Ford Transit Connect

Author
Discussion

RS Grant

Original Poster:

1,427 posts

233 months

Tuesday 2nd December 2014
quotequote all
Heaveho said:
I'm on my 3rd Connect now, started with an 08 plate 75, went to a 57 plate 90 LWB, and just changed to a 31k mile, 59 plate 110 limited LWB, I love 'em. The new one felt rocket when it was empty, but it's gone off the boil a bit now all my work gear's gone in, so, like you, remap (and terra clean) on the way. If you thrash them constantly, you don't get any aggro with the EGR, but the driveshafts are made of spaghetti, so best to take it easy pulling out of wet junctions.

They seem generally very reliable, combination of decent distance high speed runs to burn all the crap out, proper fuel, rather than supermarket diesel, and 5k oil and filter changes seems to keep them pretty sweet. Worth checking the oil in the box, they've been known to allow rainwater in through the vent in the top of the box, obviously doesn't do the thing any favours. Alternator light might come on, the wiring for it chafes through where it passes the radiator cowling if it's a bit tight there, never had this happen on any of mine, but it's known to be quite common.
Valuable info, I did an oil change out of habit when I bought the van and it's covered about 2k since then. It's actually going to be due a service in the new year, so will likely get them to change the gearbox oil at the same time as a precaution now you've said that. Will refrain from getting excited and unleashing the full 75 ponies when pulling away to preserve the shafts too, haha. laugh


Cheers,
Grant

RS Grant

Original Poster:

1,427 posts

233 months

Tuesday 2nd December 2014
quotequote all
Wheeled the van into my friends unit:



Cue the music...laugh

The first thing to go was the standard headunit, big, bulky, low powered.. replacement is a Pioneer DEH-4600BT ( Link Here, I'd fitted one of these headunits into my old Focus RS and was really impressed by the amount of features, ease of use and quality of it for the money; so there was no doubt about buying another one for the Connect.

Needed the usual aerial adaptor, ISO conversion cable and facia adaptor. There were a few options for the facia adaptor, but eventually went with this one however bought it from a local audio store for a chunk less than Halfrauds were wanting for the same bit of kit.

Here is the headunit all fitted up:



..and given that it's Bluetooth enabled with calls coming through the front speakers, it obviously needs a microphone fitted somewhere to let you talk back!! I decided to put it in the same place that I had fitted one in the Focus and it works fine, telephone calls are nice and clear both ways.



With just the headunit fitted, the standard speakers (front only) sounded 10? 20? times better than they did with the standard headunit... so much so that I wondered if I should really bother fitting upgraded speakers!! irkedlaugh

But since I'd already bought them and the standard front speakers were better but still not capable of being left alone, it seemed stupid to take them back. I went for some Fli 6x9 speakers ( Clicky Link) after reading a few reviews and comparing them to much more expensive speakers, I didn't see the point paying almost double for what I was wanting them to do.

Now if you could try not to notice the amount of dirt/dog hair that I discovered in the next few photos that'd be great, it's gone now, promise!! redface ...I unscrewed the centre console around the gearstick/handbrake so I could run the cables for the speakers down the dashboard and tuck them up underneath the centre console for as tidy an installation as possible.




Next instalment to follow shortly...

RS Grant

Original Poster:

1,427 posts

233 months

Tuesday 2nd December 2014
quotequote all
...and here it is:

The wires supplied with the speakers weren't going to be long enough to reach the rear doors, which is where the 6x9's were finally mounted. So using bullet connectors, extra wires were added to give the length required. MDF was cut to the shape of the door sections and then covered in some black vinyl that my mate had lying around in his unit, it's a bit bubbly in places and doesn't quite cover it all... but it looks better than bare wood. cool



Keeps them nicely out the way and also if/when the van is used for days at park/beach/camping trip, then it gives the opportunity to fling open the rear doors and direct the music outside too. Happy days. thumbup

Here are a few pictures showing how I routed the wiring from the front to back. The passenger side is all hidden at the front end, it runs under the side door step, into the small plastic panel at the door opening and into the sides same as the drivers side. Wiring from van into the rear doors used existing grommets etc... time will tell if this is working out, but so far it seems to be fine. smile




How it reached the rear doors:




The next/final part of this upgrade was the addition of a subwoofer, something I got talked into by a friend who said that I 'might as well' if I was pulling the headunit out... so while I was in Halfords, I saw a special offer on one of their Fli active subwoofers ( Clicky Link) which would negate the need to mount an extra amplifier somewhere as the sub and amp all came in one box. I read a few reviews (granted from people under my age range laugh ) and it seemed a good piece of kit and came with all the wiring needed, so I bought that too.



Not sure if I'm going to bother upgrading the front door speakers, they handle what they're asked to handle pretty well and the 6x9's take care of the rest with a nice wee kick from the subwoofer low down... overall, I think it cost me around £220-£230 and the difference is massive. If you're thinking about upgrading but not sure if it'll be worth it, then do it, you'll not regret it at all.


Cheers,
Grant

Edited by RS Grant on Tuesday 2nd December 14:56

Shadow R1

3,800 posts

176 months

Tuesday 2nd December 2014
quotequote all
Great job. smile

RS Grant

Original Poster:

1,427 posts

233 months

Friday 5th February 2016
quotequote all
Realised that I haven't updated this in a wee while.

As far as the look of the van goes, it's still very much the same as before, nothing has changed on the outside... all the work recently has been done under the skin.

At the tail end of last year, the alternator light started to flicker on and off and after finding no fault with any wiring.. I continued using the van until the light stayed on and eventually led me here:




...so it was recovered to the garage I use for all my cars where it had the following work:

- New Alternator
- Full Service inc Timing Belt
- New Clutch and Flywheel

...which was a painful bill to swallow, but at least the van is all serviced and running well. It was noted that one of the intercooler hoses had a small hole in it and when I discovered that Ford wanted 48quid+VAT for one, I decided to look for an alternative.

Eventually found some silicone replacements for £24 delivered, downside is that they are bright blue, but they are very well made and should last longer than the OE replacements. While I was fitting them, I gave the engine bay a wee clean up and degrease as well.






thumbup


Cheers,
Grant

qwertina

113 posts

198 months

Friday 5th February 2016
quotequote all
Nice work.

I've had a Connect LWB as a works van for 7years/100k and I rather like it. Feels fairly well put together and drives well, often miss it when I get a loaner van for a few days.

I've had the intercooler pipes replaced twice though. Dunno what Ford make them out of but they seem to break down quite fast!

Heaveho

5,288 posts

174 months

Friday 5th February 2016
quotequote all
Yeah, the i/c hose mod is borne out of necessity, as you've found for yourself, mine's sporting the same. Also got the same rear speaker location setup ( Alpine, in my case ), and some of the same manufacturers offerings in the doors. I decided I'd had enough of no digital radio, and managed to source a Focus RS 6 disc Sony and aerial for sensible money, which is a bonus.

I found that running mine on Shell Nitro diesel livens it up no end, and gets an extra 40-50 miles per tank, and thrashing the bks off it as often and mercilessly as possible keeps the egr clean. 5k miles oil and filter changes doesn't do any harm either, anything with a turbo driven the way mine is needs all the help it can get! They're great if you look after them, in the time I've had mine I've owned a Boxster S, and still have an Evo and a Lexus, but I'm still always happy to take the van.

Edited by Heaveho on Friday 5th February 23:47

Baryonyx

17,996 posts

159 months

Friday 5th February 2016
quotequote all
I mentioned in this thread that I used to drive Connects at work. They've all been replaced by Vivaros, which are competent and bigger, but aside from being able to carry a tiny bit more they are inferior in every sense.

RS Grant

Original Poster:

1,427 posts

233 months

Sunday 7th February 2016
quotequote all
qwertina said:
Nice work.

I've had a Connect LWB as a works van for 7years/100k and I rather like it. Feels fairly well put together and drives well, often miss it when I get a loaner van for a few days.

I've had the intercooler pipes replaced twice though. Dunno what Ford make them out of but they seem to break down quite fast!
I know I've just had to spend cash on repairing mine, but it's just one of those things and the van is 8 years old, so to be expected.

The intercooler hoses are extremely thin and poorly made, I expected Ford to charge about a tenner a throw, but at over 50quid each it's absolutely scandalous... the ones I have are constructed more in keeping with Samco/Roose hoses which I have had on performance cars before, so I think they'll handle all that the Connect will throw at them!! laugh


Heaveho said:
Yeah, the i/c hose mod is borne out of necessity, as you've found for yourself, mine's sporting the same. Also got the same rear speaker location setup ( Alpine, in my case ), and some of the same manufacturers offerings in the doors. I decided I'd had enough of no digital radio, and managed to source a Focus RS 6 disc Sony and aerial for sensible money, which is a bonus.
That's a good shout on the FRS Sony stereo, do they come with Bluetooth?? I like the idea of digital radio too actually, so if the Focus unit includes bluetooth then that could be a decent option.


Heaveho said:
I found that running mine on Shell Nitro diesel livens it up no end, and gets an extra 40-50 miles per tank, and thrashing the bks off it as often and mercilessly as possible keeps the egr clean. 5k miles oil and filter changes doesn't do any harm either, anything with a turbo driven the way mine is needs all the help it can get! They're great if you look after them, in the time I've had mine I've owned a Boxster S, and still have an Evo and a Lexus, but I'm still always happy to take the van.
Haha I know what you mean, I've done ~500 miles in my Impreza over the past year... and have covered quite a few times more than that in the van!! It's just so damn useful and means that I can keep dog hair, rubbish, mud, general crap away from my other stuff. smile


Baryonyx said:
I mentioned in this thread that I used to drive Connects at work. They've all been replaced by Vivaros, which are competent and bigger, but aside from being able to carry a tiny bit more they are inferior in every sense.
My friend has got a Vivaro, granted it's not brand new, but he's had to replace diesel pump/steering rack/gearbox in it and it isn't a high mileage abused example either.. makes me appreciate my Connect that much more as it chugs along needing very little attention and remaining to be a good steer as well.


Cheers,
Grant

mk2 24v

647 posts

164 months

Monday 8th February 2016
quotequote all
Robin Hood said:
LaurasOtherHalf said:
Aren't these limited to 50 mph on B roads etc?
50mph on single carriageways and 60mph dual carriageways due to being over 2 tonnes GVW.
Nope, same as normal cars due to them being classed as a car derived van wink

And to the OP, any pics of the axle flip its had at the back?

mph1977

12,467 posts

168 months

Monday 8th February 2016
quotequote all
mk2 24v said:
Nope, same as normal cars due to them being classed as a car derived van wink

And to the OP, any pics of the axle flip its had at the back?
gotthat in writing from DVSA and /or Ford ?

mk2 24v

647 posts

164 months

Monday 8th February 2016
quotequote all
mph1977 said:
gotthat in writing from DVSA and /or Ford ?
Logbook and interpreting the highway code.
Unless its changed since I learnt all those years ago laugh

Although some of the vans are abusing the car derived van part a bit, and most (make that all) the vans driven about near Ashford don't know/care about the difference in limits for lcv stuff anyway rolleyes

Six Fiend

6,067 posts

215 months

Monday 8th February 2016
quotequote all
It's been done to death in SP&L, they are restricted to the lower speed limits due to the GVW as mentioned above.

Mine was ace, banged 100K on it in about 14 months. Loved the handling smile Was a great versatile van.

mph1977

12,467 posts

168 months

Monday 8th February 2016
quotequote all
Six Fiend said:
It's been done to death in SP&L, they are restricted to the lower speed limits due to the GVW as mentioned above.

.
exactly hence me asking was it in writing from Ford and/or the DVSA


anonymous-user

54 months

Monday 8th February 2016
quotequote all
What are these like to drive compared to Berlingo's?

RS Grant

Original Poster:

1,427 posts

233 months

Tuesday 9th February 2016
quotequote all
Six Fiend said:
Mine was ace, banged 100K on it in about 14 months. Loved the handling smile Was a great versatile van.
That's a lot of miles in a short space of time... I think that I've covered about 3500 miles in the time I've had it. laugh


Cheers,
Grant

RS Grant

Original Poster:

1,427 posts

233 months

Tuesday 9th February 2016
quotequote all
yonex said:
What are these like to drive compared to Berlingo's?
I can't really comment, only drove a hire Berlingo for a couple of days and never got a proper feel for it.


The positives I have with a Connect are:

- Load space, it's tall/wide for a small van.
- The looks, it's nicely proportioned.
- The handling, it rides well (even with the lowered suspension and big wheels) and handles very well.
- The running costs, it's not bad on fuel and replacement parts can be found without breaking the bank.
- Desireability, Connects seem to be a desireable wee van so hold money/sell fairly well.


The negatives I have with a Connect are:

- The performance, being the 75ps model... it really is slow progress, a remap (giving c95-100ps) can apparently liven it up no end.
- The running costs, if you use the van on dual carriageway/motorway at typical speeds, then 5th gear is quite short meaning that the engine is revving fairly high, to the detriment of economy.
- Corrosion, mine isn't showing any signs of this yet, but I'm led to believe that older/high mileage Connects can require some attention to the bodywork/underside if they've not been properly protected.


Cheers,
Grant

RS Grant

Original Poster:

1,427 posts

233 months

Tuesday 9th February 2016
quotequote all
mk2 24v said:
And to the OP, any pics of the axle flip its had at the back?
I don't have any pictures of this, but if I get it on a ramp or find myself under it at some point then I'll update the thread with photos of that. It was a kit which was bought be the previous owner of the van, however the guy I use for mechanical work on my cars/van made his own kit for his Connect which turned out just as well.



...it's also made me think seriously about getting mine colour coded sooner rather than later. thumbup


Cheers,
Grant

Heaveho

5,288 posts

174 months

Tuesday 9th February 2016
quotequote all
That blue one looks like the same colour as mine, ocean blue met, don't see it often.

The FRS head unit is bluetooth, yes. I think you'll have to get a fascia adaptor to fit it to the earlier van, but no big deal. It gets very good DAB reception, and the bluetooth seems excellent. Got mine on ebay for £125 for the head unit and £25 for the aerial.

Edited by Heaveho on Tuesday 9th February 21:34

bungz

1,960 posts

120 months

Wednesday 10th February 2016
quotequote all
I used to do about 50K a year in these, wonderful little van!

As mentioned they scream out for a 6th gear for distance work but other than that they are a hoot.

Engines seem fairly hardy too but weren't particularly economical due to the short ratio 5th gear from memory. And that fact everyone in our fleet drove them flat out, everywhere.

I'd have another if they didn't hold money stupidly well.