Elite Dealer

1932 Ford Model B

Indiana

$75,500

1932 Ford Model B

Vehicle Details

Make

Ford

Model

Model B

Year

1932

Body Type

Hardtop

Exterior Color

Red

Interior Color

Black

Transmission

Automatic

Drivetrain

RWD

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Engine

383 Stroker SBC

Condition

Excellent

Description

1932 Ford Model B Custom ALL steel EXTREME high end build from Nickells Customs in Lodi CA full custom boxed frame with solid waterjet front arches This fabrication quality and over the top ideas put into this truck are 2nd to none Everyone loses their minds when they see this thing Be prepared to be bombarded every time you drive383 Stroker sbc and TH350 Trans (both built by Ron Grose Racing)Littlefield 671 blower and dual quad Fi Tech injection House of Kolor Candy Apple Red Color Matched powdercoat on complete chassis4 link rear with airlift Custom Sectioned stainless steel lake style headers Full custom Diamond Stitched Alacantra interior and dynomatted Pivoting wood bed cover with painted inlays4 corner disc brakes with Wildwood Calipers and Proportioning ValveQuick release steering wheel15' black powder coated steelies with Firestone tiresTitled as a 31 but has a 32 Vin number, call to discuss.

Ford Model B Buyer's Guide (1932–1934)

Full guide
J
Jim Vasquez
Hot Rods
1932–1934
~4 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The Ford Model B is the last four-cylinder Ford before the flathead V8 took over — and the body it shares with the Model 18 is the most iconic hot rod platform in American history. Whether you want an original prewar survivor or the foundation for a traditional build, understanding what you're actually looking at before you buy is the whole game.
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 Model B Market Overview

Based on 54 Ford Model B listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

54
Listed Now
$49,171
Avg. Asking Price
1932–1934
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Above Average
This car: $75,500
Low: $11,495 High: $95,000
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 72% ◄
Manual 13%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 20% ◄
Good 13%
Fair 4%
Poor 2%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 54 listings →
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Ford Model B Buyer's Guide (1932–1934)

People get confused about the "Deuce" and what the Model B actually is, so let me clear it up. In 1932 Ford offered two mechanically different cars in the same body: the Model B with the carry-over four-cylinder, and the Model 18 with the brand new flathead V8. Both are "1932 Fords." The Deuce legend is built on that body — those sweeping fenders, that low roofline, those proportions that work in every body style from three-window coupe to roadster. If you want an original Model B to preserve as a prewar survivor, that's one car. If you want the Deuce body as a hot rod foundation, that's another conversation entirely. Know which one you're buying before you fall in love with the stance.

What to Check Before Buying

Steel vs. fiberglass verification — Use magnet on flat panels — steel attracts, fiberglass does not
Cowl probe — Probe cowl channel at windshield base for rust penetration
Firewall and floor pans — Inspect firewall and floor pans for rust-through or repairs
Lower rear quarters — Check rear quarter-to-fender seams for corrosion
Door gap evenness — All four door gaps should be even — uneven gaps indicate body damage or twist
Frame X-member inspection — Look for weld repairs or cracks at X-member and front crossmember
Hot rod fab quality — Inspect all custom fabrication — motor mounts, suspension mods, brake work
Chop/channel quality — Assess any body modification for workmanship and filler usage
Flathead cooling — Verify radiator is sized correctly for V8 — flatheads run hot with undersized cooling
Trunk floor — Check trunk floor for water damage from deteriorated lid seal

Common Issues

Cowl rust is universal on unrestored examples. Floor pan deterioration from water trapped under original rubber mats. Lower rear quarter rust at the fender-to-body seam. Trunk floor rust from deteriorated lid seals. On V8-swapped cars, verify the engine mount fabrication quality and cooling system adequacy — flathead V8s run warm and require correct radiator sizing. Frame cracks at the X-member junction occur on hard-driven cars. Fiberglass bodies misrepresented as steel is a documented problem in the market — always verify with a magnet. On heavily modified cars, incorrect front-end geometry can cause handling problems; have any custom-built front suspension inspected before purchase.

What to Look For

Verify steel body vs. fiberglass reproduction — use a magnet on flat panels and tap for hollow sound. Cowl rust at the windshield base is the primary structural failure zone — probe thoroughly. Firewall condition and floor pans. Lower rear quarters at fender seams. Door gap evenness — uneven gaps indicate twisted or repaired body. Frame integrity on any car: look for weld repairs at X-member and front crossmember junctions. On hot rod builds, assess all fabrication quality — frame welds, body work quality on any chop or channel, brake and steering modifications. Verify whether the body is an original steel survivor or has been previously damaged and repaired.

Price Guide

Original steel body alone (restorable): $15,000–$35,000 depending on body style. Original complete car, driver condition: $30,000–$50,000 (Tudor/Fordor); three-window or roadster driver: $50,000–$75,000. Show-quality original three-window: $80,000–$120,000+. Quality hot rod build on steel body with flathead: $40,000–$80,000. Award-winning documented traditional build: $100,000+. Fiberglass-body hot rod builds price significantly lower — $15,000–$40,000 depending on build quality.

Did You Know?

The 1932 Ford body was designed in fewer than 90 days under Henry Ford's direct supervision, reportedly with Henry rejecting multiple proposals before approving the final design. The flathead V8 that debuted in the Model 18 was the first V8 available in a mass-produced American car priced for average buyers — it sold for $460. John Milner's yellow 1932 Deuce coupe in American Graffiti (1973) is widely cited as the most influential single car in hot rod popular culture. The original car still exists.

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