I still get geeked up when I see a new metal reproduction body pop onto the scene—especially one as rare as a1932 Ford Phaeton. Impossible as it sounds—for what was a standard body style for their ...
Gleaming steel: Henry Ford would be proud. If you're into hot rods-especially everyone's favorite, the '32 Ford roadster-here's a statistic. Of the 258,927 vehicles built by the Ford Motor Co. for ...
So, for all intents and purposes, Ford Motor Co. did in fact produce roadster pickups for the 1932 model year—listed officially as open-cab convertibles in the commercial lineup. However, as the ...
Announced at the 2013 SEMA show back in November, the coupe body shell is all-steel, and is built by United Pacific Industries and offered through the Ford Component Sales catalog. Original tooling ...
Hot rodders will rejoice and collectors might grimace, but Ford just announced the latest addition to its licensed all-steel reproduction car bodies — the 1940 Coupe. Now, anyone with the cash can get ...
If you don’t like the style of cars on the market today, there are plenty of reproduction steel bodies on the market that will allow you to build your own vintage car with modern mechanicals. Just two ...
It's over now, but for seventy-five years the archetypical American automobile was a fairly simple machine, neither big nor small, about fifteen or sixteen feet long, with a V-8 engine driving a solid ...
The ever-expanding range of officially licensed reproduction car bodies has grown to include everything from the 1967 Camaro to the 1940 Ford Coupe that debuted at SEMA. Now, vintage sport utility ...