked up. All the lines and everthing there. Runs down the road great, new tires and wheels about 800 miles ago. Does not burn oil and transmission is smooth. 9 in oper rear end. Nada Average Book is $9600. This is a great Deal for a hard to find shortbed
Ford F-100 for Sale
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Auto Services in Montana
Transolution Auto Care ★★★★★
Ronan Dodge Chrysler Jeep ★★★★★
Laurel Hill Car Care ★★★★★
Kalispell Hyundai ★★★★★
Automatic Transmission Solutions ★★★★★
Sfe-Rhino Linings-Bitterroot ★★★★
Auto blog
Which is more fuel efficient, driving with a pickup's tailgate up or down?
Tue, 26 Aug 2014
Thanks to the smoke wand in the wind tunnel, you can actually see the difference in our video.
Should you drive with your pickup truck's tailgate up or down? It's an age-old controversy that's divided drivers for decades. Traditionalists will swear you should leave the tailgate down. Makes sense, right? It would seem to let the air flow more cleanly over the body and through the bed. But there's also a school of thought that argues trucks are designed to look and operate in a specific manner, and modern design techniques can help channel the airflow properly. So don't mess with all of that: Leave the tailgate up.
Ford blamed in drug mule lawsuit
Tue, 30 Jul 2013If a college student is caught smuggling drugs across the border, one might think the kid got what was coming to him. But when a Mexican student at the University of Texas in El Paso was caught by Border Patrol agents with duffel bags filled with marijuana in his trunk, the man used a classic excuse: He claimed they weren't his.
While a claim like that is almost unbelievable, Ricardo Magallanes, the student, is now suing Ford for handling its vehicles' key codes negligently enough to allow drug smugglers to break into his Ford Focus and stash the drugs, The Daily Caller reports. The twist here is that four other people who lived in Juarez and worked in El Paso were involved in the same type of scheme - allegedly unwittingly, just like Magallanes - and all the cars were Fords except one model from General Motors. FBI agents also found an employee at a Dallas Ford dealership that had accessed the key codes to all four of the cannabis-stuffed Fords.
While we all may not own Fords, the case still causes us slight paranoia. We'll definitely be checking our trunks before we cross any more international borders.
Ford taken to task by gov't for Chicken Tax end-around
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.
But the ruling against Ford's strategy states that it "serves no manufacturing or commercial purpose" and is there to "manipulate the tariff schedule," Automotive News reports. As Ford's appeal goes through, it is importing the Transit Connect and paying the higher tax, hoping for a favorable outcome and planning to build the next-generation Transit Connect, which it plans to launch before the end of the year, in Spain.