Petrol Ford Transits - talk to me

Petrol Ford Transits - talk to me

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ChemicalChaos

Original Poster:

10,393 posts

160 months

Saturday 2nd May 2015
quotequote all
This week, a friend of mine has had his 2006 Transit 80 T350 nicked ( http://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&a... ).

Now, in the sadly likely event he doesnt get it back, he wants to get another one the same age or a bit newer - and he has allowed 5k for this.
I was telling another, London-based friend of mine about the situation, and he came up with an interesting idea. According to friend 2, a lot of Transits down in that area are running the 2.3 Petrol engine on LPG to sidestep the LEZ, and a fair few are now turning up on ebay as they get replaced due to age. Given that LPG up here is 50ppl vs £1.20 for diesel, and that the LPG vans will do more than half the mpg of a diesel one, it would seem a no brainer to get one instead.
Friend 1 is also intrigued by this idea, and has asked me to find out more. However, neither of us have ever seen a petrol Transit, let alone been in one or driven one, so are they actually any good? Obviously they will need to be revved a bit more than a diesel with a heavy load on, but are they refined and driveable, or gutless and harsh? Are they worse/equal/better for reliability than the 2.4d? What sort of mileage is acceptable before they go from a good buy to knackered and worth avoiding?

thanks
Matt

ChemicalChaos

Original Poster:

10,393 posts

160 months

Friday 15th May 2015
quotequote all
Thanks for the recommendations every one, friend one lives the idea and is now looking for a van to come up in the right length and height for his needs smile


Hooli said:
Pagey said:
I'm fairly convinced that when on a steep hill or the engine being really pushed they switched back to petrol until the throttle eased off as there was a couple of times the fuel (petrol) level dropped when running on gas.
All LPG kits switch back to petrol at full throttle as far as I know, because petrol contains more energy than LPG.
Not true. A properly specified LPG kit has injectors matched to the horsepower of each cylinder, so should be more than capable of handling full throttle. Neither my LPG Range Rover or my friend's LPG 325i switch to petrol when being caned