Oxford White 1992 F-150 is Classic Throwback
Produced from 1991 to 1997, the Ninth Generation Ford F-Series pickups offer quintessential American power and style in one beautiful package.
The Stars Shine Bright
While still grounded in the basic designs that helped make the F-150 one of the most popular trucks in the United States, the 1992 F-150 offered a variety of new features to further expand on the truck's aerodynamics, power, and interior comfort. Looking back through the prism of this beautifully maintained original, it's easy to see why this truck remains an American classic.
Images Courtesy of Motorious
The Prairie Sky is High and Wide
The truck’s body is in pristine condition and shows little if any signs of wear. Early '90s Fords like this handsome devil are recognizable thanks to their larger front grilles, and by the fact that in this design the headlights were enlarged, along with the vehicle’s turn signal lights being transferred below the headlights, reversing a design change that had taken place a decade earlier.
Big and Bright
This ’92 has not just been fabulously persevered since it’s an XLT, the top trim model released that year, there’s a wide variety of interior and exterior features that pushed it to the top of its class. The truck’s premium look is made complete by creamy Oxford White high gloss paint, full-length rub strips and encircling black pinstripe accent that truly pops off the red decals on the truck's chrome wheels.
Rabbits Rush
The truck is powered by Ford’s famed 5.0-liter V8 believed to be original to this exact truck. The engine’s stoutness and modern fuel-injection system offer a terrific contemporary powerplant despite the truck’s age, one that gives you the ability to tackle country trails and city roads alike.
The Dawgies' Bawl
The interior boasts a variety of features that only the XLT trim line offered in 1992. Among them power windows, power locks, an AM/FM stereo, cold-blowing air conditioning that runs on R134 refrigerant —something that was just debuting in vehicles in the early 1990s. In 1992, Ford also debuted a redesigned dashboard setup and plush cloth-covered seats separated by a fold-down armrest.
The Cowboys Holler
Entering the 1990s, Ford had trailed its chief rival GM in combined sales for the previous five years. The ninth-generation F-150 was so popular with American drivers that it would forge the path that would ultimately see Ford surpass both Chevy and GMC in truck sales for the first time in decades —a title they still hold some thirty years later.
For help with service of your truck, check out the how to section of Ford-Trucks.com