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Skip to content1935 Ford 1/2Ton pick-up Truck reproduction
1935 trucks were 1/2 ton Pickups with 112" wb, referred to as 'Commercial Car" back in the day. The truck (1-1/2 Ton) chassis is completely different, although it shared the same cab, hood, grille and engine.
This radiator is intended as a drop in replacement for the 1935 Ford 1/2 ton pick-up truck [50-8005] and set-up for the flathead engine in its production year and includes the fan relief in the top header and lower hose connection castings but does not include the crank relief. If you have modified or altered your vehicle in anyway, please order from the bespoke radiator section. If you wish to restore your OE radiator using your OE tanks and brackets castings please visit the restoration section of our website to begin the process.
1935 and 1936 Ford truck shells are often interchanged on vehicles but they have design differences. The most obvious is the shell side section depth. 1935 is 6 1/2" and 1936 is ~8". Please check before ordering.
Made in the USA
We make to order. Please allow adequate time for us to build.
Build time estimates [late May 2025]
Model Ts Brass/Black [Our foundry has resumed production and we have begun shipping Model Ts. We will update the lead times asap]
Model As 9-11 weeks
Heater cores ~6 weeks
Model A and 32 Ford Street rods 8-9 weeks
Common street rods ~12-15 weeks
Tricky customs & complicated restorations ~20 weeks
We appreciate your patience as we continue to recruit and train new fabricators and manage the labor shortfall our country has been experiencing.
We make to order. Please allow adequate time for us to build.
Build time estimates [late May 2025]
Model Ts Brass/Black
[Our foundry has resumed production and we have begun finishing and shipping Model Ts. We will update the lead times asap]
Model As 9-11 weeks
Heater cores ~6 weeks
Model A and 32 Ford Street rods 8-9 weeks
Common street rods ~12-15 weeks
Tricky customs & complicated restorations ~20 weeks
We appreciate your patience as we continue to recruit and train new fabricators and manage the labor shortfall our country has been experiencing.