2010 Transit Connect Cargo XLTransit Connect inventory The 2010 Ford Transit ConnectBy Sajeev Mehta
July 30, 2009
Down on the
showroom floor, the guys talk about the "Needs-Payoff:" trying to turn a
customer's perceived need into a coveted sale. This marketing concept finds its
Ford translation in the highly anticipated solution, the Transit Connect. The
Blue Oval Boyz see gold in them there panel vans-assuming gas prices go north
of the three dollar mark as their number crunchers and street-walking doom
preachers predict. Gas prices be damned; the Transit Connect screams success
for many self-made citizens, provided they don't carry more than 1600 lb or tow
anything to bring home the bacon.
Aside from
the droopy-lip front bumper, Ford's cargo van (in XL trim) succeeds where the
first Dodge Caravan "CV" failed: it's elegantly utilitarian, not
frumpy and cheap. The wicked fast A-pillar climbs above the door frames for a
quirky dash of style, much to the wannabe-SUV Scion xB's disappointment. In
fact, I reckon the Transit does the vanning thing like the VW Microbus. Plus, I
felt so cheeky and European just standing next to it.
But
automotive Mennonites rejoice, because there's no mistaking a Transit Connect
for a CUV Hard but rich-grained plastics surround your fingers,
there's painted sheetmetal elsewhere. Ford threw in some retro masonite
paneling on the rear doors for that unfinished art studio feel. Combined with
the cargo's rubber floor, RV-worthy overhead storage, perky seat fabrics and
surprisingly high quality buttons and vent registers, the Transit Connect
appeals to more than the ordinary work truck buyer.
Not all is
perfect: the center console with floor shifter is a waste of space, especially
since it lacks an armrest for the passenger seat. But (optional) features like
Ford's laptop Work Solutions system makes sitting on the Transit Connect's
modest yet accommodating bucket seats better than a day spent in your average
cubicle. And it's reasonably fun to drive, much like today's taller, fatter
Ford Focus. No surprise then, the Transit Connect handles like a hot hatchback that's
taken an Octomom-like fancy for in-vitro fertilization.
Unlike any
other van, the Transit Connect corners flat in most situations, with stunning
lateral grip and less push than expected from a nose heavy beast: I clipped a
freeway underpass at twice the speed of our Ford Econoline Tester, realizing the Transit Connect had plenty more.
And just like
the Focus, there's a 2.0L Duratec I-4 and a four-speed slushbox under the hood.
The gutsy and thrash-free four cylinder made for effortless merging on a
So keep a
loaded Transit Connect in the city and enjoy the ergonomics: the (optional)
rear doors swing out 255° with the push of a button, and the mid section's
sliding doors open effortlessly, sans motorized assists. All 135 cubic feet of
cargo space is easy to reach, and users shorter than six feet tall can walk
inside without folding in half. If there's enough space for a service tech and
his storage shelving system back there, every other work vehicle is screwed.
Sell your camper shell futures now!
But nobody's
perfect: like every other portal on the Transit Connect, opening the hood
requires the ignition key. Which means you have to turn off the van to get
under the bonnet. And the hood's latch/lock combo resides under the grille's
Ford Oval. Missed that in the owner's manual? Fear not: the instructions are
under the grille's logo, where your less-than-attentive employees cannot find
it. Unless the logo is misaligned like our tester, refusing to latch shut. Hey,
And the
ignition key that opens everything is still in trouble. Lose it back beyond the
radiator after opening the hood and Ford charges $200 for a replacement key,
which you cannot buy anywhere but a FoMoCo dealer since it isn't shared with
another US-bound Ford product. Uh-oh.
While the
Transit Connect is influenced from the USA Ford parts bin, the lessons learned
from the Dodge Sprinter are obvious: component cost, availability and downtime
from poor dealer training/servicing can kill
If so, a
comparable Econoline is only two grand more, and it'll keep food on your plate
if Ford turns this (showroom) hero into a (service department) zero. But let's
hope this gas-sipping global sensation gets the C-level Executive love it truly
deserves, and, unlike the Ford Contour/Mondeo, meets its potential in the
Search Transit Connect Inventory HERE