The Auto Wire on MSN
Vintage Model T Driver Killed After Collision With Truck in Utah Crash That Ended in Seconds
A routine afternoon drive ended in tragedy in southern Utah when the driver of a vintage Ford Model T was killed after being thrown from the vehicle during a collision with a pickup truck towing a ...
The last model of the car that changed the motor vehicle industry rolled off the assembly line on May 26, 1927.
Ford’s eight most senior employees each stamped one digit of the serial number of the 15-millionth Model T. Henry Ford and his son Edsel watched the historic moment. There’s more to Model T No. 15 ...
While it was invented in 1886 when Carl Benz patented his Benz Patent-Motorwagen, the automobile didn't become popular and affordable until the late 1900s. That's when Ford introduced the Model T.
This once-black 1924 Ford Model T Coupe features a 177 ci inline-four engine, a two-speed planetary gear transmission, and wood-spoke wheels. It just sold at auction for $27,000 (plus a buyer’s fee), ...
I heard this again on the news the other day: The original Model T Ford, launched 100 years ago, got 25 mpg. Since then we've split the atom, put a man on the moon, and invented spray-on cheese. All ...
First released in 1908 by the Ford Motor Company, the Model T is one of the most important vehicles ever made. While it wasn't the first car to be produced on an assembly line, Ford took steps that ...
In a recent video posted to YouTube, environmental advocacy group The Sierra Club dialed up production values to call out Ford's lobbying efforts to roll back fuel-economy standards. The video showed ...
Consider this one. To begin, it’s from 1915, a transitional year for the T. The headlights are now electric, although still trimmed in brass. The radiator remains brass as well, but a sheetmetal cowl ...
Where would hot rodding be if Henry Ford had not decided to build the Model T? For the first several decades of its existence, the automobile was a luxury item. At the start of World War I, ...
Ron Crawford has been a Model T enthusiast for practically all of his life. He was a 13-year-old kid when he owned his first one. Now, at the age of 80, he's back behind the wheel of another Model T.
Evan Williams is an automotive journalist and mechanical engineering technologist with more than a decade of experience in the industry. He has written for the Toronto Star and AutoTrader Canada and ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results