1957 Ford F100 on 2040-cars
Mount Airy, Maryland, United States
Body Type:reg cab
Vehicle Title:Clear
Engine:351 w
Fuel Type:Gasoline
For Sale By:Private Seller
Make: Ford
Model: F-100
Drive Type: 2wd
Disability Equipped: No
Mileage: 1
Number of Doors: 2
Sub Model: f100
Warranty: no
Exterior Color: grey
Trim: base
Interior Color: Black
Number of Cylinders: 8
I am selling this truck for my brother in law. It is a 1957 Ford F100 long bed pickup from California. This truck is 98% rust free and has a rebuilt 351 windsor C6 automatic. Truck runs and drives great. It has new front spring bushings, new front brakes and wheel cylinders. The front end is tight, steers straight, and drives down the road great. This would be great restoration truck or use it as a daily driver or . As I said above is its 98% rust free and you can see that from the attached pictures. The only rust is a few pin holes in the driver side cab corner. The truck has some dings and dents but what do you expect with a 56 yr. old truck. also included in this sale is a pair of rust free doors, tail gate with no rust but slightly bowed. If you have any questions you can contact my brother law-Jimmy at 240-750-0355
Ford F-100 for Sale
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Auto blog
Man turns Ford Fiesta into a one-car band
Mon, 18 Nov 2013The one-man band is a rather ridiculous idea, drawing up images of one person attempting to manipulate several instruments, at once, in a vain attempt at creating music. It's usually represented by silly scenes like this. Interestingly, the concept isn't much more successful when the "man" in "one-man band" is replaced with "car," as we see in this video.
It seems that someone rigged up and edited (699 times, we might add) a Ford Fiesta, a bucket, 12 PVC pipes and the natural sounds that a car makes to come up with a song. Now, we don't recognize the tune, so we've no idea if this is a cover or an original piece. And while it's hardly Beethoven, we have to admire the amount of effort the "conductor" went to in his attempt to turn a subcompact car into a musical instrument(s). Take a look (or listen) below for the entire video.
Chris Harris pits Fiesta ST against Mercedes G63 AMG in 0-60 battle... sort of
Thu, 01 Aug 2013Vehicle performance tests are serious business, with reputations made or broken by things like braking distance, top speed, and lateral g-forces. King of the metrics, though, is the 0-60 run, which for unknown reasons has become the benchmark for what truly makes a car a performance machine.
Now, Chris Harris from Drive has turned the whole idea behind the sprint to 60 on its ear. Taking a new Ford Fiesta ST, Harris asks a simple question: would the ST be quicker to 60 on its own, or on a trailer being towed by a Mercedes-Benz G63 AMG?
It's a fair question, really. The Fiesta Harris tested hit 60 in 7.2 seconds on a slightly uphill section of runway. It should be noted that Harris quotes his ST at 182 horsepower, which is about 15 ponies less than what we're getting in the US, so these numbers might not hold up all that well against an American model. The G63 AMG, meanwhile, is a 536-horsepower monster, powered by a twin-turbo V8 that, able to propel the big SUV to 60 mph in just 5.2 seconds without towing a Fiesta.
Ex-PR chief Vines accuses Ford of bugging cars, phones
Fri, 24 Oct 2014Jason Vines, former head of communications at Ford among other automakers, is accusing the Blue Oval of bugging his company phone and his car during the Firestone tire recall for the Explorer in 2001. The allegations have come to light in Vines' upcoming book What Did Jesus Drive? Crisis PR in Cars, Computers and Christianity.
According to The Detroit News, which has an advance copy of the book, Vines (pictured above) claims that after leaving the company, someone with security within Ford advised him that he had been bugged around the time of the recall. The allegations don't stop there, though. Vines further contends that he might not have been the only one to get this treatment, noting that then-general counsel John Rintamaki also believed he was being listened to.
According to The Detroit News, even if it had been a company phone, recording Vines without his knowledge still would have been a felony under Michigan law.