1936 Ford Model 68 DeLuxe Cabriolet �€" Rumble Seat, 302 V8, Full
Restoration Why This Car Is Special The 1936 Ford Model 68 DeLuxe
Cabriolet is one of the most desirable body styles Ford produced
during the prewar era. Ford designated its entire 1936 lineup under
the 'Model 68' name, representing a significant refinement over the
1935 cars in terms of styling and chassis development. The
cabriolet was a low-volume, premium body style within that lineup
�€" a convertible with a genuine rumble seat, meaning the rear deck
opens to reveal a separate passenger compartment exposed to the
open air. It was a coachbuilt-style experience at a production car
price point, and buyers who ordered one in 1936 were making a
statement. The cabriolet accounted for a small fraction of overall
Model 68 production, which itself totaled just over 791,000 units
across all body styles. Open cars with rumble seats were already
beginning to fade from the American market by the late 1930s,
making the 1936 Ford cabriolet a genuine end-of-an-era body style.
What makes this particular 1936 Ford Model 68 DeLuxe Cabriolet
worth serious attention is the combination of authentic pre-war
coachwork and a thoughtfully executed restomod drivetrain. The
all-steel body retains every significant factory styling detail �€"
the chrome vertical-bar grille, the teardrop headlamps, the
sweeping fenders �€" while the chassis underneath has been updated
to make this car completely usable in modern traffic. It is not a
trailered show piece. It is a car you can drive to the coast on a
Saturday morning and bring home the same day without worrying about
vapor lock, drum brake fade, or a 6-volt electrical system that
cannot keep up with a modern traffic light cycle. The tan exterior
with the red leather interior is a sharp, historically consistent
color pairing for a car of this era, and the folding black soft top
with the rumble seat behind it gives this car a silhouette that
nothing built after 1940 can replicate. Features List - 302ci Ford
small-block V8 - 5-speed manual transmission with floor-mounted
shifter - 4-wheel disc brakes - Independent front suspension -
Rack-and-pinion steering with tilt column - Air conditioning -
Folding black convertible soft top - Functional rumble seat -
Updated 12-volt wiring throughout - Performance exhaust system -
Wood-grain dashboard and interior trim - Banjo-style steering wheel
- Red leather interior upholstery - 16-inch steel artillery wheels
with V8 hubcaps and beauty rings - Wide whitewall tires with red
pinstripe accent - Chrome vertical-bar grille with concealed horns
- Teardrop-shaped headlamps - Clean and detailed undercarriage -
Professional-grade tan exterior paint - New glass throughout -
Functional heater Mechanical Under the hood sits a 302 cubic inch
Ford small-block V8, the same engine family that powered everything
from Mustangs to police interceptors across several decades of Ford
production. It is a proven, parts-everywhere platform that any
competent Ford shop can work on. The engine bay photo shows a tidy
installation with a chrome open-element air cleaner, MSD ignition
wiring, an electric cooling fan from Perma-Cool, and what appears
to be a mechanical fuel pressure gauge �€" the kind of detail that
tells you the builder was thinking about long-term drivability, not
just appearance. Behind the 302 is a 5-speed manual transmission
with a floor-mounted shifter. Running an H-pattern gearbox in a
prewar body is a distinctly different experience from driving a
modern car, and in the best possible way. The gear ratios give you
flexibility that the original 3-speed flathead setup simply could
not provide, including an overdrive fifth gear that lets the engine
settle into a relaxed cruise at highway speeds. The chassis
upgrades go well beyond the engine swap. Independent front
suspension replaces the original transverse leaf and kingpin setup,
giving the car actual road-holding geometry. Rack-and-pinion
steerin
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