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Consumer Reviews for the Ford Transit Connect
Read recent reviews for the Ford Transit Connect
Exactly right for dealing with city traffic.
Tom Bright, 04/30/2016
2012 Ford Transit Connect Cargo Van XLT 4dr Minivan w/Side & Rear Glass (2.0L 4cyl 4A)
Okay, so the radio's hands-free robot lady is laughably, pathetically clueless. Hope Ford got a freebie, since a Microsoft badge is glued to the dash like a commercial.
Cabin noise on California's crumbling roads has reached 109 dB on my meter, about as loud as standing behind a jet taking off. I buy earplugs by the case, but then I have for 40 years anyway.
Lots of positives, thanks … to the designers. The standard door lock-unlock sequence protects me in crummy neighborhoods (unlocks the cargo doors while leaving the driver door locked, and vice versa, and it's programmable). If I leave the doors open in the garage for extended loading time, the interior lights go out after a few minutes. Very thoughtful. Power points are always on but the entertainment USB only powers up with the ignition, so that conveniently runs the dash cam.
Astounding 1,600-lb payload includes me and gas — my big pickup is only rated for 1,100 lbs, and weighs 3,050 lbs wet, the same as this little Ford, to the pound. Don’t know how they did it. Does not jitter on tippy-toes when empty, does not wallow when loaded to the limit. Many SUVs have a load limit of only 900 pounds -- so you would be overloaded if you fill the tank and only take three friends with you.
Spec Continentals kept picking up nails: eight in 15,000 miles. Ran two sets of Federal, an exact Taiwan copy of the Continental. Great tires, half the price. Michelin finally makes a Defender in this spec, so installed a set 50,000 miles ago. More expensive, somewhat quieter.
Don’t replace the wheels with cheapie boy-racer alloys, because aftermarket wheels may not be rated for this 1,600-pound payload.
22-24 mpg combined, 25 mpg on occasion. Getting 22 at 159,000.
I did okay in endurance racing back in the 70s, so I really appreciate the seats and view out front. This is the final English Ford design, I think, and shows off its performance heritage.
The Limeys built the high-level 3rd brake light into one of the cargo doors, so it's only six inches from precise vehicle center. Naturally, DOT made them blank it over and pierce the roof for a separate brake light unit. Thanks, guys. Do you even own cars in Washington?
Progressive-rate steering centers well and allows flicking 90º to full lock. Low center of gravity, low cargo floor. Antilock brakes stop on a dime, straight and true. Traction control light comes on when I overdo it on off camber onramps, so I know it’s watching and helping. All controls within easy reach. A clear jump-in/jump-out path through the door to the driver’s seat make it the perfect setup for long shifts of multiple stops.
Failures: Front brake caliper seized in a few months (warranty). On my 4th battery. A tiny plastic tab in the interior light assembly broke ($78). That high-level LED 3rd brake light assembly went dead ($120). Coolant reservoir cracked (warranty). One of the remotes failed (warranty). Sun visor is unraveling along one edge. Wheel covers break a lot (replaced two at $53 each, then gave up and got four Chinese phonies on eBay for $120. They dig into the wheels, but they stay on. Have removed them permanently.)
Wheel paint and primer have vanished, although always garaged out of the 120º Sacramento sun. Local car wash chain snapped off 4 rear wiper arms, so I’ve yanked rear wiper assemblies and rely on Rain-X. Vertical wiper arms park vertically and most robot car washes use horizontal brushes with hit-and-miss company attempts to tape them down or tube them with big baggies fails much of the time. Styling department designed a cheesy plastic cover over the rear wiper hinge that looks beefy, but under the cover it's the width of a pencil, and breaks a lot. New Ford shocks, and on my 5th windshield -- welcome to California's Gravel Emporium.
In close 70-mph evening freeway traffic, could not avoid a paving stone sliding off a truck that Nationwide Insurance insisted was a Fixed Object. NASCAR sponsor or not, could be time to consider switching insurance. 2 kinked steel wheels, 2 Michelins, no apparent suspension damage.
Following some windy rainstorms, a pine branch swung over an Armco and I hit it at 70. New power driver side mirror: $450 installed, not bad at all.
Engine gutless? Not really. Just set Cruise before the highway rises and let it rev it right out to 6,000. Transmission and engine smooth and reliable: My copier tech’s Focus with same motor needed a water pump at 235,000. He replaced his Focus with a Transit Connect a year after I did. If tech gurus like Connects, I take their advice.
Trade-in is astoundingly low -- at 108,713 miles, my spotless little runabout, maintained by the book, pothole-avoided van is worth FOUR thousand bucks. Only 14% of the purchase price remains after less than five years. Mercedes claims a better resale value, but their new $40,000 Metris is Spanish like the current Connect, so who knows how far it'll fall from its current $21,000 trade-in with high miles? To be fair, many tradesman vans get driven by guys who don't own them, so that paper-towel resale value is probably justified.
Would buy another, but the newer Spain-built version does not offer a high roof. The new motor is stronger, though -- drove one as a rental. Might as well order the most doodads, even leather if you can find it. Dealer lead time for custom builds has been as high as 6 months, so you may have to take whatever is on the lot, like I did.
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