1929 Model A Ford Woody Wagon Replica on 2040-cars
Greencastle, Pennsylvania, United States
Very rare 1929 Ford Woody Replica, this model is called a Sprinter. Built in 1980 & titled as a 1980 Sprinter, manufactured by a company called Sprinter Auto Works, Inc., in Plymouth, Indiana. This is a very well built car, built on a Chevy Chevette frame with a 4 cylinder Chevy engine, and automatic transmission, 4 seats, lots of inside room, with headroom for a 6' 2" driver. This car features rare dual side mounted spare tires, 6 chrome rims with wire baskets, am/fm radio, new padded roof, 2 rear doors, tilt front windshield, wipers, dual amber fog lights, antique styled moto meter hood ornament with wings & temp gauge, very solid Crome bumpers, wood steering wheel, Model A Ford tail lights, running boards, & gorgeous Ash & Birch wood inside & out. This is a nice heavy car at 2100 pounds, 147" long, 63.5" wide, 94.5" wheelbase, 63" high, & 5" road clearance. Gets super great gas mileage & easy to maintain mechanics, body is mostly fiberglass that will never rust. Beautiful 2 tone cream with brown fenders. A Great car for shows, parades, or to advertise a business. Only 17,200 miles so this car runs like new. Please ask questions |
Ford Model A for Sale
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Auto Services in Pennsylvania
Wright`s Garage ★★★★★
Williams, Roy ★★★★★
West Tenth Auto ★★★★★
West Industrial Tire ★★★★★
United Imports Inc ★★★★★
Toms Auto Works ★★★★★
Auto blog
40+ cars that barely avoid the gas guzzler tax
Thu, 24 Jul 2014
The Gas Guzzler schedule, with mpg ratings and charges that haven't changed since 1991, lays out which fuel-swillers owe what to Uncle Sam.
I started thinking about the "Gas Guzzler Tax" - considerably less well known as The Energy Tax Act of 1978 - when I was driving Dodge's new Challenger SRT Hellcat last week. Unsurprisingly for a car that can burn 1.5 gallons of gas per minute at max tilt, theoretically able to empty a full tank of premium in about 13 minutes, the Hellcat will be subject to the Gas Guzzler Tax schedule when it goes on sale.
Ford profiles surprisingly affluent Focus ST buyers
Fri, 08 Nov 2013It comes as no surprise when Ford says that 32-percent of Focus ST buyers are under 35, but we weren't expecting this: the average annual salary of Focus ST buyers is $127,000. Twenty-two percent of non-ST Focus buyers are under 35, while their average annual salary is $67,000.
We like the Focus ST because it has 252 horsepower, is genuinely fun to drive and offers great value for performance-minded car enthusiasts; facts that are not lost on customers, it seems. Ford says that the Focus ST has the highest percentage of conquest sales for a non-hybrid model it sells, and that the top-four trade-ins are from Honda, Chevrolet, Mazda and Toyota. Demand for the hot Focus is strongest in Los Angeles, Detroit, Houston and Orlando.
"[The Focus ST is] having this kind of halo effect for other vehicles we'd hoped for when we invested in the ST brand," says John Felice, vice president of US marketing, sales and service, because it's helping to boost sales of other Ford vehicles.
Chrysler called out over lackluster Ram Runner by racer who helped develop it
Fri, 11 Apr 2014Fans of off-roading and desert blasting might recall that Chrysler offers an aftermarket conversion that can turn a Ram 1500 into a road-legal desert racer, called the Ram Runner. The kit, sold through Mopar, includes some significant suspension upgrades, body tweaks and a brawnier cat-back exhaust for the truck's 5.7-liter V8.
Considering all of this, comparisons with the almighty Ford F-150 SVT Raptor are common. Among the off-road community, that makes these two a sort of Chevrolet Camaro and Ford Mustang for people that prefer driving on dirt. In the Race-Dezert forum, the discussion as to which truck was better was proceeding as normal - Ram fans said their piece and Ford fans said theirs. Then, a man named Kent Kroeker offered up his two cents.
See, Kroeker is a Baja racer, and the man that helped develop the Ram Runner. Despite his association with the truck, though, he had some less than kind words for Chrysler and the Ram Runner.