Eye candy.
Jim
Jim
29 or 30? I worked with 2 guys that had one of each. Always had them in shows. Beautiful rides
I'm not sure , but I'd guess 30.29 or 30? I worked with 2 guys that had one of each. Always had them in shows. Beautiful rides
Well . . . long as the tailgate flips down, so the kids can ride in it with their feet danglin'.
Hah! That comes close to being an optical delusion
That is a real beauty!
That is a real beauty!
LOL. That grille is Excessively Ugly - and 1955 is early in that trend.
My grampa s brother, my great uncle, had one , but his was 2 tone green. That thing floated down the road.
Jim
I used to see that truck, or the real one, in his driveway in Las Vegas. It was a modest house by todays standards but Red Foxx lived there until he died. The truck left a few years later. I never thought to stop for a picture, but that was prior to smart phones and would have required the 35mm.I used to drive an old ford pickup that "floated". The Kingpin bushings in the I-beam suspension were worn out. Kept me awake when I drove, it tended to drift around some...
Ha! Now this is a truck!
View attachment 84787
I think a 45 pretty much had to be 'govmint', because they all were.Another real truck... but out of my budget!
'45 Dodge, pretty sure the original paint was olive drab.
View attachment 84788
20/20 hindsight, imagine buying a 1963 but opting for the convertible. The one, main, most identifiable and intriguing part of the 1963 body was the split back window, and half the cars were convertibles. Don't get me wrong, I wouldn't pass up the chance to own one, but tiny bummer in the collectible world.
20/20 hindsight, imagine buying a 1963 but opting for the convertible. The one, main, most identifiable and intriguing part of the 1963 body was the split back window, and half the cars were convertibles. Don't get me wrong, I wouldn't pass up the chance to own one, but tiny bummer in the collectible world.
View attachment 85227
Enter your email address to join: