A stock Model A Ford, even refreshed with decent tires, is comfortable driving at around 40 mph—maybe up to 50 in short bursts. In my town, where rural 45-mph roads are a license to go 70, driving a ...
I was pleased to learn that Ford’s Model A is one of the top 10 cars insured by Hagerty. I’m not surprised; after all, Ford produced more than 4.8 million of them between 1928 and 1931. They are great ...
Way back when, the hot setup was a Cad mill in a Model A. This new overhead-valve V8 wasthemotor to have in your hot street roadster. Today, we're overloaded with exotic, high-tech engines and ...
The nature of hot rodding has always been to mix and match various components and come up with a combination where the sum is greater than the individual parts. One of the most popular combinations of ...
This car was built almost exclusively with 1930s mechanical components, but it has been driven as fast as 70 m.p.h. By Paul Stenquist Dominic Palazzolo occasionally shows up at car shows and ...
Ford produced about 15 million Model Ts in the 19 years between 1908 and mid-1927 before introducing the upscaled Model A to the world on December 2, 1927. It took several months to switch tooling ...