1971 Ford F250 Reviews
You'll find all our 1971 Ford F250 reviews right here. 1971 Ford F250 prices range from for the F250 to for the F250 .
Our reviews offer detailed analysis of the 's features, design, practicality, fuel consumption, engine and transmission, safety, ownership and what it's like to drive.
The most recent reviews sit up the top of the page, but if you're looking for an older model year or shopping for a used car, scroll down to find Ford dating back as far as 1970.
Or, if you just want to read the latest news about the Ford F250, you'll find it all here.
Ford Reviews and News

Kicking the Ford Ranger habit: The car to save Ford from itself - but when will we finally see the sub Toyota HiLux and Isuzu D-Max ute? | Opinion
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By Byron Mathioudakis · 24 Nov 2024
Ford needs a less expensive model under the Ranger and Everest, that buyers want, preferably to operate in a segment that is not saturated with rivals, while offering a far-more economical powertrain than a diesel engine in order to meet increasingly stringent NVES regulations. To paraphrase one of the company’s most successful-ever advertising campaigns, the Ford Maverick is the answer.
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Toyota, BYD and Kia's new nightmare! 2026 Ford Ranger Super Duty breaks cover in world-first Australian off-road towing-workhorse/weekender-wonder ute
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By Byron Mathioudakis · 19 Nov 2024
Ford has announced its strongest and most capable Ranger yet in the shape of the new Super Duty line-up. While little has been revealed for now, since sales won’t commence until 2026, Ford has confirmed a breakthrough 4500kg towing capacity, as well as 4500kg Gross Vehicle Mass (GVM) and 8000kg Gross Combined Mass (GCM) ratings.
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'No one car company is going to dominate like it has': Toyota expects SUVs like RAV4 to overtake utes as Australia's best selling vehicle as fierce new competitors like BYD Shark, Kia Tasman, GWM Cannon Alpha and more eat into HiLux and Ford Ranger sales
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By John Law · 18 Nov 2024
With Toyota’s evergreen HiLux being knocked from first place by the Ford Ranger and now the RAV4, Australia’s largest car brand sees big changes coming.
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Are electric vehicles running out of charge? Why new performance heroes are good news for fans of six-cylinder and V8 engines as Ford Mustang and Dodge Charger stick with petrol
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By Stephen Ottley · 18 Nov 2024
Is the Dodge Charger Daytona the canary in the coal mine for electric vehicles? A report from the US this week indicates the brand is rushing to get its twin-turbo six-cylinder petrol engine into showrooms six months ahead of schedule.

New 600kW-plus supercharged Ford Mustang with official Ford Performance parts now available via one of Australia's most renowned tuners for massive power gain
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By Chris Thompson · 15 Nov 2024
The new generation Ford Mustang has been given the Ford Performance treatment by one of Australia’s best-known Ford tuners.

Why Toyota, Ford and Mazda should be worried: Sydney International EV Autoshow proves new Chinese electric car brands like Xpeng, Deepal, Zeekr are ready to rumble with major manufacturers | Opinion
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By John Law · 14 Nov 2024
Getting out among new car buyers can be a rare occurrence in this line of work, with a focus on new products and the promises of executives filling our regular days. So it was refreshing to man the CarsGuide EV advice stand at the 2024 Sydney International EV show for the weekend and get some insight into how electric car buyers think. Although it was a smaller footprint than Sydney Motor Shows of old, fervent visitors started filling the halls from 9am on all three days. In total, more than 30,000 bodies passed through the doors over the weekend. The overwhelming takeaway from talking to buyers was this sect of Aussies was not at all concerned about brand history, with Toyota and Ford’s stands dramatically quieter than the barely-known start-ups from China such as Xpeng, Zeekr and Deepal.It helps that these new marques dressed their stands to impress. Aside from a wild flying machine, XPeng also had a luxurious seven-seat people mover essentially purpose-built to generate public interest with a huge rear entertainment screen and ‘business class’ reclining rear seats with heating, cooling and foot rests. The G6 is the first retail model from XPeng and it was also well-trafficked, along with the larger G9 the brand is considering for local release. Zeekr turned up with the X small SUV along with a few extra bits of eye-candy like the confirmed-for-oz 009 people mover, a 475kW 007 sedan in a lewd yellow paint colour and a 001 FR the Geely-owned marque’s Polestar 2-related first model. The other new entrant was Deepal, which is being imported by well-known company Inchcape that also handles Subaru, Foton, Peugeot and previously Citroen. Along with the classic Tesla Model Y rival, the S07 electric family SUV, Deepal had some cool stuff. Namely, a Cybertruck-like electric and range-extender compatible E05 electric sedan-pick-up amalgamation that was catching attention. Kia’s front-and-centre placement helped drive plenty of traffic to the brand’s new EV5 while also making Hyundai’s lack of presence quite obvious. With the Tasman due next year and the EV5’s sharp price, it’s a brand that’s sure to go from strength to strength. Tesla’s presence was held up by the Australian owner’s club while BYD was represented by a dealer, with an unfortunate lack of Shark utes on the stand. It was Ford and Toyota that were visibly the lowest traffic OEMs over the weekend, and Australia’s third most-popular brand Mazda didn’t even turn up with its plug-in hybrids. With a pair of bZ4Xs on display and charge-box-on-wheels, Toyota’s wasn’t exactly a dull stand yet it proves that people are more interested in the whizz-bang new models — that’s the point of a motor show, after all. As for Ford, despite having prime real estate among the newcomers, it seemed that not so many punters were interested in the Mach-E and plug-in hybrid Ford Ranger Stormtrak, even with the ute’s vehicle-to-load system that can power a coffee machine, TV, work tools and more.Some other mainstream carmakers present were Audi, BMW, Cupra and Volvo though these stands were notably smaller than the others. As for other brands from China, Chery and GWM proved relatively popular but the Smart stand was quiet. MG’s choice to only bring a Cyberster rather than the affordable MG4 seemed a bit short-sighted — next year, maybe.The most common line of questioning was if we would recommend the XPeng G6 and what the best alternatives to a Tesla Model Y are — we fielded almost no questions about the bZ4X or plug-in hybrid Ford Ranger Stormtrak. Plenty of test drives were taken over the three days and at one point on Sunday, you would have had to queue for four hours to sample XPeng’s new G6. But what does all this tell us about the new car landscape?MG has already proven sharp pricing can drive mega traffic into electric vehicles and that, when EVs reach parity with combustion-engined and hybrid options, they are much more attractive. In this case, customers aren’t cross-shopping, say, a Tesla Model Y with just other EVs, but similarly-priced combustion and hybrid models, too. Electric cars aren’t competing with themselves, but in a battle to bring the other 90.6 per cent of the new car market out of combustion and hybrid-engined choices. Most worrying for big carmakers, though, will be the lack of brand devotion. Despite what the bZ4X advertising campaign suggests, there were very few talking about Toyota’s proven low-cost servicing or reliability. Instead, the long seven- and even ten-year warranties of newcomers seemed enough to allay most fears. Don’t expect Toyota, Ford or Mazda sales to drop off a cliff anytime soon, but the interest and willingness of local buyers to branch out and sample an unknown product will definitely cause a headache.
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'The next battleground': Why Ford isn't worried about the BYD Shark 6 or GWM Cannon Alpha PHEV challenging Ford Ranger plug-in hybrid ute
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By Samuel Irvine · 10 Nov 2024
Despite stiff competition from cut-price Chinese rivals, Ford Australia has high hopes for the Ranger plug-in hybrid (PHEV), insisting it will deliver on the many attributes that have put the Ranger on track to be Australia’s best-selling vehicle for two years running.

So, you're a US pick-up hater. Have you driven a 2025 Ram 1500, Chevrolet Silverado, Ford F-150 or Toyota Tundra? | Opinion
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By James Cleary · 09 Nov 2024
I get it. The Chevy Silverado, Ford F-150, Ram 1500 and soon to arrive Toyota Tundra are eff off big trucks. In many situations, arguably too big for Aussie conditions.

Australia's favourite cars revealed: Battle heats up for the best selling vehicle of 2024 with Toyota RAV4 and Ford Ranger going toe-to-toe
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By Dom Tripolone · 06 Nov 2024
Toyota is making a run to have its hybrid hero crowned Australia’s favourite vehicle.
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Will the 2025 Kia Tasman really 'redefine' the ute sector? How Kia's new Tasman lines up in an on-paper comparison against Ford Ranger, Toyota HiLux and Isuzu D-Max
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By Samuel Irvine · 04 Nov 2024
Kia has released its first ute with the ambitious target of capturing 10 per cent of Australia's highly competitive pick-up market in its first year of sales.