Ford five window coupe hot rod rat rod high boy

Price: US $26,000.00 Item location: Victorville, California, United States
Description:

1926 Ford Five window coupe

Original all steel ford five window coupe high boySitting on a 1932 frame1932 grillCalifornia car 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

50's style hot rod with a great look

Definitely a head turner


Your chance to own a run and driving ford five window coupe


1937 21 stud flathead v8 with serviceable main bearings,

The 1937 flathead v8 21 stud is the holy grail of flathead v8's because it offers the early look with water pumps on the head or you can move the pumps on the block, the only year this is a option. Plus it's a serviceable main bearing engine.

Very rare and desirable engine.

Manual transmission3 speed

Dropped axle

4 link front and rear

Stainless steel suspension

🇺🇸Bonneville Salt Flat racing wheels 🇺🇸

Clear coat finish on steel body to seal the patina steel look with real authentic period correct bullet wounds, this car tells a story just from looking at it. You can see the history


Hope you guys like the look I was going for,

If you look closely there are bullet holes from a more "adventuresome time”

Bonnie and Clyde stuff here guys 🚔💰🚨💰🚔

To much to list

Titled as 1926 ford coupeIn my name


Pretty much all there, i never got around to putting the door windowsin it. In California we drive with windows down anyway. The window regulators are there and you can just order the glass online if you wish.

All other glass is there
Shipping 🌟🌟🌟I will assist the buyer to arrange shipping if neededand do my best for a smooth and pleasant transactionSelling worldwide
Deposit is is due 24 hrs after auction ends and is $1500 non refundableInspections to be done before purchase



Henry Ford built a fine car using only top-quality materials such as Vanadium steel.

Vanadium Steel

This lightweight, (blueish dark gray color) durable, easily machined steel alloy was developed in Europe and used on racing cars and premium-priced vehicles before Ford became aware of it around 1905. He recognized that the material's high tensile strength (nearly three times greater than cheaper, lower-grade steels) would allow him to make a stronger, lighter, better performing car.

During a car race in Florida, Ford examined the wreckage of a French car and noticed that many of its parts were of lighter-than-ordinary steel. The team on Piquette Avenue ascertained that the French steel was a vanadium alloy, but that no one in America knew how to make it. The finest steel alloys then used in American automaking provided 60,000 pounds of tensile strength. Ford learned that vanadium steel, which was much lighter, provided 170,000 pounds of tensile strength. As part of the pre-production for the new model, Ford imported a metallurgist and bankrolled a steel mill. As a result, the only cars in the world to utilize vanadium steel would be French luxury cars and the Ford, it might break down every so often, but it would not break.