1929 Ford Model A Roadster �€" Steel Body Hot Rod with 355ci V8,
708 Miles Since Build Why This Car Is Special The 1929 Ford Model A
holds a unique place in American automotive history. When Henry
Ford introduced the Model A in late 1927, it ended an 18-year run
of the Model T and signaled Ford's return to genuine competition
with General Motors. The Model A was a dramatic leap forward �€" it
offered a proper sliding-gear transmission, hydraulic shock
absorbers, and a 40-horsepower inline four-cylinder engine at a
time when most buyers were just grateful to have reliable
transportation. Ford sold more than 4 million Model A's between
1928 and 1931, and the roadster body style became one of the most
popular platforms for customization in the decades that followed.
It's no accident that the Model A roadster became a foundational
vehicle for the American hot rod movement �€" the proportions are
right, the steel body is workable, and the short wheelbase keeps
the whole package tight and purposeful. This particular 1929 Ford
Model A roadster represents a complete ground-up build executed
with real hardware, not budget shortcuts. The steel body is a
meaningful detail �€" fiberglass reproduction bodies are common in
the Model A hot rod world because original steel is increasingly
difficult to find and work with. Having a steel body on a build
like this preserves the structural integrity and visual
authenticity that fiberglass simply cannot replicate. With only 708
miles since the completion of the build, this car has been broken
in but not worn in. Everything that was going to loosen up has
loosened up, and everything that was going to seat has seated �€"
without putting real wear on any of the major components. The
builder made deliberate choices throughout this project. The
drivetrain combination, suspension engineering, and comfort
upgrades all point to someone who wanted a car they could actually
drive, not just trailer to shows. Features List - 355ci V8 engine -
Edelbrock intake and carburetor - Turbo 350 automatic transmission
- 9-inch Ford rear end with 4-link coilover rear suspension -
4-wheel disc brakes with drilled and slotted rotors - Power rack
and pinion steering - Vintage Air climate control system with dash
vents - Chrome tilt steering column with leather-wrapped steering
wheel - Dolphin gauge cluster - Black vinyl interior with
vertical-stitch door panels - AM/FM/CD Bluetooth audio - Staggered
wheel and tire fitment �€" 235/55/17 front, 255/55/18 rear - Hidden
kill switch - Seat belts - Steel body - 708 miles since build
completion Mechanical The engine in this 1929 Ford Model A is a 355
cubic inch V8 built on the small-block Chevrolet platform, fed
through an Edelbrock intake manifold and Edelbrock carburetor.
Edelbrock has been supplying performance induction equipment to the
hot rod community since the 1930s, and their intake and carburetor
combinations have a well-earned reputation for strong street
performance and reliable tuning. The 355ci displacement �€" one
bore size over the standard 350 �€" is a common and well-understood
stroker variant that delivers added torque without sacrificing the
proven bottom-end architecture of the small-block. Backing the
engine is a Turbo 350 automatic transmission, a General Motors unit
introduced in 1969 that became one of the most widely used
automatics in the hot rod and custom car world due to its compact
size, mechanical durability, and straightforward serviceability. It
is a sensible choice for a build intended for regular driving.
Power reaches the pavement through a Ford 9-inch rear axle, one of
the strongest production rear ends ever built and a staple of
performance builds for the better part of six decades. The 4-link
coilover rear suspension positions the axle precisely under load
while allowing the builder to dial in ride height and spring rate
independently. Up front, the power rack and pinion steering system
replaces the slow, vague feel of the origin
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