2001 Ford E250 Utility Service Truck on 2040-cars
Plainfield, New Jersey, United States
Body Type:Pickup Truck
Vehicle Title:Clear
Engine:5.4 GAS
Fuel Type:Gasoline
For Sale By:Private Seller
Number of Cylinders: 8
Make: Ford
Model: F-250
Trim: BASE MODEL
Safety Features: Anti-Lock Brakes, Driver Airbag, Passenger Airbag
Drive Type: 2WD
Power Options: Cruise Control
Mileage: 141,082
Exterior Color: Red
Interior Color: Tan
2001 FORD SERVICE TRUCK IN EXCELLENT WORKING CONDITION. ENGINE, TRANS AND ALL MECHANICAL COMPONENTS OPERATE LIKE NEW. IT HAS 4 BRAND NEW TIRES AND HAD ONLY ONE DRIVER SINCE NEW.
Ford F-250 for Sale
- 1978 ford f250 4x4 rust free original paint 2 owner truck
- 1986 ford f-250 xl standard cab pickup 2-door 5.8l(US $5,100.00)
- 2001 ford f-250 super duty lariat extended cab pickup 4-door 7.3l
- 2002 ford f-250 super duty xl extended cab pickup 4-door 7.3l
- 2003 red ford f250(US $15,000.00)
- 1997 ford f-250 base standard cab pickup 2-door 5.8l
Auto Services in New Jersey
Xclusive Auto Leasing ★★★★★
Willie`s Auto Body Works ★★★★★
United Motor Service ★★★★★
Ultrarev Inc ★★★★★
Turnersville Transmission Center ★★★★★
Troppoli Automotive Used Cars ★★★★★
Auto blog
Ford Focus ST checks into Jay Leno's Garage
Mon, 23 Sep 2013In a change of pace from the high-end vehicles that often appear in Jay Leno's Garage, Ford sends its hottest hatchback (in the US, at least), the 252-horsepower Focus ST, to be featured on Leno's show. Accompanying the five-door hatch is its chief engineer, Jamal Hameedi.
Riding on stylish 18-inch wheels with summer tires and with a spoiler that doubles as a lunch tray, Hameedi and Leno walk us through the finer points of what makes the ST special, which also includes bigger brakes, torque vectoring, a manual transmission and, of course, 252 hp and 270 pound-feet of torque from the 2.0-liter EcoBoost four-cylinder engine, which is made possible by 21 psi of turbocharged boost.
Watch the video below to see what Leno thinks of the global Focus ST.
Ford gives police chiefs tech to surveil officers in their own cars
Tue, 28 Oct 2014Police officers certainly have a difficult job in keeping the streets safe, but as public employees in positions of authority, there is still a very real need for oversight. To that end, Ford is partnering with a tech company to offer a new system called Ford Telematics for Law Enforcement on its line of Police Interceptor patrol vehicles that could make cops safer, while giving cities a better idea of what its officers are doing.
The system streams live data about cruisers back to the home base to people like the police chief or shift supervisor. That info includes expected things like speed, location and cornering acceleration, but it gets incredibly granular as well, with records of things like if emergency lights are on, or even if an officer is wearing a seatbelt.
Ford Telematics for Law Enforcement "ought to protect officers as much as it protects the public," said Ford spokesperson Chris Terry to Autoblog. Constantly monitoring patrol cars offers cities a lot of advantages, too. First, it reduces potential liability because a department can prove where each vehicle is at all times. Also, officers know they are being watched and may potentially drive more safely.
How Ford secretly used customers to test its aluminum F-150 [w/video]
Fri, 30 May 2014Automakers getting clever about disguising development vehicles isn't anything new. Between mules wearing the sheetmetal of other cars and prototypes decked out in as much camouflage as is practical, automakers know how to make it very difficult for the general public to get an exact idea of what kind of vehicle is in development. Ford, though, is rapidly becoming the master.
We knew that the Blue Oval originally tested the durability of the aluminum construction being used for the 2015 F-150 by building an all-aluminum 2014 truck and entering it in the Baja 1000 off-road race. That's no longer a secret. What we didn't know, though, is that the aluminum development dates back to before even that, and that some of the people in question had no idea what it was they were working with.
Ford says this is the first time prototypes have ever been handed over to the public.