1967 Ford Galaxie Fastback With Parts Car on 2040-cars
Danville, Illinois, United States
Up for sale/auction is 2 1967 Galaxie fastback cars. The Blue car is a Texas car with no rust what so ever on it. Has minor dents and dings for a car of it's year and is in terrific shape for anybody looking to build one. The only defects are the nose has some minor damage to it, and the interior is in sad shape, but that's why there is a 2nd car. The white car is an IN car and the frame is rusted but the front is in perfect shape and the interior is in great shape. The white car has major frame rust and wouldn't be a good builder. You won't find a better set of cars for the price and would make a great project for someone. The blue car has 240 straight 6 with 3 speed overdrive trans, the white car has no motor but has a 3 on the tree. I was planning on building it myself but I found a car I want more so I'm trying to sell these to buy it.
Shipping and Payment: This is a CASH ONLY auction and LOCAL PICKUP only. I don't do paypal or checks. You can come pick it up at my house or send someone to get it for you as long as they have the money in hand to pick it up. |
Ford Galaxie for Sale
- 1965 ford galaxie 500 2-door convertible(US $8,500.00)
- 1965 ford galaxie base 6.4l(US $10,000.00)
- 1964 ford galaxie 500 base 5.8l(US $11,000.00)
- A really stunning nice driver condition convertible for the summer. hard 2 fault
- 1962 ford galaxie 500 base 5.8l(US $15,000.00)
- Gorgeous galaxie convertible - 390 / factory installed 3-2 setup/factory headers
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eBay Find of the Day: 1970 Ford Torino King Cobra prototype
Wed, 08 May 2013Over the last decade or so, competition in NASCAR has led to some pretty funky looking racecars. And when the sport was still up and coming, the tight competition actually led to some interesting production cars. The Dodge Charger Daytona and Plymouth Superbird are perhaps the most well-known cars of the sport's "aero wars" era but the Ford Torino King Cobra might have been the most memorable of all, if not for some different homologation rules established in 1970. The Torino King Cobra never made it to production and never competed in NASCAR, but three examples exist including this one now for sale on eBay.
Designed as a successor for the aero-tuned Torino Talladega, the Torino King Cobra has a sleeker front end with hidden headlights and a sloped nose. As the story goes, NASCAR made a rule change in 1970 requiring 3,000 of the vehicles to be produced, which was substantially more than the 500 units required by the previous rule. One of the three prototypes ever built - and the only one built with the Boss 429 engine - is now for sale on eBay with a starting bid of $500,000. With a little more than three days left on the auction there are still no bids, but in the grand scheme of things this seems like a relatively fair price for a rare piece of automobile and racing history.
Watch this awesome R/C car chase scene made with cardboard and glue
Fri, 22 Feb 2013It never ceases to amaze us how much video production talent you can find on YouTube, especially when considering movies like Battleship actually exist on the silver screen. It's even better, of course, when cars are involved, which is why we can't stop watching this car chase between a pair of radio controlled Ford Mustangs.
Racing through a detailed set built in the middle of a public street using just "cardboard, hot glue and spray paint," this video is possibly even greater than The Greatest R/C Car Chase Ever that we saw last year. With the exception of a fruit stand and/or a plate-glass window being carried across the street, this has all the makings of a classic cliché chase scene.
Scroll down to watch the scaled-down action ensue as well as the full-scale conclusion.
1964 Ford GT40 prototype sells for $7M
Mon, 14 Apr 2014Seven-figure Ferraris are not horribly rare. Heck, an eight-figure Ferrari isn't a rare occurrence. Between modern masterpieces like the Enzo and more classic offerings, cracking the million-dollar mark isn't a particularly tall order for the cars from Maranello. For a Ford, though, it's a big deal.
Now, this is not just some rare Mustang. This is a GT40, the car that Henry Ford II commissioned to whip Enzo Ferrari around a track in France. As far as the Le Mans-winning racers go, they don't get much rarer than this one. Sold at the Mecum Auctions in Houston, this is one of the prototypes, meaning it's one of the very first GT40s ever built. That makes its $7 million winning a bid, a record for on-air coverage of the auction, a pretty darn impressive figure.
You can watch the auction below, but first, take a look back at our original story on this rare Blue Oval.