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Ford Pickup F-100 Custom Cab 1964 Original In Excelent Conditions! on 2040-cars

Year:1964 Mileage:100000 Color: WHITE AND BLUE /
 Blue
Location:

queretaro, queretaro, Mexico

queretaro, queretaro, Mexico
Transmission:Manual
Body Type:Pickup Truck
Engine:8 CILINDER
Vehicle Title:Clear
Fuel Type:Gasoline
For Sale By:Private Seller
Condition:

Used

Year
: 1964
Interior Color: Blue
Make: Ford
Number of Cylinders: 8
Model: F-100
Trim: CUSTOM CAB
Cab Type (For Trucks Only): Regular Cab
Drive Type: FWD
Mileage: 100,000
Sub Model: f-100 custom cab
Exterior Color: WHITE AND BLUE

Excelent Ford pickup, beautifull, we bought it in Frost Texas from a really nice old guy a few years ago. We are the 4th. owners. He keep it in really good conditions, and the only thing that was missing was a little bit of fixing of the paint, the front window was broken, so we did it in Mexico. The pickup was restored we repainted and clear coated it, really carefully, everything was taken apart so we could see that the frame and base was intact, just as new, cero rust. Everything works perfectly in base they are cars that last forever. Before we made the restoring, we asked a company to make a valuation on the pickup, they valuated the car in 17,800 dlls.
We love the pickup is in fashion right now, they are still super strong metal. I have to sell it because i need to move the money, they are a good investment.
The car right now is situated in Queretaro, two hours from Mexico city. I listen to offers
For any question, and more pictures, please contact me.

Auto blog

Ring Brothers shows 1965-66 Mustang fastback carbon fiber body

Thu, 07 Nov 2013

We covered one of Ring Brothers' more extreme SEMA builds yesterday, the De Tomaso Pantera-based ADRNLN, but if that well-executed but over-the-top Italian-American exotic is too much for you, then perhaps this Ring Brothers 1965 Ford Mustang fastback with a carbon-fiber body suits your tastes better.
What the performance-parts manufacturer is showcasing with the Mustang is the carbon-fiber body itself, which is fashioned around the 1965-66 fastback. It can be bought from the company and bonded to the skin and unibody as a do-it-yourself project, or you can take your Mustang to Ring Brothers and have the body installed there. The fenders, doors and quarter panels are two-inches wider than stock, and Ring Brothers offers a custom widebody chassis to those who want the complete package.
The show car looks sharp in person lowered on HRE wheels, and we appreciate the bare front end so we can see the supercharged V8 and front coilover suspension, though the details on those performance upgrades are slim. Also note the custom independent rear suspension setup at the rear.

Car companies used to cook up sales with recipe books

Fri, 08 Aug 2014

The evolution of automotive marketing has undergone a number of strange phases. Few, though, match the strangeness of the 1930s to 1950s, when automotive marketers turned to cookbooks as a means of promoting their vehicles. Yes, cookbooks. We can't make this stuff up, folks.
This bizarre trend led to General Motors distributing cookbooks under the guise of its then-subsidiary Frigidaire. Ford, meanwhile, offered a compilation of recipes from Ford Credit Employees (shown above). The cookbook-craze wasn't limited to domestic manufacturers, though. As The Detroit News discovered, both Rolls-Royce and Volkswagen got in on the trend, although not until the 1970s.
The News has the full story on this strange bit of marketing. Head over and take a look.

Ford celebrating 80 years of Aussie utes as it prepares to shutter Oz manufacturing

Wed, 26 Feb 2014

Ford is ending Australian production after 90 years in 2016, and with it may go perhaps the most iconic vehicles in its auto market - the ute. Car-based pickup trucks like the Ford Ranchero and Chevrolet El Camino were always more of a curiosity than a true market force here, but in Australia, they have long proven hugely popular.
As the legend goes, Ford invented the niche after a farmer's wife had asked Ford Australia's managing director for a more utilitarian car. Her request was simple: "My husband and I can't afford a car and a truck but we need a car to go to church on Sunday and a truck to take the pigs to market on Monday. Can you help?"
Ford's design team came up with a two-passenger, enclosed, steel coupe body with glass windows and a steel-paneled, wooden-frame load area in the rear. The sides of the bed were blended into the body to make it look more unified, and to keep costs down, the front end and interior were based on the Ford Model 40 five-window coupe. Power came from a V8 with shifting chores handled by a three-speed manual. Within a year, the new vehicle was ready, and production began in 1934. Lead designer Lewis Bandt christened it the coupe-utility.