Check for smoke out the pipe at initial crank too. Amount, color, etc. can tell you things.
Buying old cars is fun!
Last edited by Worried Man (2013-08-16 13:09:23)
Nice, but a member of the enemy camp. If I bought a Ford, my Dad would probably die just so he could roll over in his grave.
Hahaha. IMO, the Fords of the 55 - 65 era were VERY good cars. I'm slightly partial to Fords, but I can really get into any old car, even 4 doors and the ugly Pontiacs and Dodges. Anything old or rare that you just don't see every day, I like.
390 with a three-on-the-tree would qualify as rare, that's for sure. Ford probably built a lot of them, but by now most of them have been wrecked, rusted away or had a floor shifter cobbled into them.
A friend of mine in high school had a '69 Thunderbird with a 429 wedge in it. That car was fast, but the way it handled made it feel like a closed casket funeral waiting to happen.
^
When was this? Ford has definitely made some real crap. I mean, they all have at some point.
Last edited by Worried Man (2013-08-16 13:58:08)
70's, 80's and well into the '90's. Mostly F150's, real strippers. Some of them were even 'radio delete' trucks, just a blank panel where the radio should have been. Almost all of them had bog standard 302's but there was one with a 460 with a five speed. It probably would have been a fun truck if it hadn't had a roll around tool box, a welder and a mobile machine shop in the back.
Last edited by TheExpandingMan (2013-08-16 14:08:04)
One thing that I do find very irritating about old fords is that when the "Total Performance" era got started, during the early '60s with all the American muscle car competition, they were constantly developing new engines in order to best the competition. They went through a remarkable number of engines in each of their V8 families, i.e. late Y Blocks, Ford-Edsel (FE), and the small block Windsors. They must have been paying their engineers some serious overtime, as some of the engines were outmoded in less than a year's time, e.g. Ford 221 ci Windsor. They also used a multitude of transmissions and transmission bellhousings that were specific to the engines. To make a long story short, hardly anything is easily interchangeable between engines and transmissions from year to year so trying to "just dump another engine" or transmission into your old ford can be a real headache. With a Chevy on the other hand, you can pretty much do whatever you want with minimal headache. Again, I'm just talking about older cars.
The British have a soft spot for fast Fords.
Ford have a great motorsport tradition.
...with a lot of help from British racing engineers of course, Namely Cosworth.
My own fav though is Jaguar, who made beautiful sports cars.
Last edited by TheExpandingMan (2013-08-16 15:01:10)