Vehicle Description
Complete Pictures (including undercarriage) and Video at
www.4-wheelclassics.com
This Short Box 1970 Ford F100 4x4 is a sweet little truck that
spent its life in Montana. The last owner built this truck for his
daughter and finished around 5 years ago and they did a great job
on the build. Really cool truck!! The body on this F100 is really
nice and it appears to be all of the original steel. It was painted
Light Blue and White (unsure if these are the original colors) and
the paint still looks nice with only the normal minor wear and tear
from driving over the years. The bumpers and trim we think are
original and still in nice condition. The underside is clean and
solid and the bed was professionally Rhino Lined.
The interior is also in nice condition with new seat upholstery,
new rubber floor mat, new headliner, and new sun visors. The
headlights, taillights, brakelights, and turn signals are working.
All of the gauges work and the heat and wipers are working. The
horn is not working.
Mechanically this truck runs and drives great!! The last owner told
us the engine is the 300 Cubic inch Inline 6 that runs smooth and
strong with no issues that we could find. This is not a gear head
V8 truck but it is a great cruising I6 that gets good fuel mileage.
The transmission is a 5 Speed Manual out of a newer Ford that
shifts nice. It is mated to the np 205 transfer case and the 4WD
works like it should. It has a Ford 9 Inch Rear Axle with 3.54
Gears and the front axle is a Dana 44 with 3.54 gears.. This truck
does have power steering and power front disc brakes so it is a
great driving truck!! This is all sitting on a nice set of Black
Steel rims with 31 Inch All Terrain Tires.
We drive what we sell so that we can give you a first hand and
accurate report on how the vehicle runs and drives. Our pictures
are never touched up or photoshopped. What you see is an accurate
representation of the vehicle. We take consistent pictures and show
you everything so you can get a true representation of the
vehicle.
Complete Pictures (including undercarriage) and Video at
www.4-wheelclassics.com