14 Passenger Shuttle/ Party Bus, Low, Low Miles on 2040-cars
Florissant, Missouri, United States
Vehicle Title:Clear
Engine:7.5 v8
Fuel Type:gas
For Sale By:owner
Transmission:Automatic
Make: Ford
Model: E-Series Van
Options: CD Player
Safety Features: Anti-Lock Brakes, Driver Airbag
Drive Type: 2 wheel
Power Options: Air Conditioning, Cruise Control
Mileage: 49,000
Number of Cylinders: 8
Trim: DELUXE
AWESOME 14 PASSENGER PARTY BUS WITH ROOM FOR MORE. 7.5 LITER V8 WITH ONLY 49,000 MILES, RUNS & DRIVES GREAT. NEEDS NOTHING. READY TO MAKE MONEY.TINTED WINDOWS, BLINDS,STEREO WITH IPOD HOOK UP, LED LIGHTING. NEW BRAKES, NEW BATTERIES, TIRES ARE 40%. IN SERVICE NOW SO MILEAGE WILL CHANGE.
Ford E-Series Van for Sale
2008 e250 white good condition v8
13 e-150 e150 4.6 v8 keyless entry power windows we finance! msrp $28,565(US $24,906.00)
2005 ford econoline e-350 6.0 diesel cargo van storage bins 1-owner low miles(US $8,980.00)
White e-350 handicap accessible van 324k hwy miles well maintained low price(US $7,750.00)
2003 ford e450 party bus, limo bus, shuttle bus(US $27,500.00)
E-350-1-ton-power-stroke-turbo-diesel-high-top-conversion-dvd-dual-ac-rv-camper(US $20,890.00)
Auto Services in Missouri
Wyatt`s Garage ★★★★★
Woodlawn Tire & Auto Center ★★★★★
West County Auto Body Repair ★★★★★
Tiger Towing ★★★★★
Straatmann Toyota ★★★★★
Scott`s Auto Repair ★★★★★
Auto blog
Ken Block and friends race light in silly-beautiful Castrol commercial
Wed, 28 May 2014How does one make fast, loud, drifting cars better? Well, you can add more fast, loud, drifting cars or you can add lasers. Either or, really. In this case, Castrol did the right thing and added both, creating a highly stylized commercial for its Edge Titanium motor oil starring South African racer Adrian Zaugg, BMW factory driver Augusto Farfus, Audi DTM and Le Mans staple Mike Rockenfeller and some bloke named Ken Block.
Their cars? No surprise, but Block is in his Ford Fiesta GRC, while Zaugg samples a Lamborghini Aventador and Farfus and Rockenfeller drive along party lines, with a BMW M4 and an Audi R8, respectively. And those cars look good, too, thanks to the creative light and laser work on display.
Take a look below for the video from Castrol.
Ford decides C-Max shoppers not interested in fuel economy
Sat, Oct 25 2014If you say a car – the Ford C-Max Hybrid, for example – is "fun to drive," can anyone really come up with some empirical evidence against your claim? What about calling it "versatile"? We wonder if Ford has been thinking along these lines when it talks about the green little hatch. Ford is refocusing its sales strategy for the C-Max Hybrid after the model took a sales hit on both sides of the Atlantic recently, Automotive News reports. That sales dropoff may stem from the fact that Ford has had to revise its fuel-economy figures downward for the C-Max twice since last year, most recently in June. That made the company's once-proud fuel-economy comparisons with the Toyota Prius kind of pointless. Ford is going a different route, calling the model versatile (which, to be fair it was also doing a year ago), technologically advanced and fun to drive. Since the C-Max has about 50 more horsepower than the Prius, that last part may be true. Ford representatives didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from AutoblogGreen about the mpg-mention-free advertising direction, but we will update this post if we hear back. Sales of the C-Max Hybrid have suffered in the US. Through September, Ford sold 15,245 C-Max Hybrids, down 36 percent from last year. We shall see if a new focus away from the car's lowered mpg numbers helps. At least Ford can be pleased with sales of the C-Max Energi Plug-in Hybrid, which are up 51 percent compared to 2013.
Which is more fuel efficient, driving with a pickup's tailgate up or down?
Tue, 26 Aug 2014
Thanks to the smoke wand in the wind tunnel, you can actually see the difference in our video.
Should you drive with your pickup truck's tailgate up or down? It's an age-old controversy that's divided drivers for decades. Traditionalists will swear you should leave the tailgate down. Makes sense, right? It would seem to let the air flow more cleanly over the body and through the bed. But there's also a school of thought that argues trucks are designed to look and operate in a specific manner, and modern design techniques can help channel the airflow properly. So don't mess with all of that: Leave the tailgate up.