Ford Excursion, Diesel, 4x4, Quad Seats, Eddie Bauer, Truck, Suv 3ed Row Seat on 2040-cars
Orlando, Florida, United States
Hello, my wife has decided to sell our Ford Excursion. This is a 2005 Ford Excursion 4x4 diesel automatic. This is the last year that the Excursion was made and it has all the bells and whistles that you would want. First the 4x4, the tow package, the DVD player, the multi CD player am fm. Power windows, power door locks, cruse, leather quad seats and a 3ed row bench seat. I just replaced the breaks and rotors, The tires are Michelin and still have great tread. She gets about 16 mpg, not bad for the biggest Diesel SUV on the road.
On Oct-17-13 at 20:03:56 PDT, seller added the following information: |
Ford Excursion for Sale
- 01 ford excursion limited 2wd 7.3l turbo diesel v8 florida leather needs work(US $6,500.00)
- The 7.3 long stroke diesel engine with jasper remanfauctured engine
- 2005 ford excursion eddie bauer sport utility 4-door 5.4l(US $12,500.00)
- 2001 ford excursion limited 7.3l power-stroke turbo diesel 1 owned watch videos
- 2005 ford diesel excursion 4x4(US $19,800.00)
- 2004 ford excursion xlt(US $8,995.00)
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Ford GT40 makes historic return to racing at Goodwood
Wed, 23 Oct 2013Is there a more iconic, American racecar than the Ford GT40? That may be a discussion for another day (although by all means, tell us how wrong we are in Comments), but this video of heaps of GT40s running in the Goodwood Revival races certainly has us thinking that Ford's Ferrari-killer might just be the best racer the Land Of The Free and Home Of The Brave has ever come up with.
That's completely ignoring the fact that the GT40 was largely developed by Brits using American money, but that's besides the point (there was also a rather brash Texan, who had a big role later in development). The resulting vehicle was dominant, besting the cars of Il Commendatore from 1966 to 1969, although it should be noted that Ford's GT40 was unable to beat Ferrari in its first two Le Mans outings in 1964 and 1965.
Those four years of dominance, which started with Ford sweeping the podium, were enough to establish the GT40's legend. And now, here we are almost 50 years later, celebrating the mid-engined monsters at Goodwood, in their first ever one-make race. Take a look below for the entire video.
Amid Mulally rumors, Bill Ford praises company's deep bench
Wed, 02 Oct 2013Bill 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."
Ford-sponsored survey says a third of Brits have snapped a 'selfie' while driving [w/videos]
Fri, 08 Aug 2014Talking on the phone while driving isn't advisable, and texting while driving is downright dangerous. Considering those truths, the fact that we even need to point this out this is incredibly disturbing: taking "selfies" while behind the wheel is exceptionally stupid. But, it's a thing that a third of 18- to 24-year-old British drivers have copped to doing, according to a new study from Ford.
Ford, through its Driving Skills for Life program, surveyed 7,000 smartphone owners from across Europe, all aged between 18 and 24, and found that young British drivers were more likely to snap a selfie while behind the wheel than their counterparts in Germany, France, Romania, Italy, Spain and Belgium.
According to the study, the average selfie takes 14 seconds, which, while traveling at 60 miles per hour, is long enough to travel over the length of nearly four football fields (the Ford study uses soccer fields, but we translated it to football, because, you know, America). That's an extremely dangerous distance to not be focused on the road.