1932 Ford Roadster: The Ultimate Hotrod

American, Builders, Classics, Featured  /   /  By Bruce Caldwell

Many cars are hotrods, but the 1932 Ford roadster is the ultimate hotrod. That’s the way it is and that’s the way it’s always been. If that statement seems arbitrary, ask any automotive enthusiast to name a single car that best defines a hotrod. Not only is the correct answer a ’32 Ford roadster—the complete answer is a 1932 Highboy, like this prime example currently listed on eBay.

The roots of the fender-less ’32 Ford roadster powered by a modified V-8 engine can be traced to the early 1940s prior to World War II.

Post-war, the hotrod movement exploded, especially in southern California. That location coincided with racing on dry lake beds and abandoned airstrips. Emerging Los Angeles-based magazines like HOT ROD, covered regional cars and events. Lightweight, sunny weather Ford roadsters were prime editorial fodder. As California magazines went national, so did their predominantly So Cal content and influence.

The ’32 Ford was the last and best of the open fender style Fords. The lines and proportions of the one-year only design were near perfect. The year 1933 marked the beginning of larger, heavier, often closed bodies with enclosed fenders. The ’32 Ford signaled the end of lightweight roadsters.

No Extra Sheetmetal

Speed is relative to weight and power, so Ford Roadsters absent any extraneous sheetmetal were the key to young men going fast on a budget. Model T and Model A Fords with hopped-up four-cylinder engines dominated the world of low-buck speedsters until Ford introduced the first affordable, mass produced V-8 in 1932.

1932-ford-roadster-600-12

Once prices of used ’32 Ford Roadsters dropped substantially, the Deuce coupe—later enshrined by the Beach Boys in their 1963 hit song—became the shortcut to a V-8 hotrod. The ’32 interior is roomier than a Model A and the styling is smoother and more refined, but it was the available V-8 (which started appearing in wrecking yards), and the ease of modifying it, that made the ’32 roadster the car of choice. A chord was struck and it stuck.

The many iterations of the flathead Ford V-8 ruled hotrodding until it was usurped by the ’55 Chevy OHV V-8. The small-block Chevy easily fit within the gracefully flowing ’32 frame rails, so the ’32 highboy popularity continued to flourish.

Even as newer, more powerful factory muscle cars emerged, the ’32 Ford roadster was so firmly entrenched in the automotive culture that it remains the all-American hotrod.

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See Ford Cars and Trucks 1932 Roadster for sale on eBay.

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