1963 63 Ford Fairlane 500 4 Door 260 C.i. V-8 Cyl. Automatic Parts Car on 2040-cars
Florence, South Carolina, United States
Engine:260 c.i. V-8
Body Type:Sedan
Vehicle Title:Clear
For Sale By:Private Seller
Exterior Color: White
Make: Ford
Interior Color: Tan
Model: Fairlane
Number of Cylinders: 8
Trim: 4 door hardtop
Drive Type: Automatic
Mileage: 107,000
Sub Model: Fairlane 500 4-door
Number of Doors: 4
I bought this car 15 years ago from the original North Carolina owner as a parts car only. It appears to be 90 to 99% complete but would need to be completely restored. The engine is missing the dip-stick and possibly some other parts. I don't believe that there are any rust-through areas but there is a lot of surface rust. There is no major body damage to any of the panels. The glass is in good shape. The interior would need to be completely redone.
| The odometer shows 7,000 miles so it has at least 107,000 miles on it. It's a 4-door Fairlane 500 with a 260 c.i. inch V-8 engine and automatic transmission.    This is a mostly complete car that needs to be completely restored.  The running condition is not guaranteed.  I don't know anything about the condition of the suspension and drivetrain.  The car is being sold as-is.  See the pictures for details and email me for my phone number if you would like to talk about the car.  I have additional pictures and can email them if you contact me. I am also selling a 221 c.i. V-8 63 Fairlane 2-door and a 200 c.i. 6-cyl. 63 Fairlane 4-door.  See the last picture and my other ebay ads for details on these cars. I will need a deposit via paypal within 2 days of auction end and will only accept cash when you pick up the car. The car is for sale locally and the auction may be withdrawn if the car sells locally before auction end.  | 
Ford Fairlane for Sale
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Shelby American cleans house of 14 concept cars
Wed, 25 Jun 2014Typically when an automaker rolls out a concept car or pre-production prototype, it does its tour and then disappears into the company's archives. Maybe it will be displayed for the public to see in the company's own museum or maybe it will spend most of its time under covers in a warehouse somewhere, but every once in a while, an automaker will open up its history and start selling off its concept cars. For Shelby American, "once in a while" has just rolled around.
The House that Carroll Built is moving from its previous headquarters at Las Vegas Motor Speedway to a new facility off of the Las Vegas strip, and in the process is liquidating fourteen of the rarest cars in its collection. That presents a tremendous opportunity for muscle car collectors to bring one or more of these snakes home.
As you might expect, the catalog is composed mostly of Mustangs, but not exclusively. There's a pair of 289 Cobras: the last of the 50th anniversary slab-sided continuation cars and an original development vehicle, offered at $200,000 apiece. At the other end of the spectrum you'll find the 2013 Shelby Raptor concept for $125k and Focus concept for $50k. And of course there are the Mustangs.
Junkyard Gem: 1993 Mercury Topaz GS Sedan
Sat, Aug 13 2022As long as the Mercury brand existed — a period spanning the 1939 through 2011 model years — nearly every Mercury sold in the United States was more or less a redecorated Ford model. The Torino had its Montego sibling, the Crown Victoria had the Grand Marquis, the Cougar was based on everything from the Mustang to the Mondeo, and so on. Naturally, when the folks in Dearborn developed the Ford Tempo compact, a Mercury version had to be created. This was the Topaz, with the official launch of both cars taking place on the deck of the aircraft carrier often referred to as the USS Decrepit. You can't make this stuff up! The Tempo/Topaz, also known as the Tempaz, has largely faded from our collective automotive memory by now, since it broke no significant new engineering or styling ground (this story would be much different if Ford had only put the amazing straight-eight "T-Drive" Tempaz powertrain into production) and didn't have any endearing features other than being a cheap domestic competitor to the Toyota Corolla and Nissan Sentra. Still, close to 3 million Tempazes left North American Ford and Lincoln-Mercury showrooms during the 1984-1994 period. As you'd expect, most of these disposable cars disappeared from both the street and the car graveyard long ago. It takes a very special Tempaz for me to break out my camera while I'm patrolling my local wrecking yards; generally, this means an ultra-rare all-wheel-drive version or at least a very early model in super-clean condition. Today's Junkyard Gem is neither, but I took one look at this spectacular Bordello Red crypto-velour-and-slippery-plastic interior and recognized that this was no ordinary junkyard Mercury. It appears that Mercury had dropped the idea of clever names for base-grade seat fabrics by the time of the Topaz, referring to this stuff as just "cloth" in all the brochures I could find. That's too bad, because Mercurys had cool names for upholstery (e.g., Chromatex) in the old days. The interior is in very good condition but the steering wheel shows substantial wear, so I think this is a high-mile Topaz that got meticulous care from its owner or owners. Ford used five-digit odometers on these cars until the end of production, however, so we'll never know if this reading indicates 65,404 miles or 365,404 miles. The body is very straight, but there's some nasty corrosion behind the right front wheelwell.
1964 Ford GT40 prototype sells for $7M
Mon, 14 Apr 2014Seven-figure Ferraris are not horribly rare. Heck, an eight-figure Ferrari isn't a rare occurrence. Between modern masterpieces like the Enzo and more classic offerings, cracking the million-dollar mark isn't a particularly tall order for the cars from Maranello. For a Ford, though, it's a big deal.
Now, this is not just some rare Mustang. This is a GT40, the car that Henry Ford II commissioned to whip Enzo Ferrari around a track in France. As far as the Le Mans-winning racers go, they don't get much rarer than this one. Sold at the Mecum Auctions in Houston, this is one of the prototypes, meaning it's one of the very first GT40s ever built. That makes its $7 million winning a bid, a record for on-air coverage of the auction, a pretty darn impressive figure.
You can watch the auction below, but first, take a look back at our original story on this rare Blue Oval.

 
										



















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