Elite Dealer

1990 Ford F-150

Michigan

$7,495

1990 Ford F-150

Vehicle Details

Make

Ford

Model

F-150

Year

1990

Mileage

185,000 miles

Body Type

Pickup Truck

Drivetrain

RWD

Fuel Type

Diesel

Engine

and transmission are very sound

Condition

Good

Description

1990 Ford 7.3L DIESEL This truck has the iconic 7.3L IDI diesel! And only 185k miles! It really is a pleasure to drive, the steering and brakes are both very tight and the suspension still gives it a very smooth ride, even on the interstate. No mechanical issues that I know of, engine and transmission are very sound. No strange noises or quirks.

No blow by or smoke at all. The most recent parts that have been replaced are as follows: Radiator Alternator Most all of the coolant hoses Tires (under a year old) Front brakes and brake lines Currently the A/C is not working. There is no belt on compressor (even when I bought it) and I haven’t looked into it.

But heat works good. The interior is very good for it’s age, cruise control still works. No electrical issues or battery drains. It is rusty underneath but not near as bad as most trucks it’s age. It was not driven often in the Winter.

The body has very minor rust. Please Note The Following **Vehicle Location is at our clients home and Not In Cadillac, Michigan. **We do have a showroom with about 25 cars that is by appointment only **Please Call First and talk to one of our reps at 231-468-2809 EXT 1 **

Classic Ford F-150 Buyer's Guide

Full guide
R
Robert Halloran
Classic Trucks
1975–1996
~3 min read
Updated Apr 2026
Buyer's guide for classic Ford F-150 pickups (1975–1996). Dentside, Bullnose, and Aero generation breakdown, frame and cab inspection, engine identification, and current market values.
This guide covers
✓ 10-point inspection checklist
✓ Common issues & what to avoid
✓ In-person inspection guide
✓ Market pricing by year & condition
✓ 5 FAQs answered
✓ History & fun facts

Ford F-150 Market Overview

Based on 24 Ford F-150 listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

24
Listed Now
$23,805
Avg. Asking Price
1951–2001
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Below Average
This car: $7,495
Low: $4,995 High: $57,995
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 58%
Manual 21%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 17%
Good 46% ◄
Fair 4%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 24 listings →
💰

What is this car worth?

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Classic Ford F-150 Buyer's Guide

Ford introduced the F-150 designation in 1975 as a half-ton pickup positioned between the original F-100 and the heavier F-250 — and it quickly became the most popular vehicle in America. The first three generations of the F-150 span the era when American pickup trucks were simple, repairable, and built to actually work. Today those same trucks are increasingly collectible, and the cleanest examples are disappearing from the affordable end of the market fast.

What to Check Before Buying

Inspect cab corners and lower quarters — Dentside: lower rear cab corners. Bullnose: inner fender and battery tray area. Aero: cab corners and lower door skins. Use magnet to detect filler.
Pull floor mats and check floor pans — Driver and passenger sides. Floor pans rust from below on salt-belt trucks.
Inspect frame rails with flashlight — Under the cab and at rear crossmembers. Probe paint bubbles with a screwdriver.
Test 4WD engagement on 4x4 trucks — Engage both high and low 4WD ranges. Should engage cleanly without grinding.
Check engine oil and coolant condition — Milky oil or white residue in coolant = head gasket. Dark sludge = chronic deferred maintenance.
Identify engine displacement via casting numbers — Verify claimed engine matches firewall data plate.
Test EFI system on 1987+ trucks — Should start instantly and idle cleanly cold. Rough idle usually means IAC or TPS sensor — inexpensive fix.
Check battery tray on Bullnose trucks — Driver-side front under hood. Battery acid accelerates corrosion of tray and inner fender.
Drive at highway speed minimum 20 minutes — Listen for differential whine, transmission slip, driveline vibration.
Document with photos before purchase — Every panel, VIN, firewall data plate, engine bay, frame rails, and undercarriage.

Common Issues

Rust patterns depend on which generation. Dentside trucks (1975–1979) rust at lower rear cab corners, rear quarters, and the tailgate. Bullnose trucks (1980–1986) are prone to battery tray corrosion and cab corner rust. Aero trucks (1987–1996) rust at cab corners and lower door skins. The 300 inline-six is bulletproof across all generations. The 302/5.0L Windsor V8 is equally long-lived; the 351 Windsor runs hot in stock form and needs cooling system attention. The 360 FE big-block in Dentside trucks is reliable but parts are less common. EFI issues on 1987+ trucks are common but inexpensive: idle air control valves, throttle position sensors, and mass airflow sensors age and cause rough-idle complaints. These are $50–$200 parts, not engine problems.

What to Look For

Frame and cab first. Flashlight under the truck, screwdriver to probe frame rails, magnet on the cab corners and lower quarters. F-150s lived as work trucks and the evidence shows. Engine identity second. Verify casting numbers on the block against the claimed displacement. The firewall data plate lists the engine code. Trim level documentation. XLT Lariat trucks carry meaningful premium over base Custom trucks. The trim tag on the door jamb lists the trim code — verify it matches the interior before paying the premium.

Price Guide

Dentside F-150 (1975–1979): $18,000–$38,000 for clean drivers; $48,000–$70,000 for professional restorations. Big-block and 4x4 configurations add $5,000–$12,000 premium. Bullnose F-150 (1980–1986): $12,000–$28,000 for solid drivers; restorations at $35,000–$55,000. XLT Lariat trim adds 15–20%. Aero-generation F-150 (1987–1996): $10,000–$28,000 for low-mileage XLT Lariat trucks. This generation is early in its appreciation curve.

Did You Know?

The Ford F-Series has been the best-selling truck in the United States for 48 consecutive years (since 1977) and the best-selling vehicle for over 40 years as of 2024. The F-150 specifically has led US vehicle sales since its 1975 introduction. The 300 cubic inch inline-six fitted to F-150s appeared on multiple "most reliable engines ever built" lists from mechanics' trade publications. Ford offered it from 1965 all the way to 1996 — 31 years of continuous production with essentially no fundamental changes.

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