1928 Ford 5 Window Coupe Street Rod on 2040-cars
Semmes, Alabama, United States
Body Type:Coupe
Vehicle Title:Clear
Engine:FLATHEAD V-8
Fuel Type:Gasoline
For Sale By:Private Seller
Number of Cylinders: 8
Make: Ford
Model: Model A
Trim: 2 DOOR COUPE
Options: CD Player
Drive Type: MANUAL
Mileage: 0
Interior Color: Black
Number of Doors: 2
1928 FORD 5 WINDOW COUPE WITH 1948 FORD FLATHEAD V-8, IT HAS BEEN CONVERTED TO 12 VOLT SYSTEM. HAS NEW BRAKE SHOES ALL THE WAY AROUND, 1948 BRAKE SYSTEM. NEW ALTERNATOR, NEW ELECTRONIC DISTRIBUTOR, NEW PLUGS AND PLUG WIRES. CD PLAYER. CAR HAS RUMBLE SEAT OR MOTHER-IN-LAW SEAT. INTERIOR NEEDS BE COMPLETED. THE CAR RUNS AND DRIVES GOOD. CAR MAY NEED NEW WATER PUMPS, SPEEDWAY HAS THEM FOR $ 89.00 EA. JUST A LITTLE TINKERING AND SHE'LL BE GREAT. MAY CONSIDER TRADE FOR 1937-1940 COUPE STREET ROD. HAVE THE CAR FOR SALE LOCAL AND RESERVE THE RIGHT TO PULL FROM EBAY AT ANY TIME. CAR IS SOLD AS IS, NO WARRANTIES WITH " BILL OF SALE "
Ford Model A for Sale
1929 ford model a 2 door
1930 ford model a coupe, all steel, original title, magazine car, show winner(US $60,000.00)
1930 ford model a briggs blindback
327ci motor, th-350 trans, over $40+ in receipts for parts, show winner, nice bu(US $34,995.00)
A very nice, mostly restored & upgraded 1930 1931 model a coupe not aa rat rod(US $11,550.00)
1931 ford model a - deluxe rumble seat roadster(US $26,500.00)
Auto Services in Alabama
United Auto Repair ★★★★★
Transmission Doctor and More ★★★★★
Townsend Roadside Assistance ★★★★★
Tire Express ★★★★★
Stadium Grill ★★★★★
Radiators Inc ★★★★★
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2022 Rivian R1T vs. 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning vs. GMC Hummer EV Pickup | How they compare on paper
Tue, Sep 28 2021The 2022 Rivian R1T has arrived, ushering in the era of the production electric pickup truck. The Rivian reviews are in, and spoiler alert: They're pretty good. Curious how the new battery-powered truck stacks up to its forthcoming competitors? Well, you've come to the right place. Rivian beat all of Detroit's big automakers to market in the half-ton segment, but probably not by the margin the startup would have liked. Ford's answer is the F-150 Lightning, which is due to enter production early next year, coming hot on the heels of GM's first entry into the space – the GMC Hummer EV pickup – which is scheduled to come off the line late this fall. While all three are pickups, they're aimed at distinctly different buyers, as a perusal of their specifications will reveal. Let's have a look, shall we?  Disclaimer: Before we dive in on this one, we'd like to note that while we've made our best effort to verify the specs provided, the Rivian is brand-new and the others are still in the prototype phase. Some of these figures may be inaccurate or may simply change before production. This is all hypothetical until you can actually cross-shop them anyway, right? Cool. End disclaimer. Let's start with the powertrains. They're all battery-electric trucks engineered on a modular rear-wheel-drive configuration engineered to accommodate (theoretically, anyway) up to four electric drive units. Rivian actually makes the most use of this with a quad-motor setup producing 835 horsepower and 908 pound-feet of torque with its high-output initial model. GMC's three-motor Hummer has the R1T beat with its estimated 1,000-horsepower output, while Ford's (also three-motor) comes in with a far more modest 563 horses. This is an excellent illustration of our above point that these are not all engineered for the same crowd. Ford's F-150, which comes in at a lower price point, is meant to be far more mainstream, as its power output suggests. This theme continues when we look at the dimensions. Despite the image "Hummer" may conjure, GMC's entry actually needs the shallowest parking space. The Rivian is right behind it, with the work-truck-spec Ford extending more than a foot longer than either. What the Hummer lacks in length, it makes up for in girth. It's the widest by a good 5 inches. The Rivian is only slightly pudgier than the F-150, but it's much closer at that end of the scale.
Project Ugly Horse: Part IX
Thu, 20 Jun 2013One Step at a Time
Nearly every flavor of exotic driveline has been shoved into the ubiquitous Ford at some point or another.
Chuck Schwynoch had been patiently listening to my ramblings on the other end of the phone for a solid half hour. I'm not too big of a man to know when to ask for help, and at this point, I desperately needed some assistance. The truth is, working on a machine like a Fox Body Mustang is as easy as breathing thanks to the wealth of information available on the web. Nearly every flavor of exotic driveline has been shoved into the ubiquitous Ford at some point or another, and odds are the sorry souls behind those builds shared the highs and lows of their torment with the internet community.
Ford announces first non-pursuit-rated police car ever
Wed, 18 Sep 2013Ford announced its first non-pursuit-rated Police Interceptor ever, based on the Taurus, which employs the smaller 2.0-liter EcoBoost four-cylinder engine in place of similar pursuit-rated Police Interceptors powered by naturally aspirated 3.5-liter and 3.7-liter V6s and the top-spec 3.5-liter EcoBoost V6. Officially called the Special Service Police sedan, the car was commissioned at the request of law-enforcement agencies that desire a more fuel-efficient vehicle for detectives, administrators and campus police, who don't necessarily need pursuit-rated vehicles.
The 2.0-liter EcoBoost engine produces 240 horsepower and 270 pound-feet of torque, but more importantly, it allows the SSP sedan to achieve somewhere in the neighborhood of 22 miles per gallon city and 32 mpg highway, which are the civilian 2.0-liter Taurus' official EPA ratings. Ford estimates that the SSP sedan will get 20 mpg city, 30 mpg highway and 23 mpg combined, with the help of Active Grille Shutters that open to allow more cooling air through to the radiator, or close to optimize aerodynamics and fuel economy. Those numbers compare favorably to the discontinued Crown Victoria-based Interceptor's 14 mpg city and 21 mpg highway and the newer Taurus-based cars equipped with V6s, the most fuel efficient of which gets 18 mpg city and 26 mpg highway.
If it was driven 90,000 miles over the course of three years, a 2.0-liter SSP sedan would save law enforcement agencies $5,042.92 versus the Crown Vic, Ford estimates. The EPA is expected to post official fuel-economy numbers for the SSP sedan in December. Until then, read the press release below for more information.