1936 Ford All stainless steel
this thing is pretty freakin sweet, a friend of my moms sent me the pics
In 1935, officials at Allegheny Ludlum Steel Division and the Ford Motor Company collaborated on an experiment that would become a legacy and a tribute to one of the most dynamic metals ever developed. Allegheny Ludlum, a pioneer producer of stainless steel, proposed the idea of creating a stainless steel car to Ford. The idea took shape in the form of a 1936 Deluxe Sedan. That car became the centerpiece of a campaign to expose the public to the new metal and its many uses. http://upload.spankdu.com/images/8uuj7nbortl6thv0vv.png http://upload.spankdu.com/images/1r9...13vgr9lp2g.png http://upload.spankdu.com/images/amh...minuvz2cxw.png http://upload.spankdu.com/images/jbx...0nf892djk0.png |
Thats hot.
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Im working on a project with Allegheny Ludlum :cool:
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blang blang
Originally Posted by Skelly_GSR
(Post 4119728)
Im working on a project with Allegheny Ludlum :cool:
Working on one that's Zinc coated :cool: Ballin |
Originally Posted by craighimself
(Post 4119723)
thats hot.
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Originally Posted by Skelly_GSR
(Post 4119728)
Im working on a project with Allegheny Ludlum :cool:
we used to have a 37 coupe that was all steel and it was a beautiful toy but slightly more powerful with a blown 350 :oh: ... this thing is nowhere near the power or technology but id take it over my dads coupe any day |
Beautiful. :cool:
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Originally Posted by JessTD
(Post 4119719)
this thing is pretty freakin sweet, a friend of my moms sent me the pics
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only if they had the flux capacitor :hs:
someone had to say it :oh: |
For Christmas 1981, A DeLorean/American Express promotion planned to sell one hundred 24k gold-plated DMC-12s for $85,000 each to its gold card members, but only two were sold. One of these was purchased by Roger Mize, president of Snyder National Bank in Snyder, Texas. VIN #4301 sat in the bank lobby for over 20 years before being loaned to the Petersen Automotive Museum of Los Angeles. It has a black interior, and an automatic transmission.[28]
The second gold-plated American Express DMC-12 is located at the William F. Harrah Foundation/National Automobile Museum in Reno, Nevada. This car, VIN #4300, is the only one of the three existing gold-plated examples to be equipped with a manual transmission. This car has a tan interior. Like its golden siblings, it is a low-mileage vehicle with only 1,442 miles (2,307 km) on the odometer.[29] http://i277.photobucket.com/albums/k...700/Gold-D.jpg |
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