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

1957 Ford Thunderbird on 2040-cars

US $10,900.00
Year:1957 Mileage:3007 Color: Red /
 White
Location:

Bogota, New Jersey, United States

Bogota, New Jersey, United States
Advertising:

If you have questions email email me at: despinalegrant@netzero.net .

1957 Ford Thunderbird

312 V8 w/4bbl 245HP / Automatic
Red Exterior
White Vinyl Interior

Info
A true barn find!!!

1957 Ford Thunderbird Original 312 cu in. / 245HP, auto trans, power steering, and power brakes, red with white
interior and convertible top. Recently removed from dry storage, cleaned up and mechanically overhauled throughout.
It has a solid frame and body panels... RUNS AND DRIVES EXCELLENT!!!

This garage find 1957 Ford Thunderbird is an excellent driver. Inspection sticker is from 1993 and it has been
stored in a dry environment since 2004. This is a nice driver with great potential, Driver quality with older paint
& original chrome.

Mechanically gone through and runs great!

Major tune up performed, new spark plugs, ignition wires, etc. New gas tank, sending unit, fuel pump, and water
pump w installed. Carburetor rebuilt, transmission serviced, all fluids flushed and changed. Complete brake
rebuild. New master cylinder, hoses,wheel cylinders, and shoes. Complete new aluminum exhaust system. All gauges
fuction, original radio not working.

Overall condition:
Then engine compartment has been keep mostly as original , it's clean but it's not detailed. Mechanically has been
gone through. The interior was redone sometime ago and is in really nice shape, with no tears or open seams, etc.
Just clean and very presentable. Conv top and back window is nice and does NOT need to be replaced.

The car has had bodywork through the years and been repainted. It's presentable but not perfect. All the body
panels & floor are original and in decent shape. It appears to have only the lower quarter extensions and one small
floor patch replaced.

I have driven the car on various occasions. The car starts, runs, steers and stops fine. The car has old bias ply
tires with flat spots from sitting but driving it has improved them quite a bit.

Auto Services in New Jersey

Xclusive Auto Tunez ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Window Tinting, Tire Dealers
Address: 100 Henry St, Delaware
Phone: (570) 872-9277

Volkswagen Manhattan ★★★★★

New Car Dealers
Address: 540 W 38th St, Kearny
Phone: (212) 627-7711

Vito`s Towing Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Automotive Roadside Service
Address: 65 Clifton Blvd, East-Rutherford
Phone: (973) 773-2929

Vito`s Towing Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Automotive Roadside Service
Address: 65 Clifton Blvd, Pine-Brook
Phone: (973) 773-2929

Singh Auto World ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Used Car Dealers, Wholesale Used Car Dealers
Address: 2001 Hanover Ave, Phillipsburg
Phone: (610) 432-7595

Reese`s Garage ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Inspection Stations & Services
Address: 120 E Main St, Milltown
Phone: (215) 257-6052

Auto blog

Next-gen Ford Cobra Jet development underway, but will it be a Mustang?

Wed, 09 Oct 2013

Ford might be stepping away from the NHRA, but it isn't abandoning drag racing altogether. Hot Rod says that Ford confirmed a next-gen Cobra Jet factory drag racer is in the works, but the report also speculates that a new Cobra Jet could switch away from the Mustang nameplate.
Even though talk of a new Cobra Jet coincides with the all-new 2015 Mustang, the lack of confirmation for the dragster's platform leaves Hot Rod to guess that the car might switch to another platform - specifically a front-drive-based, unibody car like the Fusion or Taurus. We'd hate to think of a world with a NASCAR-ized dragster from Ford Racing, but it's also highly unlikely that the Mustang Cobra Jet would step away from its quarter-mile rivals like the Chevy COPO Camaro and Dodge Challenger Drag Pak.

Lincoln 'not true luxury' yet, says Ford design chief

Wed, 28 Aug 2013

Lincoln is "not true luxury," according to Ford's design boss, J Mays. His statements come from a story in The Detroit News that saw candid language on the issues facing Ford's troubled premium brand. Notably, there's a need for a strong character, with Mays saying, "Every brand needs to have a DNA and a unique selling point and things in the vehicle that make you think, 'That's that particular brand.'"
With a range of rebadged Fords, it's not hard to see why that DNA is missing. Mays hinted that a full recovery for Lincoln will be a ten-year process, that's been kicked off with the MKZ sedan. While that car is still largely a Ford Fusion under its extremely pretty wrapper, it's the first Lincoln in some time to inject its own unique take both through the exterior styling and through interior features, such as the vertical, pushbutton gear selection.
Some analysts weren't so certain about Mays' 10-year estimate. Jim Hall of 2953 Analytics thinks it'll be more like 30 years before Lincoln can show a true return to form. The issue, as Hall explains it, is that, "luxury has a degree of exclusivity," that Lincoln just doesn't have. Michelle Krebs from Edmunds adds, "it's definitely a wanna-be luxury brand," comparing the troubled American brand with Infiniti and Acura, two other brands that have struggled to find their place in the luxury market.

Malcolm Gladwell reflects on engineering, recalls, and compromise

Thu, Apr 30 2015

Journalist Malcolm Gladwell has made a career taking on big, complicated topics and humanizing them to make the unwieldy understandable. He has already done this in bestsellers like The Tipping Point and Outliers, and now he has brought the same approach to automotive recalls in a long piece for The New Yorker. The article titled The Engineer's Lament is framed around an interview with the former head of Ford's recall office about the famous Ford Pinto campaign where the position of the compact's fuel tank could cause it to explode in rear-end collisions. Plus, there are detours into Toyota's unintended acceleration cases and the General Motors ignition switch problem. While all the history is illuminating, the heart of the story comes from an examination at the thought process of engineers, and how their thinking differs from other professions. Gladwell comes off as sympathetic to auto engineers in this piece. While he admits that they often approach problems in a sterile way, the writer doesn't try point that out as a failing. It's merely a fact to be understood. The story itself is quite lengthy, but well worth a read if you have the time for an insiders view into how these recalls are assessed on the inside.