Find or Sell Used Cars, Trucks, and SUVs in USA

1930 Ford Model. A 4 Door With Suicide Factory Doors. Original Car on 2040-cars

US $16,500.00
Year:1930 Mileage:490000
Location:

United States

United States

This is an original great running 1930 Ford Model A.  

I'm no expert on these cars and don't really know the value of such a car but I traded my camper for it anyway.  My 4 young children and my wife have enjoyed ridding around in a piece of American history. It is truly a beautiful car.  

It has the points with the retarder, hand throttle to set for highway use(cruise), foot petal accelerator, hand brake, wolf whistle and the iouga  horn.  The body is straight and the paint is ok. The top is great and the interior is very very good.  It is a dependable driver.  The tires are less than a year old and have no more than 1000 miles on them. There are no leaks to notice when I park it in my garage.  It has all the original equipment included.   This is the kind of car you could use in a road rally.  The man who has owned it for the past 40 years is a T and A expert. He passed last year and left it to his daughter. She traded it to me for my rv.    I will take as many pictures as I can. And answer as many questions as I can.   I'm going to have to trust you with a lot of this, including the value.   If you have something you want to sell so you can buy thus give me a call. However I require this transaction be completed on ebay if it originated here.   Things I'm in the market for:  hot rod, 67-69 camaro ss or rs, dodge viper, motor home, travel trailer, gold coins, silver coins. I like buying theses items. Maybe you can buy mine here by bidding and I could buy yours later . Call my cell at 501-593-7448.   And please be honest I don't know a lot about these cars. 

DELIVERY IS AVAILABLE ENCLOSED FOR $2 per drivable mile. No boats

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Ford pits The Stig against Gran Turismo 6 in Focus ST Goodwood run

Thu, 03 Jul 2014

The Goodwood Festival of Speed is one of the world great automotive gatherings. So, it was the perfect event for Ford to give the refreshed 2015 Focus ST its world debut in front of a loving public. It even surprised us with a new diesel-powered version, as well.
The Blue Oval really put its focus on making the ST a better driver for this refresh. It left its 2.0-liter turbocharged four-cylinder alone to still pump out a respectable 252 horsepower and 270 pound-feet of torque. The changes like a retuned front suspension, electric power steering and improved interior made the hot hatch an even better place to spend time behind the wheel.
To prove that the Focus ST is still as potent as ever, Ford set up a one-on-one race up the Goodwood Hill. But instead of putting the two cars side-by-side, former Stig from Top Gear UK, Ben Collins, piloted the real model up the course, and his rival drove the virtual version in Gran Turismo 6. The two hot hatches set off at the same time to see whether reality could beat the virtual world, and the finish was actually extremely close. Scroll down to watch the video and find out the winner of this battle at Goodwood.

Watch live as Mark Fields is officially named Ford's next CEO

Thu, 01 May 2014

We've heard rumblings of a changing of the guard at Ford, and this live stream from The Blue Oval itself is set to confirm the rumors: Alan Mulally will be succeeded by the automaker's current Chief Operating Officer, Mark Fields.
Mulally, who is 68 years old, has served at the head of Ford for eight years, and his official retirement date will be July 1st, 2014. Fields, who is 53 this year, has been with Ford for 25 years and has been groomed to take the helm from Mulally for the last several of those years.
There's an official press release that you can read, but if you're more of a visual person, you're welcome to watch the live video feed of the announcement down below.

Average transaction prices climb to a record $36,270 in January

Sat, Feb 3 2018

The automotive sector made a hash of the numbers last month, a mess of pluses and minuses clogging the transaction-price charts according to Kelley Blue Book. The overall industry rose one percent, even though buyers bought fewer cars and light vehicles in January 2018 vs 2017 using the selling-day adjusted rate. Due to January transaction prices rising to $36,270, a record for January, the value of new vehicles sold climbed more than $1 billion compared to January 2017. KBB's transaction prices don't include customer incentives, which changes the complexion slightly; average incentive spending rose to just over ten percent. The average transaction price in December 2017 was $36,756, so January dropped a bit - nothing unexpected, with the month annually blamed for "January doldrums." More revealing is the fact that the average transaction price in January 2017 was $34,910. This year's plumped-up figure came courtesy of the continued shift to crossovers, SUVs, and light trucks, which shouldn't surprise anyone who's read an automotive blog in the past 20 years. That category comprised nearly 70 percent of new vehicle sales for the month. Some manufacturers profited more than others, though. Fiat Chrysler managed 12.8 percent fewer sales in January compared year-on-year, but the company's vehicles sold for $1,300 more. The Ford brand suffered a 6.3-percent dip in sales, but brand transaction prices increased $2,000, while a Lincoln sold for $8,700 more on average. General Motors sold more cars and sold them for more money; overall GM transaction prices rose four percent, or $1,270, while a GMC traded hands for seven-percent more than in January 2017 and a Cadillac got $2,300 more on average. Of KBB's listed automakers, the Volkswagen Group got the most of out its customers, transaction prices rising at the German automaker by 5.6 percent to $42,243 in January 2018 compared to a year earlier. American Honda followed with a 4.3-percent increase to $28,991, GM in third at 4.1 percent to $40,313. Find your next car at Autoblog using our new and used car listings or the Car Finder tool. Broken out by segment, minivans rocked the table, transaction prices leaping by 7.9 percent to $35,380 compared to January a year earlier. Luxury cars boasted the next-highest rise, at 3.6 percent to $58,533.