Find or Sell Used Cars, Trucks, and SUVs in USA

2001 Ford 350 Diesel Dually Lariat W/2001 Lance 1181 Camper 85k Miles on 2040-cars

Year:2001 Mileage:85900 Color: are in excellent condition
Location:

Sedalia, Colorado, United States

Sedalia, Colorado, United States

This truck and camper are in excellent condition with many upgrades. 

 

Truck information: 7.3 turbo diesel; 85,900 miles; Ford replaced transmission at 60k; KN filter; 2 new batteries; HD shocks all around; air bags; 6 new tires (<3k miles) tuned exhaust; GPS system with laptop and table; extended trailer hitch; both interior and exterior are in excellent condition - no dents, paint is shinny - interior is perfect; Superchips included. 

 

Camper:  2001 Lance 1181 11'6" with slide; fully equipment except for onboard generator but it is wired; new camper battery; winterized; small tv.  This has been my rig for over 10 years but we recently bought a condo in the south and will not be using this outfit.

I have many other pictures but I am having a difficult time loading them.  Google 2001 Lance 1181 for pictures and floor plans.  Camper is in great condition.

Auto Services in Colorado

Western Auto Recycling - Commerce City ★★★★★

Automobile Parts & Supplies, Used & Rebuilt Auto Parts, Automobile Salvage
Address: 7481 Kearney St, Englewood
Phone: (303) 287-9716

Village Auto Care ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Brake Repair
Address: 789 Tech Center Dr, Hesperus
Phone: (970) 259-1991

Subaru Of Loveland ★★★★★

New Car Dealers
Address: 3930 Byrd Dr, Masonville
Phone: (970) 622-1000

Subaru ★★★★★

New Car Dealers, Used Car Dealers, Automobile Parts & Supplies
Address: 5995 Arapahoe Ave, Pinecliffe
Phone: (303) 443-2919

South Main Auto Sales ★★★★★

New Car Dealers, Used Car Dealers, Wholesale Used Car Dealers
Address: 1439 Howard St, Delta
Phone: (970) 874-7851

Silver Star Automotive Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Clutches
Address: 4345 S Parker Rd, Gateway
Phone: (303) 690-1225

Auto blog

Ford debuts Fusion NASCAR racer that edges closer to stock [w/video]

Wed, 20 Feb 2013

The sixth-generation NASCAR Sprint Cup racecar, which will make its competition debut at the 2013 Daytona 500 this weekend, marks the closest thing to a "stock car" that the sport has seen in more than 20 years. No longer using just stickers to distinguish the different brands, the image above shows the lengths NASCAR and automakers went in order to create a racecar design that more closely resembles the individual cars they represent.
Ford, one of the more open and vocal OEMs regarding the Gen6 car's development, is giving us a closer look at its racing version of the Fusion with a pretty revealing side-by-side comparison with last years' racer (click above for an expanded view). Aside from the more realistic front end and production-like body lines, the overall shape, dimensions and proportions have also been designed to give the racecar a more stock appearance. Most of the new racer was designed by the Ford Design Center, which the automaker says was the first time it has been so involved in the design process since the 1960s. Of course, one area the Sprint Cup Fusion really differs from the production Fusion is its Ford Racing 5.8-liter V8 producing around 850 hp. Can you say Fusion SVT?
Scroll down for a quick video from Ford Racing showing a production Fusion morph into a Cup car.

2015 Ford Transit

Wed, 11 Jun 2014

As a segment, fullsize vans are stealth-fighter invisible on most consumers' radar. Visit a dealership for any of the four brands that offer them and you'll be lucky to find even one on display. These are commercial vehicles primarily, even more so than pickup trucks. Vans are the shuttles for plumbers, caterers, carpenters, concrete layers, masons, electricians, florists and flooring, and a huge part of this country's productivity is accomplished using them. At the moment, Ford is the 800-pound gorilla in that room - fully 41 percent of commercial vehicles wear a Blue Oval. So when Ford announced three years ago it would be ditching its commercial bread-and-butter E-Series, it meant the Transit that would be replacing the Econoline had huge, 53-year-old shoes to fill.
We were still a bit nostalgic about Econoline vans going away until going directly from the Transit first drive in Kansas City to an E-350 airport shuttle. Climb up through the Econoline's tiny double doors and bang your head on the opening, crouch all the way to your seat then enjoy a loud, rattle-prone, creaky, harsh ride on beam-hard seats while struggling to see out the low windows. This is an experience nearly every traveler has had. By comparison, the Transits we'd just spent two days with were every bit of the four decades better they needed to be. It cannot be understated just how much better the Transit is in every single way. The load floor is barely more than knee high. There's a huge side door, and hitting your head on a door opening is nearly impossible. Stand up all the way if you're under six-foot, six-inches - no more half-hunching down the aisle. There are windows actually designed to be looked out of. The ride is buttery smooth, no booming vibration from un-restrained metal panels and no squeaks. Conversations can be held at normal levels rather than yelling over the roar of an ancient V8. The seats are comfortable. The AC is cold. There are cupholders.
Enough anecdote-laying, what's in a Transit? We're talking about a very fullsized unibody van that's enjoyed a 49-year history in Ye Olde Europe. This latest iteration is part of the "One Ford" initiative, so it was designed as a global offering from the get-go, eschewing the body-on-frame construction the E-Series has used since 1975. Instead, the Transit integrates a rigid ladder frame into an overall frame construction made of high-strength cold-rolled and boron steel. The suspension is a simple but well-tuned Macpherson strut array up front with a rear solid axle and leaf springs.

Mustang driver proves wheels are overrated

Mon, 21 Apr 2014

We don't need to tell you that there's something missing in the image above. What we do need to tell you is that this is not a picture of a parked car stranded on the highway. This is, rather, just one frame from video of that three-wheeled Mustang traveling down the highway at highway-appropriate speed.
We don't know where you'd have to be nor how badly you'd have to be there to go shooting down the freeway in a car with three wheels, but if the New Daily News is correct, that place is somewhere in Texas. The video's short, but you'll have plenty of time to shake your head at it by just scrolling down.