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

1942 Ford Pickup Rat Rod, Street Rod, Hot Rod on 2040-cars

Year:1942 Mileage:1 Color: Flat black
Location:

Richardson, Texas, United States

Richardson, Texas, United States
Advertising:
Transmission:Automatic
Engine:302
Body Type:Pickup Truck
Vehicle Title:Clear
Condition:

Used

Year
: 1942
Mileage: 1
Make: Ford
Exterior Color: Flat black
Model: Other Pickups
Number of Cylinders: 8
Trim: none
Drive Type: rear wheel

 1942 Ford pickup Rat Rod. 42 pickup body, custom sheet metal bed and 35 Ford pickup grill. Great running Ford 302 engine with serpentine belt drive and Edelbrock 4 barrel on aluminum intake. Mustang II front end with rack and pinion and power steering and power front disc brakes. 8.8 Ford rear end with big sway bar. Rebuilt C4 automatic trans and is also set up for standard trans if you want it. Truck was running and driving with 4 speed in it when I got it but I took the 4 speed out and installed the C4 and that is as far as I got. Fell and broke my pelvis and can't work on it. Engine runs very good and truck drives fine. This is a RAT ROD so it is going to need your own touches to get it like you want it. Doors open and close good and it has new glass in windshield but no side glass. Driveline is completely installed including driveshaft. It still needs transmission lines shifter and cooler, fuel line from fuel cell to engine, exhaust pipes and some minor wiring to be drivable now. Comes with widened fiberglass rear fenders but I think it looks better without them but that is up to buyer. This truck could be on the road with just a couple of days work. Has clean open title ready to go. Truck is for sale locally so auction could end at any time.  You can call me at 972-231-7393 with questions.

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Address: 2416 N Frazier St, Cut-And-Shoot
Phone: (936) 441-3500

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Phone: (817) 924-0099

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Auto blog

Ford GT40 makes historic return to racing at Goodwood

Wed, 23 Oct 2013

Is there a more iconic, American racecar than the Ford GT40? That may be a discussion for another day (although by all means, tell us how wrong we are in Comments), but this video of heaps of GT40s running in the Goodwood Revival races certainly has us thinking that Ford's Ferrari-killer might just be the best racer the Land Of The Free and Home Of The Brave has ever come up with.
That's completely ignoring the fact that the GT40 was largely developed by Brits using American money, but that's besides the point (there was also a rather brash Texan, who had a big role later in development). The resulting vehicle was dominant, besting the cars of Il Commendatore from 1966 to 1969, although it should be noted that Ford's GT40 was unable to beat Ferrari in its first two Le Mans outings in 1964 and 1965.
Those four years of dominance, which started with Ford sweeping the podium, were enough to establish the GT40's legend. And now, here we are almost 50 years later, celebrating the mid-engined monsters at Goodwood, in their first ever one-make race. Take a look below for the entire video.

Ford Fusion getting substantial refresh for 2017

Wed, 13 Aug 2014

It's only been a couple of years since Ford rolled out the current Fusion, but if these spy shots are anything to go by, it's already planning what appears to be a substantial update for the mid-size sedan.
According to our paparazzi on the ground, the new Fusion is being prepared for launch late in 2016 or early 2017. Although heavily camouflaged to keep it from prying eyes such as ours, it appears that the updated Fusion will tone down the Aston Martin-style grille, ditch the small corner window with revised front side glass and tweak the vehicle's overall shape. But there's more to the new Fusion than a styling adjustment, and our spy photographers have caught a glimpse inside and taken us along.
Apparently the new Fusion is to get a completely overhauled interior with soft-touch surfaces and matte wood trim to make it seem more upscale. There's an all-new rotary gear selector (like you'd find on a Jaguar, for example) hinting at the implementation of a new nine-speed automatic transmission. The prototype appears to be packing the Microsoft SYNC system, suggesting that the new Blackberry QNX system isn't ready quite yet - though that doesn't necessarily mean it won't be ready by the time the new Fusion is.

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.