After yesterday's 1972 Mercury Junkyard Find, it makes sense— in some circles— to stick with model-year 1972 vehicles this week. With that in mind, here's a very biohazardous second-gen Ford Econoline that I braved without benefit of a space suit. I'm pretty sure I didn't catch hantavirus, scabies, or dioxin poisoning, but it's still too early to know for sure.
This is the big, industrial-strength one-ton version of the early front-engined Econoline.
Built in Long Beach by the now-long-defunct (as far as I know) Sierra Vans.
The 1998 newspapers indicate a van that sat for quite a while.
However, the 2005 calendar on the stove might mean more recent habitation. Perhaps the newspapers were serving as insulation. It's a shame to see a perfectly good propane stove go to waste— a little scrubbing and it will be 19% less disgusting than it is now!
RVs in junkyards manage to combine lots of sharp edges with the smell of human feces. Yucko! Since this is in California, chances are that dozens of black widows (and maybe a rattlesnake or two) await as well. Normally I'd stay far away from this thing, but journalists have to face danger now and then.
In 1980, Ford stuck millions of these decals on the dashes of automatic-transmission-equipped vehicles, in hopes of warding off future lawsuits in the infamous "park-to-reverse" fiasco. If they'd been made to recall all the affected vehicles, it would have involved at least 23 million cars and trucks.
The post Junkyard Find: 1972 Ford Econoline 300 Camper Van appeared first on The Truth About Cars.
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