1968 Ford F100 ***5.9l 6bt 12v Cummins Swap*** on 2040-cars
Watertown, Wisconsin, United States
Body Type:Pickup Truck
Vehicle Title:Clear
Engine:6BT CUMMINS
Fuel Type:Diesel
For Sale By:Private Seller
Exterior Color: Black
Make: Ford
Model: F-100
Trim: TRUCK
Drive Type: 2-WHEEL DRIVE
Mileage: 150,000
Up for auction is a 1968 Ford F100. This F100 is equipped with a 5.9l 12 valve cummins engine and 5-speed transmission out of a late model Dodge truck.
This truck runs, drives and looks great. The engine had been freshened before the engine swap, the engine and trans both had 150,000 miles on them before the swap. This truck has never seen salt! The truck came from New Mexico just seven years ago and is completely rust free. The truck was just recently sprayed semi gloss black and all of the body seams were re-caulked. The truck also has lots of other new suspension parts, tires, carpet, and firewall cover.
Thanks for looking and feel free to contact me with any questions.
920 twofivethree 5787
Ford F-100 for Sale
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Auto blog
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.
Ford's J Mays feels vindicated by Fusion reception
Tue, 25 Sep 2012It's hard to think back now, but the same man overseeing the design of the 2013 Ford Fusion also presided over a rather lackluster period in Ford design, highlighted by vehicles like the Five Hundred and Freestyle. With the redesigned Fusion receiving high praise, J Mays tells Automotive News that he feels vindicated from criticisms suggesting he's not a daring enough designer.
When Mays took over as lead of design in 1997, he admits to having quite an ego ("My head would barely fit through the door some days. I've long since gotten over myself") and the workload to match. With the Blue Oval's portfolio full of premium brands like Aston Martin, Jaguar, Land Rover and Volvo at that point, along with the bread-and-butter Ford, Lincoln and Mercury models, Mays certainly had quite the challenge.
It was in the mid-2000s that Mays took over just the premium brands, and took on the new title of Chief Creative Officer. At the time, Mays endured some criticism for looking backwards to retro styling, rather than setting a new standard for American car design - criticism that Mays says he is free from with the all-new Fusion.
Which is more fuel efficient, driving with a pickup's tailgate up or down?
Tue, 26 Aug 2014
Thanks to the smoke wand in the wind tunnel, you can actually see the difference in our video.
Should you drive with your pickup truck's tailgate up or down? It's an age-old controversy that's divided drivers for decades. Traditionalists will swear you should leave the tailgate down. Makes sense, right? It would seem to let the air flow more cleanly over the body and through the bed. But there's also a school of thought that argues trucks are designed to look and operate in a specific manner, and modern design techniques can help channel the airflow properly. So don't mess with all of that: Leave the tailgate up.