A Quick Note About this Wesite Design Change

Hi everyone!

So I have been meaning to change this website design to a more appropriate car collecting theme and I started early this morning to put up a temporary one, and of all things, I accidentally deleted the existing theme that has been up for about two years!

Well my programmer to the rescue, and we have fixed it at least for the time being. I will now install said temporary theme and by next week some time we will have a brand new much prettier website with all the bells and whistles that are available to a WordPress theme.

Please bear with us. It will be nice, promise.

Admin Rich

Oh, and another thing.

The 1940 Ford pickup street rod is “SOLD!”
It is on it’s way to sunny Australia and we will give a full report after the lucky collector receives it!

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Street Rods For Sale

The days of yesteryear, when signs that said street rods for sale were a common thing are long past. Today it is more common to see muscle car for sale or classic cars for sale, street rods or even hot rods for sale are long past. I think the main reason is because before muscle cars came into being in 1964, there were only street rods.

studebaker street rod - flickr

studebaker street rod - flickr

There were no production muscle cars to be had going into the 1960’s. All of the fast cars were built by their owners. There was plenty of know how and parts to make this a viable industry. I especially liked the old 1930’s Fords that would have their fenders taken off and the engine replaced along with the rest of the drive train to make them go fast. There were many painted black with a wild flame job added to the nose of the car. This made them look like a flaming rocket going down the road.

The best place to see these cars run were the interstate sections that were being built. These closed off straight sections of smooth road were the ideal places for drag races. Plus there were few to no cops watching these unopened roads.

But with most of the interstates already built across this nation and the old street rods and hot rods so old and rare most owners do not want to take a chance, so they sit in car shows instead of racing. Maybe I am showing my age but this was a time of American history I miss and street rods for sale are far and few between.

You can see a couple of beauties here on American Classic Car Sale that have been lovingly taken apart piece by piece and reassembled using the best of the best in replacement or original parts. 1940 Ford Pick Up Street Rod, and a 1942 Ford Coupe Street Rod.  What you end up with is a connection to the past which is a salute to the original car designers, coupled with new technology and go fats treatments that make your head spin.

I know that some of the old time antique car collectors openly scoff at such a travesty but deep down inside they are thinking that they would just love to take a ride in that rocket.

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The Collector Car Sale

The sign: “Collector Car Sale” is one that gets all of our hearts pumping a little faster. When we see this term in a classified ad in the newspaper or on a website there is always a mad scramble to be the first caller. How many times have you heard the stories about having just missed that 1963 split window coupe that sat in a barn and sold for a few thousand?

I have never really found a classic car that I did not like. Yes I know the Edsel was a bomb but compare it to a new Kia and I would prefer the Edsel.

That is a dramatic statement but I had to drive a Kia for a few days and I felt like I was in an aluminum foil car the sheet metal was so thin. Instead of a thud when the door closed it went twang. The can of beans I ate last night had thicker sides on it. The engine was fuel efficient to the point that it could not get out of its own way. I won’t admit I was scared but there were times when an 18-wheeler was next to me on the highway and I was a little uncomfortable.

viper

When you see a collector car sale advertised and it is a newer Viper or a Shelby Cobra you had better find some way to buy it and hold on to it for several years as these cars will become the classics of tomorrow. There are banks and finance companies that specialize in collector car financing and will give you a good rate. A couple of classic car financing companies that we know of and suggest you look at are hagerty.com and woodsidecredit.com.

When you find these advertisers you will do well to contact them directly as the reason they provide special rates for collector car financing is that they know you will take good care of your baby and that if you are in this field of collecting than you are no doubt a responsible person and a good risk for them.

collector car sale: shelby

collector car sale: shelby

Along with financing you will need to have special car collector insurance as this is very specialized also. The average automotive insurance will not be sufficient to cover your new ride but these specialty insurance companies have studied the risks and they come up with plans that will be perfect for your needs. Some companies that we can refer you to that have car collector insurance are; hagerty.com, heacockclassic.com, lelandwest.com and americancollectors.com.

Here in the states we are coming into the cold weather season and many of you will be putting your collector cars up for the winter and you will be making plans all winter long about what you will want to do to your car for the coming car shows and events next summer.

You had better keep watching out for the collector car sale ads all winter long because some of the best deals to be found are during the off-season periods that other collectors might not be looking for.

Please let our readers know when you purchase a new classic and we will publish pictures of it and your story if it meets our requirements.

If you have a classic car, muscle car or antique car for sale contact us using the contact form at the top of this page and we will advertise it here on American Classic Car Sale. Our advertising rate is ridiculously low and you do not have to pay anything at all until you sell the car. If we don’t sell it for you, there is no charge.

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Video of One Huge Collection of Classic Cars Muscle Cars

They say a picture is worth a thousand words.  Then this video is the Great American Novel.

Roy’s collection of Vettes and muscle cars is below the radar of the average car collector, but wouldn’t we all love to have some of these babies?

Enjoy.

Leave your comments below.

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3rd Annual “Souped Up on Guilderland” and “Classic Car Show” Contest

We received the following request and happy to post the announcement here.

Hi.

I was hoping you might be able to post the following Classic Car Show on your website.

Thanks.

Ben Gorenstein
Guilderland Chamber of Commerce
———————————–

3rd Annual “Souped Up on Guilderland” and “Classic Car Show” Contest

CAR SHOW! SOUP CONTEST!
Altamont Orchards – October 10, 2009
6654 Dunnsville Rd. Altamont, NY 12009

Car Show from 10am-2pm Featuring hotrods, classics, antiques, customs, foreign, trucks and bikes. Best of show awards Dash plaques and swag bags (fully loaded goody bag) to first 50 cars $10 per car (includes 1 soup ticket) Additional soup tickets will be available at $5 each

Soup Contest from 11am-2pm Featuring Chef Carmine Guilderland’s finest restaurants Vote for your favorite soup, stew or chili

Live entertainment from 1pm – 4pm Featuring Renee Lussier & Branchwater

Apple picking, crate maze, haunted house, cider and doughnuts and much, much more….

For additional information on this fun and exciting event, please contact the Guilderland Chamber @ 456-6611 or visit tasteofguilderland.com

Altamont Orchards is located @ 6654 Dunnsville Rd. Altamont NY 12009

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American Classic Cars Remembered

American Classic Cars have been seriously collected starting soon after World War II.  There is the fascination of putting you back in time to when you were a little kid standing in awe and amazement when you first say the new year models.  When you think of the many different kinds of American Classic Cars that there are you have a wide area of choices to select your favorites from.  We here at AmericanClassicCarSale.com encourage you to step back in time right here on our website.  Please leave any comments that you care to share.

One friend remembers his experiences with these beauties and shares them with us in the following article titled:

American Classic Cars I Have Owned

Some of the Detroit Iron manufactured after WWII until about 1980 can be considered Rolling Art. Several Companies like Packard, Hudson and Studebaker ceased building cars for one reason or another during the early part of this span, but they and the traditional big 3, Ford, GM and Chrysler did turn out some masterpieces.

As a kid just old enough to think about getting a drivers license, I would sit in my tree house and fantasize about the latest crop of finned behemoths pictured in the car magazines of the time. After careful consideration I would rank them according to style and features that I could really relate to and desired to possess. Always decisions. Should I have twin rear antennas and dual spotlights or would one of each do. Wire wheels were really neat as were the two and three tone paint jobs. I ended up choosing the most streamlined and elegant looking as my favorites always deferring to clean rather than clutter. I wasn’t one for fuzzy dice hanging from the rear view mirror, instead preferring power windows and air conditioning. Of course I always opted for the biggest V8 option and always dual exhaust both for easy engine breathing and the sound.

The late 1940′s and early 50s saw the transition from stodgy, subdued and functional to a more sleek and powerful motif which, year after year during the 1950′s, became a size, power and chrome enhancement race.

While some models went overboard with various excesses making their designs overburdened or clumsy, others managed to integrate fins, masses of chrome and color schemes that were a delight. All the manufacturers had their winners and losers but American cars of the period were all individually identifiable and definitely distinct and could roll down a super highway without a care.

The straight 6 and 8 motors of earlier periods soon gave way in the more deluxe models to V8′s, which couldn’t pull stumps like the old high torque low rpm straight eights, but could more lithely move a couple of tons of iron, glass and plastic down the road. By the mid 1950′s all American cars had settled on 12 volt electrical systems, 14 or 15 inch wheels, wrap around windshields, and with the V8 motor now the entrenched favorite.

It was a time in American history when each new car year was greeted with excitement and anticipation as each model sought to capture the limelight with its own distinct identity. Priorities were simple if not naive. Dazzle the customer with great expanses of sheet metal and chrome, brilliant colors and lots of buttons to push. Although mundane items like seat belts were introduced as selling features from time to time, the consumer wanted none of that as it didn’t add any value as a status symbol.

Slowly technological improvements did advance along with convenience and power options. Radial tires were a big plus adding smoothness, safety and longevity replacing thumping, rapid tread wear and numerous flats. Disc brakes were a definite safety advantage replacing the inferior drum and shoe method that could fade in emergency situations. Automatic transmissions became the option of choice and then ultimately became standard equipment. And of course, radios evolved.

In the mid fifties, signal seek or ‘wonderbar’ AM radios were introduced, followed soon thereafter by the transistor models which allowed for ‘instant on’ instead of waiting for the tubes to warm up. In the sixties, FM radio appeared, and at first offered ad and DJ free programming. That of course didn’t last long once the bandwidth became entrenched. By the seventies there were 8 track tape players which in fairly short order gave way to cassettes.

1959 marked the pinnacle of the auto as jet sporting gigantic rear fins, the ultimate appearing on the 1959 Cadillac with the 1959-60 Chrysler and DeSoto not far behind. In another year the DeSoto would disappear from showrooms and go the way of the Packard, Hudson and Nash. A sobriety of sorts gripped automakers after the fin and chrome extravaganza passed. Some really classy designs were introduced in the early sixties like the 1960 Pontiac, 1961 Buick, 1962 Cadillac and classic 1964 Ford.

Chrysler Corporation would, from time to time, introduce industry leading stratagems. Their Hemi (hemispherical head) Motor during the fifties was pure muscle and reliability as was their Torqueflight transmission. They introduced the ‘Forward Look’ in the later fifties which lead styling trends for awhile. Then again in 1965 they offered some really sturdy and classy cars that towards the end of that decade lead to the innovative fuselage cars. These were large sleek machines with an air frame sculptured look that I found quite attractive. Unfortunately Chrysler quality control started slipping badly during this period and didn’t recover for many years.

By the late seventies things started going downhill in Detroit. Automakers, paying little attention to quality control and mechanical efficiencies found themselves mandated by legislation to clean up their act, literally. As a result, all manner of schemes were employed to reduce engine emissions, most, in the early days, a maze of vacuum lines and fuel injection designs that were cumbersome and mostly ill conceived, leading to a myriad of problems and customer dissatisfaction.

It wasn’t long thereafter that the Japanese stepped in to fill the void and things have never returned to the days of American auto manufacturing preeminence.

Granted American cars eventually improved dramatically but market share by then was fragmented. I personally lost interest in Detroit around the mid eighties although some really nice cars have been produced since. Now, I am afraid, because of the fickle nature of Americans, demanding SUV’s and consuming a hugely disproportional amount of the worlds resources, the twin failings of overindulgence and lack of foresight in the face of world realignment, has pushed MoTown automakers to the brink of insolvency.

The 1950s through the seventies saw the apex and beginning of decline of the American auto as a distinct form of rolling art. A combination of art deco and modern gave way to downsizing and competition from abroad. Complacent management also failed to embrace, in a timely fashion, new concepts of quality control, preferring to market their vehicles through planned obsolescence.

No doubt, some of the greatest American masterpieces in rolling art were created during the 1920s and 30s, however, the height of Auto Americana, where form and function took on whole new dimensions of vim and verve, the 1950s, seems to have marked the peak of empire as well as one of its most distinctive products.

Article by: Henry Ramsey who was fortunate in being able to own and drive many of these rolling artworks over the years. Now, however, he is quite satisfied cruising around town on his electric bicycle. Visit his car collection at: http://www.Rollingems.com

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1940 Ford Pick Up Street Rod Highest Quality Custom Build

located

Man oh man!  This is one of the most gorgeous rods we have ever fondled!  This is a 1940 Ford Pick Up that has been lovingly built into the sweetest rides that there could ever be.

Starting out life as a 40 Ford it then had the following modifications:

Engine:  Chevy 350 Cu In V-8
Transmission:  GM 350 Turbo 3 Speed Auto
Front End:  Chevy S-10
Rear End:  Ford 9 Inch
Paint:  Dark Walnut Metallic (with fabulous flame job)
Stereo:  AM – FM – CD
Air conditioning
Flame Paint Job
Power Steering
Custom Tilt Steering Wheel
Powered Bed Cover

1940 Ford Pick Up Headlight

1940 Ford Pick Up Headlight

1940 Ford Pick Up Grille

1940 Ford Pick Up Grille

1940 Ford Pick Up Flames

1940 Ford Pick Up Flames

1940 ford Pick Up Oak Running Boards

1940 ford Pick Up Oak Running Boards

1940 Ford Pick Up Right Rear

1940 Ford Pick Up Right Rear

1940 Ford Pick Up Rear View

1940 Ford Pick Up Rear View

1940 Ford Pick Up Interior

1940 Ford Pick Up Interior

All created and put together with a lot of love.  You won’t find many trucks better than this one.

1940 Ford Pick Up Engine

1940 Ford Pick Up Engine

Price is $25,000 (SOLD) and she is located in Central New York State.

*** This truck is IMMACULATE ! ***

SOLD

SOLD

Use the “Contact” tab at the top to purchase or ask questions.

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American Classic Car Sale Discusses Corvettes For Sale

As we have discussed before here on American Classic Car Sale, an ad that reads Corvettes For Sale is one that every American I have ever known has at some time in their life wanted to answer. To buy a Corvette would mean you have attained a certain level of success in life.

Covette Crossed Flags Emblem

Covette Crossed Flags Emblem

The Corvette is like no other car in the world. This American icon will never be converted to a family car. This is if there are any children in the family. The Corvette will also never be any good as a truck. They do have powerful engines, except for the first years, but we won’t mention that. The engines were made to just go fast. They do have torque but not pulling power, or at least not like a truck of comparable engine displacement.

The Corvette will also never be an off road vehicle or a four by four. I can’t even imagine an off road Corvette. The Corvette with its long sleek road hugging body is at its best when going down the road fast. Even without a fancy paint job when a Corvette goes by heads will turn.

I have been in a few and my favorite was a 1963 C2 version with the split rear window. The 247 under the hood never had a problem breaking the wheels loose and heads turned around every corner.

To date General Motors has stopped production of the Oldsmobile, the makers of the 442, and Pontiac the makers of the Firebird, Trans Am and GTO. If Chevrolet or the Corvette ever goes then I will for sure know that the people in charge of GM have lost their minds. Corvettes For Sale are ads every American must answer at least once in their life time.

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1942 Ford Coupe Street Rod Gorgeous

This 1942 Ford was lovingly rebuilt into a beautiful car that you will want to see for yourself. This car was made into a street rod on a late 1970′s Ford chassis. It is a 302 with 3 Speed Auto.
Power Windows, Power Locks, Dual Exhaust and is a great driver. It is located in Upstate New York.
Price: $ 22,000.

1942 Ford Coupe Street Rod

1942 Ford Coupe Street Rod

42 Ford left front

42 Ford left front

42 Ford left rear

42 Ford left rear

42 Ford right rear

42 Ford right rear

42 Ford headlight

42 Ford headlight

42 Ford Street Rod Engine 302

42 Ford Street Rod Engine 302

42 Ford Street Rod Interior

42 Ford Street Rod Interior

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1969 Corvette – 427 – 4 Speed – For Sale – Wisconsin

This car is being offered by the seller priced for a quick sale.  The description is as was received from the seller.

“The car is a 427 / 390 HP car
4sp, air, power windows and locks, leather interior.
We have changed the brake master cyl, put new brake lines on car…all new.
New front calipers, I have the originals yet.
I have new chrome big block valve covers, air cleaner and decals, 427 emblems for hood, crossed flags for front and rear of car, and outside door handles.

The stingray emblems are in decent shape yet, the side venting gill chrome is all missing. I have 6 older ones for the car

Need a vacuum pod for the wiper doors.
Needs vacuum work, you can see the headlights are still up.
Side pipes are cracked, they painted them white over the chrome before I bought it.
All new emblems / parts still in boxes.
I found some used cone wheel covers for it last year.  It had the chev baby moons with it for some reason.
Bumpers had been rechromed before I bought it, they are back on the car.
BF Goodrich white letter tires, very good shape, like new, look nice on the car.
2 pictures of car below from when I first bought it 5 years ago.
The car has pretty much been sitting for the last 12 years.
Was repainted before I got it.
Has a couple of small nicks in the paint, 3 – 4.
Around 67,000 miles on car.
Chassis is in good solid shape, was undercoated when new, car came from southern Ohio.
Engine compartment looks … dusty dirty.
I figured for around $5000 … for interior, carpet, exhaust, and a few other things the car would be a very nice driver.

I think it is a nice looking car as is, but with the finishing touches it would be nice enough to show a bit.
Not a Barret Jackson car by any means.”

1969 Covette 427 Wisconsin

1969 Covette 427 Wisconsin

69 Vette Wisconsin

69 Vette Wisconsin

SOLD Banner

SOLD Banner

Asking Price: $15,000 (obo)

If you have questions or wish to negotiate, please contact me using the “Contact” tab at the top of this page and I will put you in touch with the owner.

Rich Hill

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Posted in cars for sale | Tagged , , | 2 Comments