New Life: Granting Hot Rods a Second Round – 1928 Ford Roadster Pick-Up

- in Cars

Up front, a drop axle was used along with a MorDrop reverse eye spring and ’39 Ford spindles with Lincoln brakes. Finned Buick drums were used for that timeless hot rod vintage look. A set of powder coated and pinstriped 16 x 4–inch 1940 Ford wheels outfitted with Firestone 550 and 700 bias ply tires complete the foundation.

Next on the list was the engine. Staying true to hot rodding’s roots, a 322 V-8 Nailhead engine out of a 1954 Buick was freshened up at Santa Cruz Auto. After Word War II car companies began producing larger vehicles and needed more powerful engines to carry the weight. Hot rodders poached these to stuff into lightweight, stripped-down, forgotten cars.


Dave had the Nailhead outfitted with Egge Pistons, a ported Offy intake manifold with three carbs, two Holley 94s and a C&G truck carburetor. A custom set of Jet Hot-coated headers run to Smithy glass packs provided the air intake and exit with a sweet sound. A 1964 Falcon sprint four-speed tranny hooked up to a Mustang clutch and Hurst shifter crowns the hot rod power plant.


The body and box were pretty cherry when Dave picked them up so it came down to the rest of the components. Dave made the hood and used a 1932 grille dropped down 2 inches for a sleeker look along with the chopped windshield. A Brookville roll pan, 1938 Plymouth taillights and Purple Heart bed wood floor finished things off before it was sprayed in PPG Oakwood Brown. On the inside, the cabin was buried in Dynamat before a custom bench seat was made and wrapped in vintage plaid and red vinyl.

For the dash, Dave once again looked towards period-correct hot rodding with a deuce dashboard featuring Stewart Warner gauges and a Sun tachometer topped off with a 1940 Ford steering wheel and switches from a 1948 Dodge. Living in Santa Cruz, California, and having a roadster, the cool ocean breeze is all that Dave needs for air conditioning.




Dave has the vintage hot rod roadster of which his dad would approve.


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