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

1928 Model A Tudor Sedan,hotrod on 2040-cars

US $28,000.00
Year:1928 Mileage:6100 Color: Flat Black /
 Black and Brown
Location:

Green Bay, Wisconsin, United States

Green Bay, Wisconsin, United States
Advertising:
Transmission:C~4
Body Type:Tudor Sedan
Engine:300 CID Supercharged
Vehicle Title:Clear
For Sale By:Private Seller
Year: 1928
Interior Color: Black and Brown
Make: Ford
Number of Cylinders: 6
Model: Model A
Trim: Standard
Drive Type: C-4 Automatic
Options: Convertible
Mileage: 6,100
Exterior Color: Flat Black
Condition: Used: A vehicle is considered used if it has been registered and issued a title. Used vehicles have had at least one previous owner. The condition of the exterior, interior and engine can vary depending on the vehicle's history. See the seller's listing for full details and description of any imperfections. ... 

I have a beautiful 1928 Model a tudor sedan for sale. It is chopped 5" and channeled 3".It sits on a custom made chassis made out of 2X3" tubing. The engine is a supercharged straight six with two, two barrel carbs.(Carters)The engine is completely rebuilt as well as the C~4 transmission. Out the back is a Nine inch rearend with 3:24 gears and 28 spline axles. Four bar rear suspension with coil springs. Parallel leaf springs up front with friction shocks. Custom made interior with a 1958 Edsle  dash. Also has interior lights from a 40 ford . Bomber seats with a suspension and padded. These seats are very comfortable.Custom wheels from Early Wheel with white wall radial tires from Diamond Back Tires. The Gloss black metallic roof panel is completely removable to enjoy the summer sun. The tail lights are 1959 caddy. Along with a 30's school bus stop light that is the third break light. The steering is by a 1973 Camaro manual gear box. This car has more details that can be listed. It is a crowd pleaser where ever it goes, even to the gas station. Very easy to drive, even on a long haul. Also ,it made the cover of Old Skool Rods, T and A issue. Sept 2011,#47.

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Auto blog

The 24 Hour War: Adam Carolla's new documentary brings the Ford-Ferrari battle back to life

Thu, Dec 29 2016

Long before the GoPro or even videotape, races were filmed by guys standing next to the track with 16-millimeter cameras. The images kind of shook, they didn't always hold focus, and over the years all the color has faded out of the film. It all conspires to make the endurance racing battle between Ferrari and Ford in the 1960s seem like ancient history. What Adam Carolla and Nate Adams' new documentary The 24 Hour War does best is make that inter-corporate battle feel as if it happened yesterday. Yeah, if you're an obsessive you've likely seen most of the shaky-cam race footage used here before. But what you haven't seen are the interviews that frame the war and explain the egos and engineering behind the legends. It's not a perfect movie, but it's the sort of movie only fanatics could make. And it's easier to appreciate if you're a fanatic too. The first 25-or-so minutes of the documentary are taken up with histories of both Ford and Ferrari and an overview of how ridiculously deadly motorsports were in the Sixties and earlier. It's all interesting (if familiar) stuff, that could have been handled in about a third the time with some brutal editing. Still, the two protagonists in the story are well drawn: the racing-crazed Enzo Ferrari, who only builds road cars to stay solvent; and Henry Ford II, who after being thrown into the deep end of the Ford Motor Company management in 1943 at the age of 25, wasn't going to be humiliated after Ferrari pulled out of a deal to sell him the sports car maker. With one notable exception, the filmmakers were successful in rounding up practically everyone involved who is still alive for an interview. That includes Dan Gurney, Mario Andretti, Pete Brock, Bob Bondurant, Piero Ferrari, Mauro Forghieri, Carlo Tazzioli, and even Ralph Nader. There are good archival insights from the late Carroll Shelby. But where's A.J. Foyt? After all, he co-drove the stupendous Ford GT40 Mark IV with Dan Gurney to victory at Le Mans in 1967. The interviews make the movie worthwhile, but it cries out for more technical depth about the cars themselves. Yes, the GT40 was complex and engineered practically like a production car, but there's no mention of how the Lola Mk VI and Eric Broadley kicked off the development. There's only a superficial explanation of what made the American-built Mark IV such a leap forward.

Project Ugly Horse: Part VI

Thu, 21 Mar 2013

Solid axle? What solid axle?
I was fully prepared to embark on a seven-day journey down a rabbit hole of broken bolts, internet hearsay and consternation.
This should not have gone this easily. Having a long and checkered history of simple projects punctuated by much wailing and gnashing of knuckles, I was fully prepared to embark on a seven-day journey down a rabbit hole of broken bolts, internet hearsay and consternation when I finally decided to lay hands on the '89 Mustang with the goal of relieving the car of its stock rear axle. Instead, it took less than a full morning's worth of work to carve the old 7.5-inch solid axle from its moorings and mock up something, well, different.

Lincoln trumpets $129M investment, 300 new jobs in Louisville for MKC

Tue, 26 Aug 2014

Remember when we used to talk about how close Lincoln was to being axed and how it seemed any day now the Grim Reaper would use it as a car service back to the grave? Last time we did it was, oh, not even a month ago. What a difference 27 days makes: Ford and Lincoln are trumpeting a $129M investment in the Louisville Assembly Plant that builds the MKC.
In July the MKC was the third-best-selling Lincoln of the brand's six offerings, beat by the MKZ and - by a much smaller margin - the MKX. It has sold 2,895 units in the two months it's been on sale, which is more than half the year-to-date sales of the MKS, MKT and Navigator. It's already important, is what we're trying to say, and this is before the Chinese market gets a crack at it later this year.
The money headed to Kentucky will be joined by 300 new workers, another marker in Ford's march to create 12,000 hourly jobs in the US by next year. You can read more about it in the press release below.