In recent months, we’ve seen more and more Ford vehicles from the 2000s surface for sale at collector car auctions, which is a somewhat surprising development. However, we mustn’t forget that these vehicles are roughly 20 years old at this point, and for those that haven’t accumulated a ton of miles over the time span, there will undoubtedly be some interest from collectors, if not just folks wanting a nice older vehicle. Now, they have another interesting one to bid on – this 2003 Ford Expedition Eddie Bauer SUV that just surfaced for sale.
This 2003 Ford Expedition is up for auction at Bring a Trailer with a reasonable 55k miles on the clock, after spending its entire life with two owners in the state of Oklahoma. It’s finished in Medium Wedgewood Blue Metallic with Arizona Beige lower-body cladding and fender trim, accompanied by features such as roof-rack crossbars, heated and power-adjustable side mirrors, a keyless-entry keypad, running boards, and a hitch receiver. The CarFax for this Expedition notes that it incurred some damage in 2008, but there’s no other information present, so it’s unclear what happened. Regardless, it looks to be in great shape today, and is equipped with the original 17-inch wheels, currently wrapped with 265/70 Continental Contitrac SUV tires.
The same goes for the interior, which is full of luxurious amenities including Medium Parchment two-tone leather covered heated and cooled front captain’s chairs and a split-folding second-row bench, along with automatic climate control, the Audiophile CD-changer stereo, an auto-dimming rearview mirror, power-adjustable pedals, and a power-adjustable driver’s seat with position memory, cruise control, power rear-quarter windows, an overhead console, and rear auxiliary air conditioning and heat. Power comes from the naturally-aspirated Ford 5.4L V8, which was originally rated to produce 260 horsepower and 350 pound-feet of torque.
We haven’t seen too many Ford Expedition SUVs from this generation surface for sale at a collector car auction – at least, not yet – but the same can’t be said of its more luxurious counterpart, the Lincoln Navigator. In fact, we just came across a 2004 Navigator with a mere 33k miles on the clock back in January.
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