1969 Ford Mustang Red 2 Door Coupe Black Accents 600 Limited Edition Beautiful on 2040-cars
Sewell, New Jersey, United States
Body Type:Coupe
Engine:351 C
Vehicle Title:Clear
Fuel Type:Gasoline
For Sale By:Private Seller
Interior Color: BLK
Make: Ford
Number of Cylinders: 8
Model: Mustang
Trim: black hood scoop and rear spoiler
Drive Type: Automatic C-4 with B&M racing shifter
Mileage: 135,000
Exterior Color: RED / BLK
Offered for sale is my 1969 Ford Mustang Coupe, Lte. 600. My loss will be your gain as this is a very clean great car for the ask price. I am not the original owner of this vehicle. I purchased the car about 3 years ago as a father/son project vehicle and did lots of work to it to get it running and driving. I have nearly $15K into this vehicle and want to sell it to someone who can complete what we started. The vehicle is not equipped with the original motor or transmission. This vehicle, as best as I can tell from my research, was originally equipped with a 3 speed manual transmission and strait 6 cylinder motor. When I bought it, it was equipped with a 351 Cleveland motor (1972) and 3 speed manual transmission, and it did not run. I put a new 2 barrel Holly carb and new distributor, coil, and fuel pump. It runs strong now and I also replaced the manual transmission with a 1972 Rebuilt C-4 automatic transmission and added a B&M racing (rachet) shifter. I completely rebuilt the front end with all new parts and had metal work done to underside ( new floor pans) and other body work done and had it painted Ford Red with black accents. It has an original factory installed hood scoop with the turn indicator lights in scoop, similar to those on the Ford Torino. I installed a new headliner and carpeting and have many other parts included with the sale (see pic). I added a power brake booster to the manual drum brakes system. Vehicle has all four wheel drum brakes and period Crager Mags on it. It is not equipped with power steering and I replaced the worn original steering wheel with an after market chrome steering wheel. My basic research indicates that this car was originally sold in New Jersey as a 600 Lt. model painted in Coral Red. This model was only offered in two colors and the red was the most popular of the two. It is a great car for someone to complete as it only needs a little work to make it an everyday driver. Vehicle runs and drives good.
Payment will be accepted via Paypal deposit and/or certified bank or cashier's check only/cash. buyer is responsible for shipping arrangements and cost and or pick up from Southern New Jersey location.
All sales are final. Thanks for looking:)
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Auto blog
Would you pay $17 a month to give your older Ford connectivity?
Fri, Mar 30 2018When it was first introduced in 2007, there was nothing like the original Ford Sync system, since it allowed car owners to connect and use a portable device better than anything that came before it. And because it was a brought-in/tethered and software-based system, Sync leveraged a device's connectivity and was easily updated. It took competitors awhile to catch up: Toyota Entune wasn't available until 2011, and Chevy MyLink didn't roll out until 2012. But now Ford is the one playing catchup since it stuck with the brought-in strategy while most other automakers were quicker to add connectivity via an embedded cellular modem. Ford initially installed 2G/3G modems in its small fleet of electric and plug-in electric vehicles starting in 2012 so that owners could keep tabs on charging. Embedded connectivity came to Lincoln in 2014, and Ford began adding onboard 4G LTE via Sync Connect to select cars starting with the Escape in 2015. To get more cars connected more quickly, last week the automaker rolled out its FordPass SmartLink solution that plugs into the OBD port of 2010 to 2017 model year vehicles. This lets owners retroactively get onboard Wi-Fi, set up a "geo-fence" to keep tabs on a car's location, receive vehicle health reports and allows remote engine starting and door locking/unlocking using a smartphone app, among other features. But to connect older Ford vehicles will cost owners $16.99 a month for two years, not including installation. Ford throws in 1 GB of data or a 30-day trial, whichever comes first, after which owners have to add the vehicle to their Verizon shared data plan, which supplies connectivity for SmartLink, or establish a new account. (Disclosure: Autoblog is owned by Verizon.) By comparison, GM's 4G LTE data plans start at $10 a month for 200 MB and goes up to $30 for 3 GB, and owners can also add a car to an AT&T shared-data plan. But OnStar doesn't have a separate monthly subscription for the embedded modem or an installation charge, and standard features via the RemoteLink Mobile App are free for the first five years of ownership. FCA's Uconnect Access service also uses an embedded modem to provide similar telematics features for $20 per month following a free one-year trial, while a la carte in-car Wi-Fi is offered for $10 per day, $20 per week or $35 per month.
2014 Ford F-150 gets CNG option
Wed, 31 Jul 2013Ford is toiling away, installing heavy-duty engine components into select 3.7-liter V6s to allow them to run on compressed natural gas (CNG) and liquid petroleum gas (LPG) in addition to gasoline. That's nothing new, but now, Ford has announced that it will offer the 2014 F-150 with this engine configuration, bringing the Blue Oval's total number of CNG/LPG-friendly vehicles up to eight. The F-150 will be the only half-ton pickup on the market that can run on these gases.
Ford will charge $315 per vehicle to equip the optional engine, but the trucks won't be ready to run on the alternative fuels straight from the factory and must be upfitted with additional equipment. A Ford Qualified Vehicle Modifier will install a separate fuel system for the compressed gases at a cost of $7,500 to $9,500, depending on fuel tank size. With the right-size tank, the F-150 equipped with the CNG/LPG-prepped engine can go 750 miles on one tank of gas, according to Ford, averaging 23 miles per gallon.
The practice of offering flex-fuel vehicles is gaining momentum as businesses take advantage of cheap gas. CNG can be bought for $2.11/gallon on average (per gasoline equivalent), and sometimes for as little as $1.00 in some parts of the US, Ford states. "With the money saved using CNG, customers could start to see payback on their investment in as little as 24 to 36 months," says Jon Coleman, Ford's fleet sustainability and technology manager. The automaker expects to sell a total of 15,000 CNG/LPG-prepped vehicles in the 2014 model year.
Is it time for American carmakers to give up on dual-clutch transmissions? [w/poll]
Mon, 22 Jul 2013Last week, in the midst of Detroit's first days seeking relief in Chapter 9 of the bankruptcy code, Automotive News contributor Larry P. Vellequette penned an editorial suggesting that American car companies raise the white flag on dual clutch transmissions and give up on trying to persuade Americans to buy cars fitted with them. Why? Because, Vellequette says, like CVT transmissions, they "just don't sound right or feel right to American drivers." (Note: In the article, it's not clear if Vellequette is arguing against wet-clutch and dry-clutch DCTs or just dry-clutch DCTs, which is what Ford and Chrysler use.) The article goes on to state that Ford and Chrysler have experimented with DCTs and that both consumers and the automotive press haven't exactly given them glowing reviews, despite their quicker shifts and increased fuel efficiency potential compared to torque-converter automatic transmissions.
Autoblog staffers who weighed in on the relevance of DCTs in American cars generally disagreed with the blanket nature of Vellequette's statement that they don't sound or feel right, but admit that their lack of refinement compared to traditional automatics can be an issue for consumers. That's particularly true in workaday cars like the Ford Focus and Dodge Dart, both of which have come in for criticism in reviews and owner surveys. From where we sit, the higher-performance orientation of such transmissions doesn't always meld as well with the marching orders of everyday commuters (particularly if drivers haven't been educated as to the transmission's benefits and tradeoffs), and in models not fitted with paddle shifters, it's particularly hard for drivers to use a DCT to its best advantage.
Finally, we also note that DCT tuning is very much an evolving science. For instance, Autoblog editors who objected to dual-clutch tuning in the Dart have more recently found the technology agreeable in the Fiat 500L. Practice makes perfect - or at least more acceptable.