Elite Dealer

1923 Ford T Bucket

Indiana

$16,900

1923 Ford T Bucket

Vehicle Details

Make

Ford

Model

T Bucket

Year

1923

Body Type

Roadster

Transmission

Automatic

Drivetrain

RWD

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Engine

350 V8

Condition

Excellent

Description

This is a properly engineered 1923 T-Bucket, not a cosmetic recreation. Built in the late 1960s with a reinforced chassis design featuring dual rear springs, coil-over shocks, and heavily braced structural areas that set it apart from typical roadsters of that era. Power comes from a Chevy 350 cubic inch engine with light cam and Turbo 350 transmission, delivering genuine performance.

The 2022 refresh was comprehensive and professional: completely rebuilt and pressure-tested radiator, upgraded brake system with new master cylinder and booster, new wire harness, full tune-up with new plugs, wires, coil, and distributor. Heavy-duty steel fuel tank, Mickey Thompson tires all around, and modern conveniences including Bluetooth audio with removable speaker panels. Custom color-changing road lights add character. This is a driver with substance, built to run and turn heads.

Ford T-Bucket Buyer's Guide

Full guide
J
Jim Vasquez
Hot Rods
1923–1927
~4 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The T-Bucket isn't a factory car — it's a build style, an attitude, and a direct line back to the origins of hot rodding. No two are the same. Buying one means buying someone else's fabrication choices, and knowing the difference between quality work and dangerous shortcuts is the entire skill set you need.
This guide covers
✓ 12-point inspection checklist
✓ Common issues & what to avoid
✓ In-person inspection guide
✓ Market pricing by year & condition
✓ 5 FAQs answered
✓ History & fun facts

Ford T Bucket Market Overview

Based on 29 Ford T Bucket listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

29
Listed Now
$26,351
Avg. Asking Price
1915–1968
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Below Average
This car: $16,900
Low: $11,395 High: $57,995
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 79% ◄
Manual 7%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 24% ◄
Good 7%
Fair 10%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 29 listings →
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What is this car worth?

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Ford T-Bucket Buyer's Guide

I grew up around T-Buckets. My uncle had one in his garage in Torrance when I was twelve — flathead V8 with three carbs, no windshield, nothing between you and the road except a set of vintage Halibrand knockoffs. That car taught me more about what a hot rod actually is than any book ever could. The T-Bucket is the purest expression of the form: take a Ford Model T roadster body, strip everything non-essential, add power, drop it on a custom frame, and drive it. Simple in concept. Wildly variable in execution. Buying one smart means understanding the execution before you fall in love with the stance.

What to Check Before Buying

Frame weld inspection — Examine all frame welds for consistent penetration, no cold-lap or porosity
Motor mount welds — Check motor mounts under load — verify fully fused and not cracked
Suspension pickup points — Inspect all suspension-to-frame weld joints for integrity
Steering geometry check — Test for front-end wobble at speed — incorrect caster causes death wobble
King pins and tie rods — Check for wear in king pins, tie rod ends, and drag link
Brake system adequacy — Verify braking system matches power level — test stopping distance before purchase
Flathead head gaskets — Check coolant for oil contamination and exhaust for coolant — head gasket failure indicator
Body mount integrity — Inspect fiberglass body at all mounting points for cracks from frame flex
Electrical safety — Check wiring for bare conductors, improper fusing, fire risk areas near exhaust
Build documentation — Ask for any build photos, receipts, or notes — documents quality of unknown work
Engine oil leaks — Check for leaks at rear main, timing cover, and valve covers
Frame crack inspection — Look for evidence of re-welding or crack repairs on frame rails

Common Issues

Front-end geometry problems causing death wobble are the most common and dangerous issue — incorrect caster, worn king pins, or improperly set toe causes front-end shimmy that can become uncontrollable. Poor-quality welds on structural members are a safety issue unique to hand-built vehicles; cold-lap or incomplete fusion on motor mounts or suspension pickups is a failure waiting to happen. Undersized or inadequate braking systems on powerful builds — a small-block in a 1,800-pound car needs properly engineered brakes. Electrical issues are universal on custom builds — non-standard wiring from multiple builders over the car's life can create reliability and fire hazards. On flathead V8 builds: head gasket failure between cylinders is the classic flathead failure mode; overheating accelerates it. Fiberglass bodies can crack at mounting points if the underlying frame flexes — look for cracks around body mount locations.

What to Look For

This is a build quality inspection, not a rust inspection. Examine all welds: frame rails, crossmembers, motor mounts, suspension pickup points, steering rack/box mounts. Look for consistent penetration, no cold-lap, no porosity. Check steering geometry and test for wobble — incorrect caster and kingpin geometry causes dangerous front-end shake at speed. Inspect brake system completeness and condition — verify it matches the power level of the engine. Check all suspension components for wear: king pins, tie rod ends, ball joints (if applicable). Verify the engine and drivetrain are properly secured and all safety-critical fasteners are present. On flathead builds: check for oil leaks at head gaskets, timing cover, and rear main. Ask for any build documentation — photos, receipts, notes. Verify the frame has not been repaired or cracked — look for evidence of re-welding on frame rails.

Price Guide

Pricing is entirely build-quality dependent — no other classic car has this wide a range. Basic fiberglass/SBC driver builds: $8,000–$15,000. Mid-tier with quality chassis work: $18,000–$35,000. High-end builds with professional fabrication and period-correct drivetrain: $40,000–$60,000+. Award-winning documented builds: up to $80,000+. A T-Bucket is worth exactly what its build quality justifies — there is no blue book. Have any T-Bucket over $20,000 inspected by someone with custom chassis knowledge before buying.

Did You Know?

The T-Bucket style takes its name from the T-shaped appearance of the shortened Model T roadster body mated to a long hood. Norm Grabowski's 1952 "Kookie Car" — TV-famous on 77 Sunset Strip — is credited with triggering the nationwide T-Bucket craze. The first Goodguys Rod & Custom show in 1983 featured more T-Buckets than any other hot rod style. Modern kit manufacturers like Speedway Motors have sold tens of thousands of T-Bucket frame kits since the 1970s, making it one of the most-built hot rod styles in history.

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