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Registered vehicle

1985 Ford Bronco “Buckin”

registered 2002 no photos yet ♡ Follow this build

About the 1980–1986 Ford Bronco

A Ford Bronco from the generation archive from the generation archive

The third-generation Ford Bronco ran from 1980 to 1986 on Ford's redesigned 1980-1986 F-series chassis, the body enthusiasts call the "Bullnose" for its flat, forward-leaning front end and recessed grille. Ford rebodied the full-size Bronco to cut weight and improve fuel economy after the 1979 energy crisis, and the headline chassis change was the Twin-Traction Beam (TTB) front suspension, an independent setup using a Dana 44 front axle split into two swinging beams. The engine roster covered the 300 cubic-inch (4.9L) inline-six and the 302 (5.0L) V8, plus an optional 5.8L V8 that changed identity early in the run: for 1980-1981 it was the 351M, a member of Ford's 335-series ("Cleveland"/M-block) family carried over from the prior generation, replaced by the lighter 351 Windsor for 1982, which then served as the top V8 for the rest of the generation. The early years leaned on smaller, economy-tuned options. Trims spanned the base Custom and the XLT, with the Eddie Bauer package joining for 1985. Around the 1985 model year the 5.0L (302) V8 picked up Ford throttle-body fuel injection (CFI), while the 5.8L (351 Windsor) stayed carbureted through the end of this generation. All seven model years used the same 104.7-inch wheelbase and removable rear hardtop.

The story

The truck was literally driven out of the showroom and to our driveway back in 1985. Since then it has seen the entire eastern half of the country, and seen the shop a few times. Now that I have graduated college, I am taking over the reins and looking to bring her back to life with a lot more skip. Recently the cap came off, bondo has filled the rust (I am still not that good with it though) and deep deep cleaning has taken place. It is amazing what a polishing compound spun at 5000 RPM will do on a buffer! I am always looking for tips and advice though, and any information or ideas are always accepted. Thank you for taking the time to read this and I hope to hear from you soon! My email is [email protected]BUCKIN

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