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

on 2040-cars

C $16,000.00
Year:1973 Mileage:79000 Color: dark brown met / white vinyle roof /
 White
Location:

Body Type:Coupe
Vehicle Title:Clear
Engine:460 cuin / 7.5 litre V8
Fuel Type:Gasoline
For Sale By:Private Seller
Transmission:Automatic
VIN: 3Y87A121793 Year: 1973
Model: Thunderbird
Trim: coupe
Options: Leather Seats, Eight track Stereo
Power Options: Air Conditioning, Cruise Control, Power Windows, Power Seats, Driver seat Power
Drive Type: rear
Mileage: 79,000
Exterior Color: dark brown met / white vinyle roof
Warranty: none
Interior Color: White
Number of Doors: 2
Number of Cylinders: 8
Sub Model: Thunderbird
Condition: Used

This T - bird is powered by an 460 cuin / 7.5 litre V 8

Engine and transmission are running very well.

The car is ready for new collector plates , since it was already registered as a collector .

the car is garage kept and a none smoker vehicle .

The interior is in excellent condition and the exterior in good condition .

It is equipped with pwr steering , pwr windows (4) , pwr brakes , pwr driver seat , excellent leather .

The T- bird is all original with good white wall tires .

previously driven by only 2 owners and I am the 3 owner.

Body:65K

Color:5F

Trim:K9

Trans:U

Axle:2

DSO:B4

Auto blog

The 11 most expensive American cars ever

Tue, 12 Aug 2014

Here's a Pro Tip for all you would-be classic car investors out there: buy Ferraris. With the Pebble Beach festivities kicking off this week, including any number high end car auctions, we thought it would be entertaining to compile a list of some to the most expensive cars ever sold with the bang of a gavel. Trouble is, once you get past the splendor of everyone's favorite Italian sports car maker, that list is pretty boring.
Ferrari dominates the all-time auction sales list; seven of the top ten most expensive cars sold wear the Cavallino Rampante badge, as well as more than half of the top fifty. Sure, a nearly $30-million Mercedes-Benz W196 racecar might be the new top dog as of last year, but it's even possible that Ferrari could take that title back in Monterey this weekend. Long story short: we think a list of the most expensive American cars ever sold at auction is a lot more entertaining to read. Hell, our list has a friggin' Batmobile on it, how can it go wrong?
Follow on below for the top ten cars that are red, white, blue and a whole lot of green.

Ford Mondeo with 1.5-liter EcoBoost debuts in China

Sat, 20 Apr 2013

Does the car above, posing fancifully in white, look familiar? Well, it should. Although it wears Mondeo badges in the form you see above for the Chinese market - as it does in Europe - the car is basically the same thing sold in the US as the Ford Fusion. Of course, it's what's under that shapely skin that counts.
Ford has chosen the Shanghai Motor Show as the venue with which to unveil its 1.5-liter EcoBoost four-cylinder engine. We'd heard about the engine before, but now we have a few performance estimates to share: 133 kW of power (about 178 horsepower) and 240 Nm of torque (about 177 pound-feet).
Those numbers pretty much confirm previous rumors indicating about 177 in each category, and it's right on par with what Ford's own 1.6-liter EcoBoost produces. Ford is claiming best-in-class fuel economy as well, but no specific figures have yet been provided. In any case, we'll surely have all the data soon enough, as the 1.5-liter mill is destined for the US Fusion in 2014.

EPA says fuel economy test for hybrids is accurate

Mon, 26 Aug 2013


The EPA says it stands behind its fuel economy test for hybrid vehicles following controversy about the testing process after Ford C-Max Hybrid customers and automotive journalists alike struggled to achieve 47 miles per gallon, the advertised mpg number, Automotive News reports. Ford responded to the issue almost two weeks ago by claiming that a 1970s-era EPA general label rule was responsible for the inaccurate mileage numbers, rerating the C-Max Hybrid's mpg numbers and offering customers rebates. Ford later said it didn't overstate the C-Max Hybrid's fuel economy and that it was surprised by the low numbers.
Ford technically didn't do anything wrong because it was following the general label rule, but agency regulator Christopher Grundler says the automaker was exploiting a loophole when it came up with the hybrid C-Max numbers, and that the testing process remains accurate. The general label rule allows vehicles that use the same engine and transmission and are in the same weight class to share fuel economy numbers, but it doesn't take into account other factors such as aerodynamic efficiency, which affects hybrids more drastically than non-hybrid vehicles. Ford originally used the Fusion Hybrid economy figures for the C-Max Hybrid and claimed the engineers didn't realize that its aerodynamic efficiency would affect fuel economy as much as it did.