"A lot of gearheads back in the 1950's aspired to having the
perfect hot rod with pinstripes and every part of the car painted
and clean. However, not everyone had cars like this. A lot of hot
rods in the 50's were well worn, wearing primer instead of
glistening paint. Fenderless cars threw mud and water onto the
bodywork and in rainy and cool climates, not using fenders on your
hot rod was a serious decision." CarThrottle.com "Hot Rodding
Culture in its Heyday"
For consignment, a 1931 Ford Model A Roadster showing 44,925 miles,
but the true miles are unknown due to exemption. This former barn
find was restored in 2010 and features an all original, metal body
according to our consignor, a new frame, and parts from 1935, 1940,
1950, and 1951.
Exterior
The quintessential hot rod, with open wheels, non glossy paint, and
a roadster profile, this one starts with starts with satin dark
blue paint over the fenderless body and when combined with 16-inch
red wire wheels from a 1935 Ford, it gets a thumbs up for all who
gaze upon it! The wide white walls help as does the visible
flathead also painted red. Around back, the lines are clean and
panels smooth, accented with tail lights from a 1950 Pontiac in
symmetry with the two straight exhaust pipes that project under the
apron. The front is tasty too with lowered headlights and clean
black linkage and axle under the ideal grille surround. A tan
canvas top is like icing on the cake and connects to the vertical
windscreen and houses a small, glass rear window. Imperfections are
limited to a single paint chip and single scratch.
Interior
A LeBaron Bonney interior has been applied, here in saddle brown
vinyl which covers the inner doors and pleated bench seat as well
as sidewalls, footwells, and hideaway rumble seat. A stunning 3
spoke steering wheel fronts the body colored dash board with the
vintage gauge cluster in center showing appropriate patina, and
some added Stewart Warner units mounted on the side. A fitted and
textured rubber mat covers the floor, surrounding the blue painted
shifter and polished handbrake.
Drivetrain
Up front is a 239ci flathead V8, rated at 100 horsepower and fueled
via a 2-barrel carburetor. It's mated to a 1951 3-speed manual
transmission sending power to the 1940 Ford Banjo axle in back with
3.78 gears. A newer Walker radiator has been added.
Undercarriage
The original body was placed on a Brookville roadster frame which
connects to transverse leaf springs front and rear with a Super
Bell 4" drop front axle. Drum brakes are at all four corners and
the dual exhaust system consists of headers to glasspack style
mufflers prior to exiting out the back. A little bit of oil sling
is the only thing veering from perfectly clean conditions
underneath.
Drive-Ability
The flathead comes to life and provides a fantastic exhaust note as
we roll this restored vintage ride around the test loop. They
weren't known for bells and whistles, just getting from A to B, and
this car fulfills that goal swimmingly. All features that are on
board operate as they should and the car tracks straights and
brakes well. While Classic Auto Mall represents that these
functions were working at the time of our test drive, we cannot
guarantee these functions will be working at the time of your
purchase.
In the 50's, guys took cars that were 20 years old and made them
lighter, faster, and simply more fun. The fun lives on in restored
hot rods and while anyone can build a fiberglass bodied replica,
this one has an authentic steel body and the engine from a '51
Ford, which is exactly how it was done back in the day. Still cool,
still vintage, still a bucket list item for many, and this is a
very nice example.
Classic Auto Mall is home to more than 1,000 classic and
collectible vehicles for sale via consignment in a climate
controlled 336,000-square foot showroom (that's more than 8
acres!). The largest single location consignment dealer of classic
and collectible vehicles in the country is located in Morgantown,
Pennsylvania, just 1-hour west of Philadelphia off Exit 298 of the
I-76 Pennsylvania Turnpike. For more information visit
www.classicautomall.com or call us at (888) 227-0914. Contact us
anytime for more information or to come see the vehicle in person.
There is no guarantee of mileage. A $299 Dealer Administrative fee
is not included in the advertised price.
With so many great cars, you know we have a lot to talk about, and
we do that each week on the Classic Auto Mall Podcast with host
Stewart Howden. Stewart discusses new inventory as well as trends
in consignments and car prices, while interviewing celebrities and
automotive professionals about amazing cars and their history. Tune
in each week to the Classic Auto Mall Podcast wherever you enjoy
listening. You can also watch on YouTube!
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