1957 Ford Fairlane 500 Custom Ratrod Hotrod Gasser Mustang 302 Streetrod on 2040-cars
Beardstown, Illinois, United States
Body Type:Sedan
Engine:v8
Vehicle Title:Clear
Fuel Type:Gasoline
For Sale By:Private Seller
Interior Color: Blue
Make: Ford
Number of Cylinders: 8
Model: Fairlane
Trim: fairlane
Drive Type: rwd
Mileage: 99,888
Exterior Color: Blue
Disability Equipped: No
You are bidding on a 1957 Ford Fairlane 500. This car has been done For about 4 years. The car has a later model 302 with a c4 transmission. The speedo will need new cable This car is a very nice driver. It is not a showcar. It has new tires and wheels and exhaust. We drove the car about 80 miles over the weekend. It runs and drives GREAT. The trunk and floors are perfect. When the man did this car he did not start out with a rusty old car. It has a cracked winshield on the passenger side that is not bad. It has a cracked drivers door glass. The trim and chrome is very decent. Driver quality. The interior is pretty nice. It has a split on the back seat. Very easy fix. The car sounds great. It has new dual exhaust.
If you have any questions call me anytime. (217)248-2786 Thanks Mike.
This car is for sale locally and i reserve the right to end this auction at anytime.
Ford Fairlane for Sale
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Auto blog
Woman trades 1914 Model T in for 2013 Corvette
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And the Model T? Boyter says the car was built as a racer by Ford, and that it had been a show winner for years when it belonged to her father. But, after spending the last 16 years in a museum with its fluids drained, Boyter decided it was time to shed some of the past. She walked into the dealer, laid eyes on a white 2LT Corvette with a red interior and offered to trade all three of the vehicles in on the sports car.
Why not wait for the C7? "I fell in love with that one when I walked in the door," She said. We can't fault her there.
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The story of the GT40 is fascinating. Henry Ford II attempted to buy Ferrari in the early '60s, but Enzo refused. Ford decided if he couldn't have them, then he would beat the Prancing Horse on the track. Ford went to Carroll Shelby and asked him to spearhead the program. The early cars combined a steel monocoque chassis with Ford's 4.2-liter V8 engine pumping out around 350 horsepower. The first prototype made its public debuted on April 1, 1964, at the New York Auto Show.
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