citytravelfotos
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- Sep 8, 2012
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This is a 2000 Ford E-150 Conversion van, 168,000 miles (but an engine with 91,000 miles), being sold for $5500<br><br>Big plus is this guy claims to have service records (which is rare), from his ad:<br><br>"Hi, I'm selling my 2000 Ford E-150 Econoline Mark III Conversion Van. It has been cared for and service meticulously, and I have service records to prove it."<br><br>"Now THE IMPORTANT STUFF:<br>It runs GREAT. I made my living as a professional touring musician, and this vehicle is what I travelled in for the last couple of years. It was of the utmost importance that I got I got from point A to point B, so I took great care of it.... If my mechanic ever suggested something, I did it. And if a major servicing was due while I was traveling, I had it done at a local Ford dealership. I have done EVERY Ford recommended regular servicing, flushing, etc. Oil changes every 3,000 miles. Probably most importantly, it had a new remanufactured engine installed at 77k miles, so the NEW ENGINE HAS ONLY 91K MILES ON IT. (The vehicle has 168k miles on it total.) Almost ALL of these miles are highway miles, as I only drove it as a touring vehicle, and drove a small car in town. If you check the service records, and see how close together the oil changes were (ie; how quickly I drove 3000 miles) you can validate that it was mostly highway driven."<br><br>In addition, the back seat sofabed when put into its bed position isn't as large as in other conversion vans, thus I can use the back area behind the sofabed as storage.<br><br>I will be doing a lot of city parking, and a dark vehicle may not get as much attention as a light colored vehicle.<br><br><br><br>Negatives, from what I can initially see:<br><br>- The engine is not quite the original engine: A new remanufactured engine was installed at 77k miles. From what I understand, a remanufactured engine is the same as a rebuilt engine, meaning that things inside were replaced. Thus, its questionable if the quality of the replaced parts are as good as the original engine. Original Triton engines can go way past 500,000 miles, but its unclear and probably uncertain if a remanufactured engine can?<br>- In addition, what does it say about the rest of the vehicle if a new engine was installed at 77,000 miles (thus, it had to be? why? does this suggest excessive wear on the vehicle up to that point?)<br>- The rest of the vehicle has 168,000 miles on it, what does that say about the transmission and other parts of the powertrain?<br>- If it has the original spark plugs, (and it's most likely a '97 to '02 Triton engine) it may at one time have the famous blown spark plug issue. That would require going to a mechanic and being possibly ripped off of thousands of dollars to fix it.<br>- The van is dark colored, a deal breaker in itself due to the heat? (I'll probably be staying the summer in the Los Angeles area, which gets up to 80 to 90+ degrees in the summer depending on the region.) This is also a concern since I would like to use the van for working on my computer (I do stock photography for a living.)<br><br>Pictures:<br><img rel="lightbox" src="http://images.craigslist.org/3E23N43p25Kd5Hd5Jdd272903e4faa03c1472.jpg" class="bbc_img"><br><br><img rel="lightbox" src="http://images.craigslist.org/3Ke3I83Ne5I55Fd5M7d27a110c8413b0517ee.jpg" class="bbc_img"><br><br><br><br><img rel="lightbox" src="http://images.craigslist.org/3E73Fc3M15I75L75F1d27985f27c147ed1a91.jpg" class="bbc_img"><br><br><br>