being a bump side no later than 1972. Nice truck and neat photo!70s model but I'm not sure exactly what year it was made.
It doesn't really matter how big of an engine you have or the gear ratio if you can't get traction. Do you think that the photo was a marketing gimmick more than anything given the tires?
I have to agree. I have an '02 F250 7.3L and it does really well with a chip and programmer but I'd love to have more power. I have 175k miles on it now and plan on keeping it till the end, but do plan on buying a new (used) late model F350/F450/F550 with the 6.7L engine in a couple of years. Something with a flatbed and gooseneck receiver would be ideal.The new trucks cost a lot more but generally they are also more reliable, haul/tow more, have more power, are much more comfortable, tend to last for more miles and get better fuel mileage. When I was a kid, 100,000 miles was LOT of miles...now not so much. I love the vintage trucks but they don't hold a candle to todays trucks.
Looks like a 71-72 model high boy (divorced T-case). A REAL truck.My Dad's first new truck was a 1963 F250 4x4. He then traded for the one in the below pic - 70s model but I'm not sure exactly what year it was made. Also F250 4x4. Both had high sides on the back because they were used to haul cattle...and sawdust...and shavings (bedding) and anything else that needed hauling. Never used for plowing but they pulled many a loaded hay and silage wagon. Here my Mom has a platform up on the high sides that she's using to pick apples from in our orchard. The tree was so overloaded with fruit that the branches were breaking...the David Brown tractor is holding up a sagging branch.
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1971 F150 ad.
And Fords kept it's same dedication since this 1971 ad as they could still run it for 2025
"Works Like A Truck, Rides Like A Car"
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My '02 F250 Super Duty Lariat has live axles and leaf springs front and rear, but it certainly doesn't ride like an old wagon.I think all of them anymore. It wasn't always the case, I can remember old heavy duty 3/4 ton trucks with heavy live axles and leaf springs F&R. They rode like an old wagon.
There are no trucks built with a solid live axle anymore. My Jeep Wrangler is the only vehicle I’m aware of that is still offered like that.My '02 F250 Super Duty Lariat has live axles and leaf springs front and rear, but it certainly doesn't ride like an old wagon.
I wouldn't buy a truck that has independent suspension unless I used it on a race track on the weekends. I'll take a live, solid axle up front with coil springs, and a live, solid axle in the rear with leaf springs for any serious work, preferably with front and rear E-lockers.