1931 Ford Model A Town Sedan

1931 Ford Model A in Gone in Sixty Seconds, Movie, 2000 IMDB

Class: Cars, Sedan — Model origin: US

1931 Ford Model A Town Sedan

[*] Background vehicle 

Comments about this vehicle

AuthorMessage

TheDriver CH

2006-03-15 18:04

Thats a Chevrolet or GMC COE "Art Deco" Truck out of the years '41-'47, like the buildings on miami beach!

antp BE

2006-03-15 20:27

Picture was for the car ;)

TheDriver CH

2006-03-16 13:20

I know but I was only able to identify the truck...
And by the way it is worth to mention it, because it is a rather rare one!
I will see if I can identify the car too.

-- Last edit: 2006-03-16 13:20:48

Junkman UK

2006-03-16 13:35

The car pretty much looks like a Ford A Town Sedan 1931.

wrenchhead US

2006-03-16 17:23

I can't see much but what I can does look like a Ford A Town Sedan.

Cycolac Fan EN

2012-01-25 20:15

Pretty tough to tell exactly what that is, front fenders look like a Model A but the body looks pretty big for a Fordor, I'm not saying it isn't a Town Sedan but I do wonder if it's an Essex.

chris40 UK

2012-01-25 21:51

I don't know about an Essex, but I don't remember Model As having artillery wheels, only wire-spoked. Comments?

jettalover US

2012-01-26 02:43

Uhh, artillery wheels? What's that mean?

Nightrider RU

2012-01-26 03:06

Wooden wheels, similar to ones, used on contemporary towed guns.

jettalover US

2012-01-26 06:43

Towed guns like the ones used in the U.S. Civil War?

Nightrider RU

2012-01-26 16:39

No, like ones in WWI era.

chris40 UK

2012-02-04 22:40

I actually meant wheels with solid (not necessarily wooden) spokes (as on early Model Ts, Morris Bullnoses, Austin 12/4 taxis etc.) rather than wire spokes, which Ford adopted on the Model T in 1926 and fitted to all Model As. That's why I don't think this could be a Model A.

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