Home » Ford Once Built A Minivan That Was Part SUV With All-Wheel Drive And A 5,000-Pound Tow Rating

Ford Once Built A Minivan That Was Part SUV With All-Wheel Drive And A 5,000-Pound Tow Rating

Ford Aerostar Awd

Make no mistake: in terms of overall sales, Chrysler won the minivan war. It wasn’t even close, and critics are quick to point out that Ford could have been in Chrysler’s all-conquering position if only Ford’s decision makers had realized the “garageable van” concept it tinkered with in the 1970s could become a category-defining hit. But they did not.

Though it lost the war, Ford did win one important battle, and fans of those who like their minivans more “van” than “mini” are forever grateful. That’s especially true for those who wanted a little chunk of SUV in their people carrier. It’s time to revisit the underappreciated workhorse that was the E-AWD Aerostar.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Just When You Thought You Couldn’t Get Less Cool Than A Station Wagon

The story has been told for years that, despite not being first to market, Ford really “invented” the minivan. That’s a broad statement, but there’s certainly evidence that Ford in the 1970s was indeed playing with at least two different variations on what a van-style future people carrier might look like.

One of these concepts was the Carousel “garagable van,” essentially the same front engine and rear drive layout as an Econoline, but reduced in size to be more manageable for the average station wagon buyer.

Hd Concepts Oublis Ford Carousel 1972 1 5
source: Ford

Inside, a more car-like feel was accomplished with three-row seating like that of the Country Squire wagon, and the 460 V8 driving the Carousel’s rear wheels was also very LTD-like. Historians might consider the Carousel to be a “minivan,” but it wasn’t particularly “mini” at all. It’s reported that Henry Ford II saw no benefit to the thing, since in his mind it would do nothing but steal sales away from the station wagons already on dealers’ lots.

Carousel
source: Ford

The other minivan concept at Ford was reportedly one concocted by frequent Lee Iacocca collaborator Hal Sperlich. This super-compact, front-wheel-drive box called the “Mini-Max” was more about getting maximum cargo capacity in a small space rather than carrying seven people.

76pintomm
source: Ford

Unlike the Carousel, this one might have had the opposite problem: it was too small. If there’s one thing that Henry II really couldn’t stand, it was tiny cars. You can tell where this one was going, but nobody saw where it would end up.

In 1978, Henry II fired Lee Iacocca. Lee’s old partner Hal Sperlich lured him to lead the dying Chrysler Corporation, which Hal had joined after getting the boot the year before. Little did anyone know, this set the stage for the Van Wars of the Eighties.

The Lido Shuffle

Needless to say, the whole “compact front wheel drive” direction of car platforms that so irked Henry II was the main focus of Iacocca and Sperlich at the New Chrysler Corporation, with the K-platform Dodge Aries and Plymouth Reliant leading the way. The platform would spawn everything from luxury sedans to sport coupes, and of course, that compact “mini van” was one thing to which the ex-Ford men would apply all of the research that had been mothballed at Ford.

Iacocca Caravan 2 26
source: Chrysler

If nothing else, the now-Chrysler guys seemed to agree with Henry II about one thing: the Mini-Max concept in its initial form was too small to really be viable. The K-Car-based van they came up with was still compact but now able to hold up to eight people in a pinch, with three-wide benches front and rear (the middle row being shorter to gain access to the third row). Initially powered by Chrysler’s 2.2-liter four, it offered great fuel economy and was able to get out of its own way, just barely, but that was par for the course back in the malaise.

Dodgecaravanhatch
source: Chrysler

Chrysler really had nothing to lose at this point; the new Dodge Caravan and Plymouth Voyager were rather odd-looking to 1984 buyers and potentially could have been complete flops. Instead, they turned out to be Lido and Hal’s next 1964 ½ Mustang; exactly the right kind of never-seen-before product the market was looking for. Here was a car-like garageable van for people who would never have considered a van.

Dodge Caravan 2264 5
source: Chrysler

This is where many historians will wax eloquently about Ford’s oversight and hubris, blinding them to what the market wanted. The truth is not quite that simple.

Aerosmith Would Have Been A Cooler Name

While the Chrysler executives might have upscaled one of the concepts they championed before their exile from Ford, Ford itself appeared to be doing the opposite with the old Carousel: they shrunk it down. As with that concept, Ford’s new small van would be front-engine and rear-wheel drive with a body-on-frame layout similar to a traditional van. However, this was not just a scaled-down Econoline. While the Caravan and Voyager shared much of their underpinnings with the K-car, the new Ford van had a unique chassis that even included coil springs in the rear instead of the leaf springs of a full-sized van. In fact, one of the few changes the Chrysler minivans had from the K-platform sedans and wagons was “cart springs” on their beam axle in back.

Also, Chrysler chose to stick with very simple “one-and-a-half box” styling for the Caravan, but Ford presented a concept with a dramatic wedge-shaped nose dubbed the Aerostar.

Brochure Scaled
source: Ford

This radical style was not unlike Renault’s Espace van introduced in 1984. It’s one thing for the French to release such a cutting-edge design and quite another for often conservative Dearborn to throw something that looks like a monorail at the public.

Hd Concepts Oublis Ford Carousel 1972 1 5
source: Renault

Surprisingly, that’s exactly what Ford did with the launch of the production Aerostar for the 1986 model year, barely changing much from the show vehicle.

Aerostar Towing 2 2 21
source: Ford

With futuristic looks and a seemingly old-school rear-drive design chassis, you might wonder how many people would really choose such a vehicle over the Chrysler vans. As it turned out, there were plenty of buyers for Ford’s new rather low drag (.37 Cd) doorstop wedge. Ford soon offered a long version of the Aerostar as well, which possibly even scored a lower coefficient.

Aerostar Red 2 21
source: Ford

If you wanted to tow anything of significance with your minivan, you really had to choose Ford. Thanks to a V6 option and a “hybrid unibody” that utilized a partial box frame, the Aerostar’s 5000-pound towing capacity was about two and a half times more than the maximum allowed for the Chrysler K-based vans. Honestly, if you even wanted enough power to regularly haul any kind of weight in the van itself, the Csravan’s 2.2 four wasn’t a great choice. The standard 2.3-liter four-cylinder option for the Aerostar only lasted for the first two years, and Ford added a larger V6 just as Chrysler finally offered the Mitsubishi V6 for its minivans, which still couldn’t pull much.

Aerostar Towing 2 21
source: Ford

While GM released their own also-traditional-layout minivans around the same time, the Chevy Astro and GMC Safari were styled and designed to be essentially scaled-down full-sized Chevy Vans; the Aerostar’s appeal was offering these old-school functional traits but in a more forward-looking product to appeal to new buyers.

Aerostar Cutaway 2 2 21
source: Ford

Still, the slick exterior and heavy-duty underpinnings were just the start; step inside and take a look at where the Aerostar really shined.

You Had Me At Donut Hole Headrests

Ford Aerostar interiors always seemed so much fancier than the Chrysler and GM equivalent,s with fold-down armrests for everyone and sharp upholstery options.

Ferd Scaled
source: Ford

Ford even offered an upscale Eddie Bauer-branded version with even more lavish leather-covered seats. The seats could be configured in a variety of formats, including a bed or removed altogether to give you a mini-Econoline (thought there was a cargo version of the Aerostar as well).

Aerostar Interior 3 2 21
source: Ford

Hey, look! It’s you as a nineties kid luxuriating in the back of your mom’s Aerostar, enjoying not only the built-in private audio jacks but the fact that you could actually open your side window, something that a concurrent Caravan or Voyager wouldn’t let you do (they only flipped out for ventilation and you’d die back there on a hot day).

Aerostar Kid 2 21
source: Ford

The dashboard is very Taurus-like and seems more fitting for a car than anything van-related.

Aerostar Dash 2 2 21
source: Ford

You could go even snazzier and pop for digital gauges and what looks like a graphic equalizer at the bottom of the dash. Damn, is this a Lincoln minivan?

Aerostar Dash 2 21
source: Ford

Of course, with rear-wheel drive, the Mopar naysayers were quick with a comeback: “I’d hate to see that thing trying to get through a blizzard.” The poor buggers were kind of correct, but Ford had a trick ready there as well.

You Want Traction? We’ll Give You Traction

Aerostar Logo 2 21
source: Ford

For 1990, the critics were answered with an all-wheel-drive Aerostar. Dubbed ‘E-AWD,” the Dana transfer case featured an electronically controlled electromagnetic clutch to regulate power to the front wheels, as the brochure below illustrates.

Aerostar 4wd 2 21 1
source: Ford

You can see that Ford was quick to point out that the system was absolutely not designed to be used for off-roading purposes, but it was likely far more capable than any owner would ever need anyway. A bored-out, 160-horsepower 4.0-liter Cologne V6 was required with the E-AWD system, which was only offered on XLT and Eddie Bauer trim models.

Aerostar Cutaway 2 21
source: Ford

In 1992, the Aerostar was finally updated with composite headlights as on the original show vehicle, but few other major changes were implemented.

Aerostar Blue 2 21
source: Ford

The truth is that the Aerostar was supposed to have been discontinued in 1994 with the introduction of the front-drive Windstar, but this plan met with the same kind of resistance that Ford met when planning to replace the Mustang with the Probe a few years before.

Dealers in particular liked the towing-capable little van on their lots, so Ford relented and kept the Aerostar around for three more years until impending regulation requiring a standard passenger side airbag forced its cancellation in 1997.

Not Ashamed To Be A Van

Ironically, the Taurus-based 1995 Windstar was aimed to directly battle with the Chrysler competitors; it was a battle they would lose badly. The Windstar performed reasonably well, but it received generally poor reliability scores from publications like Consumer Reports and was subject to numerous recalls, most alarmingly from the U-shaped rear axle filling with salt slush and rusting in half. If nothing else, that might have been proof that Ford was right about not going head-to-head with the Caravan and Voyager in the first place.

Access 1997 Ford Windstar Neg Cn325024 012
source: Ford

Also, Henry II had a point about not cannibalizing your own internal sales, and that’s where the unique personality of the Aerostar really made everyone in Dearborn happy. Don’t forget that Chrysler had no truly viable mid/full sized station wagon during the eighties, while Ford and Mercury introduced the slick Taurus and Sable long-roofs in 1986. These aero wagons sold well from the start, and if you needed something even larger, Ford and Mercury still offered big, when-will-you-ever-die Panther wagons that could muster over 20mpg on the highway (I never did with mine, but it was old by the time I owned it, and my lead foot didn’t help).

Aerostars like this were often used up and thrown out, but you’ll occasionally see good-condition examples like this one that popped up on Bring A Trailer a little while back. 

Aerostar For Sale 2 28.jpg 3
source: Bring A Trailer

It’s in unreal condition for a 1995 van; strange to see such a workhorse with only 56,000 miles on the clock, too. Not to mention glorious green. What a dream vehicle for your mom in the nineties!

Aerostar For Sale 2 28.jpg 2
source: Bring A Trailer

Most minivan interiors didn’t look this clean three blocks from the dealership.

Aerostar For Sale 2 28
source: Bring A Trailer

The selling price? Only $11,677; an absolute steal when you can’t even get a several-year-old minivan that couldn’t do half what the Aerostar can do for that money.

In many ways, especially with that upscale interior and “outdoorsy” trim the E-AWD Aerostar was more of an SUV or capable crossover than a minivan, a “tough” appeal that the more car-based front-drive products couldn’t match. Screw your hopped-up Raptor; look at this tough little sumbeech go!

The Aerostar might have never matched the Chrysler products for sales volume, but Ford moved well over 2 million of their anti-Caravan over its 11-year lifespan. Maybe history needs to cut this poor van a break.

Also, can I get big tires and a lift kit for one of these things? Please?

Top graphic image: Ford

 

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Scoutdude
Scoutdude
9 hours ago

The Aerostar did not have a full frame it was a Unibody. Also in a number of years the Aerostar was the #1 selling minivan name plate, yes Caravan + Voyager sold more. In some other years Ford sold more minivans than any other MFG when combining the Mercury Villager with the Ford ‘Stars. Yes Ford did abandon the minivan market before some others, but they certainly didn’t fail when the minivan segment was the important segment.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
9 hours ago
Reply to  Scoutdude

After a few winters, it wouldn’t have a frame at all.

CTSVmkeLS6
CTSVmkeLS6
6 hours ago
Reply to  Scoutdude

Good call out. Unibody with c-channel ‘frame’ rails welded that stiffen the whole thing up, much like the XJ Cherokee and different from the Astro unibody which has a bolt in subframe kind of like a 2 gen F body or Nova.

Nycbjr
Member
Nycbjr
9 hours ago

@thebishop this paragraph is wonky
Aerostars like this were often used up and thrown out, but you’ll occasionally see good-condition examples like the one below that popped up on Bring A Trailer a little while back. Aerostars like this were often used up and thrown out, but you’ll occasionally see good-condition examples like this one that popped up on Bring A Trailer a little while back. 

Gubbin
Member
Gubbin
9 hours ago

If you need to tow 5000# in 90s stylee, there’s a couple 4WDs on Seattle area Cragslist for $2k give or take.

edit: just think, you could drive the car mentioned in a Neil Young song that was covered by Neko Case!

Last edited 9 hours ago by Gubbin
Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
9 hours ago
Reply to  Gubbin

If you wanted to tow 5000lb in 90’s style, there’s no better way than with a Buick Roadmaster wagon.

Zerooneonezerozeroonezerozero
Member
Zerooneonezerozeroonezerozero
9 hours ago

i’d be interested in a comparo Aerostar v. Tourneo Custom another forbidden fruit type thing i think about reading the minivan fan articles here.

Urban Runabout
Member
Urban Runabout
9 hours ago

I had a boss who traded in her I-Mark sedan for a long Aerostar XLT – Silver and Dark red two-tone.

It was pretty cool indeed.

James McHenry
Member
James McHenry
9 hours ago

I’m amused by the final remark, mainly because of memories the Bigfoot Shuttle. Pretty much a stock Aerostar from the frame up other than a nitrous bottle. Below the frame was Deuce and a Half Rockwell axles, 48″ tires, custom leaf springs, and 4-wheel steer. Actually competed at times when another truck couldn’t.

Aaronaut
Member
Aaronaut
9 hours ago

Hell yeah, the big tires and lift would look RAD on a wedge like this. Maybe a bully bar and some square fog lights to finish it off?
I co-sign this madness from you, Bishop!

Squirrelmaster
Member
Squirrelmaster
9 hours ago

I had a friend whose parents had an AWD long wheelbase Aerostar. I always thought it looked odd, but it was great inside and it had no problem hauling their cargo trailer full of camping gear.

4moremazdas
Member
4moremazdas
9 hours ago
Reply to  Squirrelmaster

This is my exact use case. I tow a small utility-ish trailer full of all the camping gear plus whatever toys we want to bring along (bikes, kayaks, paddleboards, etc) and I would like just a little more grunt than my Mazda5 offers. AWD would be a welcome addition, as well as the exquisite 80’s styling lol.

Something tells me the real-world experience would leave something to be desired, though, so instead I’m shopping 3 row crossovers since they’re actually smaller than current minivan options.

Squirrelmaster
Member
Squirrelmaster
8 hours ago
Reply to  4moremazdas

For the early 90s, the Aerostar was pretty good. But, while I have fond feelings after years of driving the OHV 4.0L V6, it is not a powerful engine and the Aerostar is a relic by today’s standards.

We picked up a Honda Pilot a little over a year ago and it does great towing, all things considered. It hauled the cargo trailer I sold a few months ago with no issues, and hauled a Uhaul trailer loaded with my quad a few thousand miles with minimal complaint. It doesn’t do it quite as well as my past tow pigs, like my V10 F250 or Duramax 2500HD, but it is so much better than those when not towing that it made no sense to keep the trucks now that my tow needs are only a few times a year instead of every week or two.

FloridaNative
Member
FloridaNative
10 hours ago

“ Ford soon offered a long wheelbase version of the Aerostar as well”

I don’t think this is true. Pretty sure all of the extra length was behind the rear axle. Same wheelbase.

Urban Runabout
Member
Urban Runabout
9 hours ago
Reply to  FloridaNative

This is correct. It was not a LWB – it was all overhang.

4moremazdas
Member
4moremazdas
10 hours ago

You know what? I’m gonna convince my wife this is the family car we need.

It’s shorter than my Mazda5 in SWB form and still shorter than the current minivans with the LWB. You can get it with AWD for increased camping capability. It’s got all the cargo room and benefits of sliding door minivan. It’s perfect.

The gas mileage leaves something to be desired, but it’s honestly not that much worse than current 3 row CUV’s with V6’s. And this is America, we’ll always have cheap gas! It’s not like there are any world events that would possibly drive those prices up.

And I’m confident 80’s Ford quality is up to my high standards of comfort and convenience.

Data
Data
9 hours ago
Reply to  4moremazdas

I would only do that if you hate your family and plan to bail out prior to impact for the life insurance money. These things have the structural integrity of a soda can.

Taargus Taargus
Member
Taargus Taargus
9 hours ago
Reply to  Data

This is what I always have to remind myself of when I see a nice example of an Astro.

4moremazdas
Member
4moremazdas
9 hours ago

My brother’s father-in-law has a thing for Astros and has owned a bunch over the years. Evidently there are forums dedicated to them that he hangs out on.

But yeah, as much as it’s fun daydreaming about the 80’s minivan life, I think the rose colored glasses would drop pretty quickly if I spent real money on one.

4moremazdas
Member
4moremazdas
9 hours ago
Reply to  Data

Right, I forgot to mention that I’m also very confident in 80’s safety technology for my family.

Really, though, I wish there was a modern version of this on the market. Give it a modern powertrain and current safety and livability features but leave it the same size and shape and I’m in. Give it a hybrid and score 30 mpg combined and I’d pay new car money for it.

With all the recent minivan content I’ve frequently bemoaned the sad state of the minivan market today. Don’t get me wrong, the minivans of today are incredibly capable and comfortable, but I’m just a weirdo who wants a slightly smaller package and less, uh, “modern” styling (looking at you, Sienna).

Taargus Taargus
Member
Taargus Taargus
9 hours ago
Reply to  4moremazdas

I just want the 2005 Mazda MPV, but new. Is that so much to ask?

DV
DV
8 hours ago

Well, if you can convince your family to move to Japan, you can buy a Toyota Alphard…

Taargus Taargus
Member
Taargus Taargus
7 hours ago
Reply to  DV

Hmmmm, I’ll go ask.

Tj1977
Member
Tj1977
10 hours ago

That’s the dash from the refresh, the first was a bit more…blocky and ’80’s.

GreatFallsGreen
Member
GreatFallsGreen
9 hours ago
Reply to  Tj1977

And had a floor shifter for the auto too, oddly.

Isis
Member
Isis
10 hours ago

I believe a locking rear differential was available on the 2WD model

Younger1
Younger1
8 hours ago
Reply to  Isis

Correct Isis. Our family’s Aerostar long had a limited slip to go with the 4.0L-2WD and I think a 4.10 axle so it was surprisingly quick for what it was. Many a vacation taken in it and many friends/family members were moved care of our 1992 Aerostar.

ProfPlum
Member
ProfPlum
10 hours ago

I worked in sales at a large computer company that provided Fords as company cars. We mostly had Taurus sedans, and some field service people had Sable wagons, but those who also serviced large medical equipment had Aerostars. They loved them for how much they held; I used to borrow one from the pool if we had a lot of computer equipment to move.

Tom Gordon
Member
Tom Gordon
10 hours ago

I suppose I look back at this era when I was a kid with rose-colored glasses, but I always loved the early caravans. We had an 89 Caravan, and eventually a 97 Caravan Sport replaced it. The 97 was “nicer” and had more power, but I’ll always love that first one. As a Dad now, I keep bringing up to my wife that when we get new cars (we have a ’12 & ’14 SUVs as daily drivers), that one of them should be a van, just for how useful they are, but I think she is stuck in the mindset that they’re boring. My sneaky plan is to get one as a rental on a family vacation to jedi mind-trick her into seeing how great they can be…

Jorge Gonzales
Jorge Gonzales
10 hours ago

I had an ’89 RWD SWB Aerostar. All my kids were in scouts and we could load it with kids and gear and go for weekend camping trips. There are a lot of great memories associated with this van.

Ranwhenparked
Member
Ranwhenparked
9 hours ago
Reply to  Jorge Gonzales

I can confirm that Aerostars were still a common sight on check-in/check-out days at Scout camps going into the late ’00s, usually towing the troop trailer

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
10 hours ago

There was one of these for sale near me recently. 2WD, but a stick! I was very tempted.

4jim
4jim
10 hours ago

Here is the add comparing its shape to the space shuttle. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V3gnIML5-GM

Anonymous Person
Anonymous Person
10 hours ago

F*rd minivans will always be DeathStars to me.

My neighbor had one with a ‘honk if parts fall off‘ bumper-sticker.

Last edited 10 hours ago by Anonymous Person
Trust Doesn't Rust
Member
Trust Doesn't Rust
10 hours ago

I distinctly remember my friend’s brother stepping on the running board of his mom’s Aerostar and breaking it off.

Drive By Commenter
Member
Drive By Commenter
10 hours ago

My dad had a LWB RWD V6 version. He took it places you couldn’t even walk. With us kids and camping gear bouncing around in the back. Fun times!

Lew Schiller
Lew Schiller
10 hours ago

Test drove an Aerostar in ’86. Likes the Eddie Bauer edition but that huge view blocking B pillar was a deal breaker.

FastBlackB5
Member
FastBlackB5
10 hours ago

This was the first new car my parents ever bought in 1992. We did not have the middle row fancy seats. Just another bench. It did have a drawer under the passenger front seat for cassette tape storage. The rear had the headphones and volume control for them, but it didn’t work very well.

I took it to college when my mom replaced it with an accord. It had 250k miles and It lasted only about 5k more.

I hauled 4 boys and all our stuff around for 10 years before it went away for scrap.

B P
B P
6 hours ago
Reply to  FastBlackB5

The radio also had dual tuners so the rear headphones could listen to a different radio station than the front passengers. It was fun.

FastBlackB5
Member
FastBlackB5
6 hours ago
Reply to  B P

Ours…. Did not. I think you could turn down the van speakers and still have the headphones work, but it all used the same radio tuner in the dash. It could have been an option I’m sure my parents would have turned down if it was extra. I remember because we would use it on road trips at first, but we moved to our Walkman when we decided not to have to explain every cassette choice to our parents.

(we taped over cassettes from audio books and the relative bought Christian music tapes with rap we got from our older cousin. Nothing like a bible stories tape with The Chronic on it….)

Last edited 6 hours ago by FastBlackB5
Kevin Miller
Member
Kevin Miller
10 hours ago

When Ford said “no” to vertical alignment and inexplicably moved their logo up a notch on the Aerostar grille, it was an eyelid-twitching OCD trigger for my young self. Still looks wrong.

Data
Data
10 hours ago
Reply to  Kevin Miller

Like Guy Fieri, they were just kicking it up a notch. The mayor of van town taking it to a whole new level.

Jack Trade
Member
Jack Trade
8 hours ago
Reply to  Kevin Miller

I feel similarly when Ford seemingly decides to cut costs by repurposing existing Ford oval badging for vehicles of different scales. The final OG Rangers seemed to sport comically large F-150 grill emblems, as did the final Escapes.

Goose
Member
Goose
10 hours ago

I’ve always been a bigger fan of GM’s approach back then. If you want a trucky minivan, the Astro/Safari were great. If you wanted a economic people mover, the dust buster were space age looking. It allowed GM to play more into each submarket and make each better suited for it. I always kind of thought the Aerostar was a bit of a jack of all, master of none type thing. I do remember thinking Aerostar interiors were cool though from what I can remember.

Ranwhenparked
Member
Ranwhenparked
9 hours ago
Reply to  Goose

Also, I’ve been trying to find a decent Astro RS or Safari GT for ages now, because factory sport van. Sort of an interesting hangover from the custom van craze of the ’70s, but toned down to be acceptable ’90s family transportation

Elhigh
Elhigh
10 hours ago

That Mini-Max is compelling. I want you to spend about one second looking at that thing and imagining a USPS Eagle on the side.

It’s almost hard to imagine it as anything else now, isn’t it? Practically designed for the purpose. It could’ve stolen the Grumman LLV’s lunch before it was ever even conceived.

TheNewt
Member
TheNewt
10 hours ago

The Carousel’s face certainly did it no favors.

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