2002 - Ford Excursion on 2040-cars
Strasburg, Virginia, United States
2002 Ford Excursion XLT 4 Wheel Drive 7.3 Diesel. 114K Miles. Original owner. Leather Interior, Front & Rear A/C, 3 row seating (3rd row removeable) Factory 6cd changer, keyless entry. Alloy wheels, Michelin tires, Factory Trailer Hitch. Clean Car Fax. One owner car, dealer maintained. Beautiful condition (see pics) Interior excellent condition. Tires good. Gets 20 mpg. Mostly lady driven. Never launched a boat or pulled trailer, never off roaded. Hubs recently serviced, brakes replaced, all hoses and belts replaced, maintenance entirely up to date. Everything works correctly, car needs nothing. Located in Upstate South Carolina near Anderson. Can be inspected here with one day notice. $500 paypal deposit required within 24 hrs of winning auction, balance due within 7 days and before title transfer. Will not ship car, it must be picked up locally.
Ford Excursion for Sale
- 2005 - ford excursion(US $7,000.00)
- 2001 - ford excursion(US $7,000.00)
- 2005 ford excursion limited(US $7,000.00)
- Title in hand (US $10,000.00)
- 2000 ford excursion limited(US $7,000.00)
- 2004 - ford excursion(US $8,000.00)
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Auto blog
The fascinating forgotten civil defense history of Mister Softee trucks
Mon, 26 Aug 2013Hemmings 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 profits soar as problems mount
Mon, 19 Aug 2013Ford is doing well. It can't make enough examples of its new Fusion, it can barely make enough of the aging F-150, it's getting good brand rankings, people like its turnaround story, it's selling oodles of product and its quarterly profit numbers end in the word "billion." As other high-flying examples have demonstrated over the past few years, though, big numbers can come with problems that aren't exactly small.
Automotive News has published a good "nutshell" report of Ford's progress and problems. The Dearborn automaker's optimistic "general label rule" determination of gas mileage for the C-Max Hybrid has led to lawsuits, hybrid software updates, a downward revision of C-Max fuel economy and millions in rebates. AN notes the C-Max was the "worst-scoring model in this year's J.D. Power Initial Quality Study," but Ford will probably be happy that it managed not to be mentioned further in the study's results after last year's mediocre showing. Its MyTouch and SYNC systems, the bugbears sabotaging Ford's J.D. Power results, have also led to lawsuits, software updates, more software updates and a center console rethink. On top of that, the 1.6-liter EcoBoost in the 2013 Ford Escape that Ford called a "hero" was soon catching fire for three different reasons. And let's not even get into the troubled launch of the Lincoln MKZ.
The Automotive News piece notes that industry observers have been surprised at Ford's stumbles because everything has been looking so good. Nevertheless, there is still the issue of those billions in profits - the company is doing plenty of things, plural, right. Ford says it is tackling its problems, hiring engineers and instituting new quality control processes as part of its effort to find solutions. The test will be to see if in a year from now we begin the discussion of these issues with "Remember when Ford...", or "Problems continue at The Blue Oval."
Curtain officially comes down on Mercury as dealers remove signage
Mon, 03 Jan 2011The process of shutting down the Mercury is complete. Ford officially made the decision to close its mid-level brand in June of 2010. In the months that followed, Ford offered its dealers money to stop selling the cars, with production shutting down in September. The last Mercury, a Mariner, rolled off the assembly line in the beginning of October and former spokesperson Jill Wagner said her good-byes to both the car and her job. Now the last piece of the brand has come down as dealers are removing any and all Mercury signage from their lots.
[Source: Detroit News]Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments