Free: Contests & Raffles.
My first car was a '69 Ford Fairlane. Bought it for $300 drove it for about 6 years and sold it for $300. Had a pretty good case of rustworms on the quarter panels by then, but had a sweet running 302 with dual exhaust and glass pacs. I wouldn't mind having it back as a project car.
Quote from: quadrafire on March 01, 2018, 08:40:39 AMMy first car was a '69 Ford Fairlane. Bought it for $300 drove it for about 6 years and sold it for $300. Had a pretty good case of rustworms on the quarter panels by then, but had a sweet running 302 with dual exhaust and glass pacs. I wouldn't mind having it back as a project car.I had a 69 Fairlane; it was my first car also. I had some money saved from baling hay that summerand pop pitched in the rest so I could get it (believe it cost $500; that was in 1977). Was as four door, light blue, 289, 3 on the tree .
My first car(Not this one but identical). Stupidly I let it go. Many didn't like these but I sure did. Very rare now, I never see em.
Very true. It did keep Mustang alive in a hard time for sport cars. mustang II was a huge seller for Ford. Without this car the Fox body Stang likely would have been in peril. 140hp 4 speed stock. 2500lb car. Just uncorking the exhaust and flipping the air cleaner lid over was a good 40hp increase. I beat all the 305 irocs and a few of the 350 irocs on a rolling start. It was very torquey and a tire burner. 70's were tough times and this car reflects it but it carried the torch for the future. Surely its nothing like a pre 73 musclecar.