SOLD on Jun 15, 2026
Elite Dealer

1934 Ford Model 40

Michigan

$59,995

1934 Ford Model 40

Vehicle Details

Make

Ford

Model

Model 40

Year

1934

Mileage

55,000 miles

Exterior Color

Black

Interior Color

Other

Transmission

Automatic

Drivetrain

RWD

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Engine

AND TRANS

Condition

Fair

Description

1934 FORD 5-WINDOW COUPE RUMBLE SEAT. ALL FORD STEEL, HARD TO FIND ONE THAT'S NOT CHOPPED AND HAS ORIGINAL TOP INSERT CAR (DOES NOT) RUN HOT AND RUNS GREAT. A LOT OF VERY EARLY PIN STRIPPING 1966 FLINT BUILT 327 ENGINE, SBC BLOCK #3858174, 80’S ERA TRUCK HEADS, POLY LOCKS.

POP UP PISTONS, 650 HOLLY. EDELBROCK INTAKE, 303 FIREBALL CAM, MSD, SANDERSON HEADERS. TURBO 400, 2400 STALL, SHIFT KIT, B & M SHIFTER, MUSTANG II FRONT END with VEGA POWER STEERING. NEW FRONT SHOCKS, 4 WHEEL DISC BRAKES NEW RUNNING BOARDS SEPARATE HEATER/AC CLASSIC AIR INSTALLED IN 2019, IT WORKS GREAT AND BLOWS VERY COLD.

HAS CADILLAC *TILT* TELESCOPIC STEERING COLUMN WITH VERY EARLY VINTAGE CHRIS CRAFT BANJO STEERING WHEEL ELECTRIC CUTOUTS, 8” REAREND WITH POSI LIMITED SLIP WITH 3:00 GEARS. 4 LINK, COIL OVERS, WALKER RADIATOR, FIRST GENERATION OUTLAW FRAME WITH MUSTANG 2 IFS, PAINLESS WIRING. SEPARATE ENGINE,A/C, TRANS COOLING FANS. LINE LOCK, FRONT/REAR PROPORTIONING VALVE.

NEW RIMS, TIRES, CAPS. JUST ABOUT A PERFECT GRILL. 1” VETTE MASTER CYLINDER. NICE INTERIOR. SHORT OF THE LONG BLOCK AND TRANS, MOST EVERYTHING HAS BEEN REPLACED WHILE ATTEMPTING TO KEEP TRUE TO IT’S 1/8 MILE AND 1/4 MILE RACE HISTORY.

SMALL DINGS HERE AND THERE, RACED BETWEEN 1959 AND 1967 IN NORTH CAROLINA AND NEW YORK. HAS THREE WELL DOCUMENTED BUILD BOOKS AND PROVENANCE OF REGIONAL RACE HISTORY. (DRAG RACE PICTURE, NEWSPAPER ARTICLE, TIME SLIP, DRAG RACE TROPHIES AND WRITTEN TESTIMONY). WELL INSULATED.

HEAVILY LOUVERED. IT’S A GREAT DRIVER AND YOU DON'T NEED TO BABY IT. IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A STREET ROD THAT WOWS THE CROWD WHEN YOU ROLL IN, YOU MIGHT LOOK ELSEWHERE, BUT IF IT IS A HOT ROD WITH A SMALL BIT OF HISTORY YOU ARE LOOKING FOR, YOU MIGHT CONSIDER A CLOSER LOOK.

BEST GUESS IS ABOUT 55,000 MILES ON ENGINE AND TRANS. The CAR WAS GLOSS BLACK AT ONE TIME. WITH BASIC BODY SKILLS AND THREE LONG WEEKENDS, IT COULD BE BACK TO VERY ACCEPTABLE GLOSS BLACK PAINT. NOW WEARS TWO STAGE FLAT BLACK

Ford Model 40 Buyer's Guide

Full guide
J
Jim Vasquez
Hot Rods
1933–1934
~4 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The 1933–34 Ford Model 40 is the first generation of Ford's V8-powered full body line after the transitional 1932 Model 18 Deuce β€” refined proportions, improved flathead reliability, and the same foundational hot rod DNA that makes every prewar Ford V8 a legitimate classic.
This guide covers
βœ“ 8-point inspection checklist
βœ“ Common issues & what to avoid
βœ“ In-person inspection guide
βœ“ Market pricing by year & condition
βœ“ 4 FAQs answered
βœ“ History & fun facts

Ford Model 40 Market Overview

Based on 20 Ford Model 40 listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

20
Listed Now
$58,733
Avg. Asking Price
1933–1934
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site β€” Average Range
This car: $59,995
Low: $8,995 High: $134,995
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 70% ◄
Manual 15%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 10%
Good 10%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 20 listings →

Ford Model 40 Buyer's Guide

Jim Vasquez here. People always talk about the Deuce β€” the 1932 Ford Model 18. And it deserves everything said about it. But the 1933 and 1934 Fords are where the flathead V8 program actually matured. The 1932 was an engineering debut that had its rough edges. By 1933, Ford had two years of production data and the engine was significantly more reliable. The body was updated into a cleaner, more streamlined form. These are better cars than the Deuce in most practical ways, and they cost considerably less β€” which means more of them are available for people who want to actually build something rather than just own something.

The 1933–34 Ford culture is tight. Goodguys, GNRS, SEMA show circuit β€” these cars show up with serious builds and nobody looks twice at the non-Deuce status. They're legitimate hot rod material and they always have been.

What to Check Before Buying

Lower Door Rust β€” Probe lower door skins and sills β€” universal rust location on 90-year-old steel regardless of storage.
Cowl and Firewall β€” Inspect cowl and firewall for rust β€” water accumulates in these areas over decades.
Flathead Cooling System β€” Warm to operating temperature β€” overheating from blocked scale means serious engine work.
Engine Casting Numbers β€” Verify casting date and numbers against 1933–34 production records for matching-engine premium.
Mechanical Brake Function β€” Test all four brakes β€” mechanical brakes require balanced adjustment for safe stopping.
Transmission Engagement β€” Test second and third gear synchronization β€” first is non-synchronized (correct condition).
Body Panel Condition β€” Assess all steel body panels for rust, pitting, and prior repair β€” metal work is expensive on this vintage.
Glass Completeness β€” Verify all glass is intact β€” period-correct 1933–34 glass profiles are difficult to source.

Common Issues

Lower door skin and sill rust β€” universal on unrestored examples regardless of climate. Cowl and firewall rust from age. Flathead V8 overheating from 90-year-old cooling system scale buildup. Engine casting cracks from prior overheating β€” visible with magnetic-particle testing. Mechanical brake adjustment drift β€” four-wheel mechanical brakes require regular adjustment for balanced stopping. Three-speed non-synchronized first gear requires double-clutching β€” not a defect but requires technique. Original glass sourcing for period-correct profiles is difficult. Body trim piece sourcing increasingly challenging.

What to Look For

The body condition is paramount β€” inspect for rust in the lower door skins, the sill areas, and the cowl. These are 90-year-old cars and rust is the primary structural concern regardless of where the car lived. On claimed original flathead V8 cars, verify the engine casting date and casting number against production records β€” the 1933–34 engine should have specific casting identifications. The three-speed transmission is non-synchronized on first gear (double-clutch required) but second and third should engage cleanly without grinding. The mechanical brake system (no hydraulics until 1939 Ford) requires proper adjustment and all four drums must function correctly β€” test carefully before any road driving. Original glass completeness matters for valuation on preserved cars.

Price Guide

1933 Model 40 tudor/fordor sedan: $12,000–$25,000. 1934 Model 40 tudor/fordor sedan: $13,000–$28,000. 1933–34 three-window coupe (original): $28,000–$55,000. 1933–34 roadster: $22,000–$45,000. Show-quality period-correct hot rod build: $45,000–$120,000+ depending on build quality and provenance. 1934 phaeton (rare): $25,000–$50,000.

Did You Know?

Ford produced the Model 40 (1933) and Model 40B/730 (1934) at a time when the Great Depression had reduced American car sales to their lowest levels since 1918. The flathead V8's relatively low price point β€” Ford insisted on keeping the V8 available in their mainstream cars rather than relegating it to expensive models β€” made it accessible to working-class buyers and created the supply of affordable V8-powered cars that the hot rod movement would later rely on. The 1934 Ford's distinctive V-shaped chrome grille is considered by many car designers to be one of the finest prewar American grille designs β€” clean, modern, and perfectly proportioned.

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