Found. Eric Arnette had no idea a 1932 Ford coupe he bought in an Arkansas barn hid a special heritage stretching back to the late 1940s and the very roots of the hot rod movement in California.
In 1932, Ford retired its second nameplate to be called the Model A (the first being a short-lived 1903 and 1904 offering), and the 1932 Ford Model B debuted. One of the variants offered was the ...
The hot rodding world is filled with common terms that gearheads throw around a lot. These terms are used throughout the hobby and describe many of the different customization techniques and parts ...
For starters, if you were like me (hypothetically), the hot rod that got my thermostat to pop open was a car that I saw on TV and in car magazines. Yep, I had never seen the hot rod that got me to rev ...
Owning a 1932 Ford hot rod means living in two eras at once. The car’s bones come from the earliest days of Ford’s flathead V8, but most Deuces on the road today are the result of decades of ...
This 1932 Ford Roadster has been transformed with a period-correct Highboy hot rod conversion and is now offered for sale. In 1932, Ford retired its second nameplate to be called the Model A (the ...
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