Find or Sell Used Cars, Trucks, and SUVs in USA

on 2040-cars

US $1,600.00
Year:1996 Mileage:87000 Color: Blue /
 Gray
Location:

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Advertising:
Engine:Gasoline
Transmission:Automatic
Body Type:Minivan, Van
Condition:

Used

Make
: Ford
Exterior Color: Blue
Model: Aerostar
Interior Color: Gray
Drive Type: FWD
Mileage: 87,000
Year: 1996

We are selling our 18 year old Ford Aerostar van, it is running great, we travelled two months with it and haven't had any trouble with it. We are the second owner and had it newly aircared. It has only run 139000km.
The Air Condition is not working.
It is fully equipped as a 
campervan and ready to go on a roadtrip. There is a bed, two pillows, as well as curtains in the back. 
The van has 2 camp chairs, a big camp stove, 5 big storage boxes, plates and cutlery, a pan, a pot and some spices, water canisters, various maps of Canada, 2 umbrellas, a parasol, as well as unused bear-spray! Which is recommended, if you plan to go hiking.

You can store the bed under the second row of seats and unfold them, if you are travelling with more than two persons.
As we are still travelling and don't have a Canadian number, you can contact us by email or whats app only.

The van is situated at Dufferinstreet, Toronto

Auto blog

The fascinating forgotten civil defense history of Mister Softee trucks

Mon, 26 Aug 2013

Hemmings came across an interesting article from the Throwin' Wrenches blog about the intersection of ice cream, cars and civic duty in America's late 1950s. In particular, it focuses on the Mister Softee trucks, which criss-crossed neighborhoods of the eastern US serving ice cream. Looking past the ultra-durable vehicles used - heavy-duty Ford-based chassis, for what it's worth - the article delves into some deeper national-security territory.
See, Mister Softee truck owners were voluntary members of the Civil Defense, thanks to all the useful stuff (potable water, generators, freezers and fridges) that the machines carried with them for serving ice cream. Click over to Throwin' Wrenches for the full run down of how Mister Softee would have stepped in to help fight if the Cold War ever turned a little hotter.

Ford blamed in drug mule lawsuit

Tue, 30 Jul 2013

If a college student is caught smuggling drugs across the border, one might think the kid got what was coming to him. But when a Mexican student at the University of Texas in El Paso was caught by Border Patrol agents with duffel bags filled with marijuana in his trunk, the man used a classic excuse: He claimed they weren't his.
While a claim like that is almost unbelievable, Ricardo Magallanes, the student, is now suing Ford for handling its vehicles' key codes negligently enough to allow drug smugglers to break into his Ford Focus and stash the drugs, The Daily Caller reports. The twist here is that four other people who lived in Juarez and worked in El Paso were involved in the same type of scheme - allegedly unwittingly, just like Magallanes - and all the cars were Fords except one model from General Motors. FBI agents also found an employee at a Dallas Ford dealership that had accessed the key codes to all four of the cannabis-stuffed Fords.
While we all may not own Fords, the case still causes us slight paranoia. We'll definitely be checking our trunks before we cross any more international borders.

Amid Mulally rumors, Bill Ford praises company's deep bench

Wed, 02 Oct 2013

Bill Ford went on the offensive to combat the rumors that CEO Alan Mulally would leave Dearborn for Steve Ballmer's vacated position leading Microsoft, adding that even if the 68-year-old, former Boeing exec were to depart, the Ford executive team is in a good place.
"I'm happy [Mulally] is going to stick around. But we also feel really good about where we are in terms of succession," Ford told Bloomberg TV, according to Automotive News. Rumors first cropped up about Mulally leaving Ford when AllThingsD speculated that he was in the running, early last month. In that same report, which you can read here, Ford's board of directors reportedly okayed the CEO stepping down ahead of his planned retirement in 2014.
That opened the floodgates, culminating in a report from a few days ago that the rumors over Ballmer's successor just might be true. The story is especially troubling, as Ford hasn't had Mulally under contract, according to AN. "He's here as long as he and I would like it to happen," Ford said, "We're also cognizant of training the next generation and getting them ready to go as well."