1958 Ford F-100 Shortbed on 2040-cars
Fresno, California, United States
Body Type:Pickup Truck
Vehicle Title:Clear
Engine:400M
Fuel Type:Gasoline
For Sale By:Private Seller
Make: Ford
Model: F-100
Drive Type: RWD
Mileage: 79,862
Warranty: Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty
Number of Cylinders: 8
Trim: Standard
This is a 1958 Ford F-100 that has a 400M and C-6 transmission swapped into it. It has the original straight front axle and 4 wheel drum brakes which work, but could use rebuilding. The truck runs and shifts well. The odometer does not show actual mileage. Most of the factory gauges need work, there are aftermarket oil pressure and coolant temp gauges under the dash. The seat is in very good condition and is out of a slightly newer Ford truck. All the tires hold air, but are older. The windshield is cracked on the passenger side and most other windows are also cracked.
Features:
- Edelbrock Performer Intake Manifold
- Edelbrock Valve Covers
- Edelbrock Performer Carburetor
- Edelbrock Air Cleaner
- HEI Distributor
- Champion Aluminum Radiator
- Ford Taurus Electric Cooling Fan
- 9" Ford Rearend
- Floor Shifter
Ford F-100 for Sale
Auto Services in California
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Www.Bumperking.Net ★★★★★
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West Tow & Roadside Servce ★★★★★
Auto blog
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Sun, Jul 26 2015Ford made big waves when it unveiled the new GT at the Detroit Auto Show this past January. But as far as details go, it's been rather quiet. Though Dearborn has revealed what engine will sit between those buttresses, it hasn't told us exactly how many horses or torques it will produce, or precisely how fast we should expect it to propel the new all-American supercar. Fortunately, the automaker let the crew at Xcar into the studio to give us a quick, four-minute rundown of all the information that is out there at the moment, along with all the most intriguing angles of the vehicle's design. The historically savvy among us will already know that the new 2016 Ford GT traces its roots back to the GT40 that conquered Le Mans half a century ago, and through the previous Ford GT that debuted a decade ago. Both of those featured V8 engines (supercharged in the latter case) while their modern successor goes with a twin-turbo V6. But as Xcar points out, six cylinders aren't without their precedence in the history of the GT-series Ford supercar: the GT70 rally car of 1970 originally packed a 2.6-liter V6. That engine was later replaced by a 1.6-liter inline-four, which puts another crack in the theory of the eight's hegemony over the history of the series – as does, we'll point out, the Bugatti-like quad-turbo V12 that featured in the GT90 concept of 1995 that sadly never made production. The point is that divergence from V8 tradition shouldn't dissuade anyone from getting excited over the arrival of the new GT, and we're looking forward to seeing what she can do – on and off the track. Related Video:
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