The 47 Mercury convertible I bought for $75.00 in 1962 and drove home was the same color. Ford called it "Ruby Red". I restored that one and hotrodded the flathead V8 with a bunch of my father's leftover dirt track racing parts. Kept it for 13 years and lost it in California in a really nasty divorce. If I could locate that car today, I'd buy it back!
In 1959 I bought my first car, a '49 Ford 4-door that had been very lightly side-swiped down the passenger side. Paid $65 for it. V-8, 3-speed. Great 1st car.
"There's more to optics than meets the eye."--anon
"...most of us would be better off losing half a pound around the waist than half a pound on our rifle."--dhg
Grandpa had a 1950 Ford. A dark green color, if I remember correctly. Grandma from the other side of the family worked at the Post Office and would bring home various stickers from the recruiters at the PO. I can remember adorning the glove box lid of that '50 Ford with a Strategic Air Command sticker just to help Grandpa out in my little way. They are great cars.
Great car. My dad had/has a 39 Chevy that was my grandparents. It was supposed to be my Dad’s but my uncle currently has it. Hoping I can get it from him some day and get it back on the road. It still runs.
Me and dad went together and bought a 49 flat head V8 I wasn’t much more than 15 of so at the time The ole man would get drunk and have me choffering him all over the place Drank a few myself Ole car would run right at 105 on top end if I remember right Was driving up rt 33 one day and went to pass this little ole lady in a nova Chevy II , early sixties model SS She had both hands white knuckled on the wheel and I floored it as she sped up , shhhiet , she sucked me up her exhaust pipe Slowed down and let me catch her again and walked off and left me again Never saw her again Kenneth
That is a very good looking old Ford - am thinking that style might have been called a Tudor - but certainly will look a lot better when that fellow is finished with it. The post-war Fords through '48 were starting to look stodgy and Ford made a big splash with that body redesign. Chev and Ply also made big shifts. That flathead V8 gave the Ford a quickness edge over the other two, but the entry of the Chev 265 in '55 changed that situation.
LOL.
You're probably right. Dad said Tudor and I heard Two Door.
Screw you! I'm voting for Trump again!
Ecc 10:2 The heart of the wise inclines to the right, but that of a fool to the 24HCF.
Dad one in the 70’s. If I remember correctly, there was no key. You would flip a switch and mash the accelerator to the floor to start it! Same color too!
Dad one in the 70’s. If I remember correctly, there was no key. You would flip a switch and mash the accelerator to the floor to start it! Same color too!
It may have hade a floor starter. It's kinda like the old floor dimmer. He would floor the accelerator because that's how you start a carb engine if the car is cold.
Last edited by 1911a1; 11/06/23.
Figures don't lie, But Liars figure Assumption is the mother of mistakes
I love when you post these. Your Dad is a master at restorations. I rarely miss the Barrett Jackson auctions on tv and I’ve never seen better. I hope he has many more years of doing this
I had a 1949 Tudor with a Flat head Six 3 on the tree and over drive when I was in High School, drove the hell out of it, then bought a 1951 Tudor that had been wrecked, put whole new front end on it from another wreck,nosed and decked it removed door handles, did a tuck and roll interior painted it pale sky blue, had a 1951 Olds V-8 with a 4 Barrel--headers--cherry's, put a B&M Hydromatic Tranny in it, turned out to be bad ass, love the old shoe box Fords. Rio7
I had a 1949 Tudor with a Flat head Six 3 on the tree and over drive when I was in High School, drove the hell out of it, then bought a 1951 Tudor that had been wrecked, put whole new front end on it from another wreck,nosed and decked it removed door handles, did a tuck and roll interior painted it pale sky blue, had a 1951 Olds V-8 with a 4 Barrel--headers--cherry's, put a B&M Hydromatic Tranny in it, turned out to be bad ass, love the old shoe box Fords. Rio7
That was a nice hotrod. The Early Oldsmobile OHV Rocket V8s were ticket for many years.
Figures don't lie, But Liars figure Assumption is the mother of mistakes
Not sure but it looks like that '50 Ford may be what was known as a 'Business Coupe' -- no backseat, deep rear window deck, allowing for a huge trunk storage space.