They say old Fords never die. Well, this one has certainly been resurrected more than once. When you’ve worked around vehicles all your life and own a business dedicated to accident repairs, it can be difficult to find time to work on your personal car, let alone completely restore one from the ground up. But when your desire’s strong enough, you find away.
Steve Willsone of C&D Services (UK) Ltd in Basildon had always wanted a hot rod and finally took the plunge three years ago. “When I was 17 years old, I began training as a panel beater,” explains Steve. “I was taught the traditional methods, using an English wheel, beating out dents over sandbags and even learned lead loading joins and metal finishing. I was always into hot rods. When I first met my wife Julie, our first date was a visit to the Chelsea Cruise.” Despite that, this 1932 Ford three-window coupe is the first rod he’s owned. “It was definitely becoming time to buy one,” continues Steve. “I love Ford Pops and they were my dream car until I saw this ’32 for sale. I’d been looking for a black car, then it suddenly dawned on me we could repaint whatever I bought any colour I fancied. I originally wanted to build a car from scratch, but by the time I’d costed that I then realised it might be better to buy one I liked and then recondition it if necessary.”
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On your Mark VII
In our sixth instalment of the Continental story, weâre looking at the seventh iteration of the Continental Mark series: the evergreen Mark VII, a powerful, aerodynamic coupe that looks as fresh today as when the covers were first pulled off 37 years agoâŠ
Mercury Cougar
A âposhâ Mustang? It could only be the Mercury Cougar âŠ
Chrysler Concept 70X
Safety as a marketing concept for cars? Well, Richard Heseltine reckons we have Ralph Nader to thank for that. This month Richard examines a concept vehicle that was a direct result of the sudden interest in vehicle safety after Naderâs campaigningâŠ
Stock or modified?
Evans debates the merits of keeping your classic in factory condition or adding upgrades to make it more suitable for todayâs roads
HEAVY METAL COLLECTION
With a bit of luck we might be able to fly to the US again by the end of the summer. If Los Angeles is on your itinerary, then make sure you include the Petersen Museum for a very special exhibition thatâs been extended due to the pandemic. Keith Harman explains whyâŠ
Patience is a BARRACUDA 1970 Plymouth Barracuda
Weâre often reading about people who have an ideal car in their mind, and who wait decades until that dream becomes a reality. We meet another beautiful dreamer, Tom Aspinall, and his Detroit-inspired dream from Mother MoparâŠ
1960 Cadillac Sedan De Ville Johnny Cash's CADILLAC?
Country crooner Johnny Cash famously sang about a Cadillac created by a worker at the Cadillac factory â One Piece at a Time â as he, errr⊠took bits of car home over a period of years to create a car⊠but was it a â60 or a â61 or aâŠ?
1929 Lincoln Limousine NICE JAG MATE!
Itâs not often we come across a Gatsby-era luxury car that has been in the UK since the roaring Twenties and with the same owner since 1966! Meet Derek Brownâs magnificent 1929 Model L seven-passenger LimousineâŠ
Remembering The K-Car
Evans looks back to the humble compacts that saved ChryslerâŠ
Idaho Red!
This early 1965 Ford Mustang still looks to be wearing most of its original paint and proves the point: itâs only original once!