Home » Happy Turkey Day! Here’s A Car You Know That’s Secretly From Turkey

Happy Turkey Day! Here’s A Car You Know That’s Secretly From Turkey

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It’s Thanksgiving! A holiday with some troubling history but, fundamentally, a solid message: be thankful for things. We at the Autopian are thankful for all of you readers, for example, and we’re a lot more fun to hang out with than that pack of weird buckle-hatted Puritans that started this whole thing. Today is also the day when turkeys get the most publicity, and as a result, traditionally I’ve tried to use this day to focus on Turkish cars. Most often, these would be Anadols, interesting fiberglass-bodied cars with input from Reliant of Britain, but all but unknown here in America. This year, I want to do something different, and focus on what may be the most well-known Turkish-built car in America: the first-gen Ford Transit Connect. Oh, and in addition to Turkey, there’s some chicken involved in this story, too.

There’s actually an Anadol connection to the Ford Transit Connect; the company that actually builds the Transit Connect is Ford Otosan, originally known just as Otosan when founded in 1959. They started building Ford Consuls under license, and then in 1966 began to build Anadols, the first mass-produced vehicles to be developed in Turkey.

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Cs Anadol2

By 1977, a deal was struck with Ford, and Otosan became Ford Otosan, which built a lot of Ford models. A plant was opened in Gölcük, Turkey in 2001, and Transit vans and Transit Connect smaller commercial vehicles were built there, with the Transit Connects coming to America. It’s a very modern, advanced factory, as you can see in this video commemorating the six millionth Ford Transit built there:

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I just want to focus the first-generation Ford Transit Connect, built from 2002 to 2013 not just because it’s a car built in Turkey that has roamed American streets for years, stealthily, but also because I think it’s a genuinely wonderful design, and it has a fascinating and absurd secret related to the infamous Chicken Tax.

Blueprint

 

The Transit Connect could be had with a diesel engine and five-speed manual, but in America we only got it with a four-speed auto and a 136 horsepower 2-liter Duratec four-banger. A manual one would be pretty sweet to find, though.

Peter Hornby, the famous designer who penned the sporty-wedgy Volvo 480 and more recently, the Lynk & Co 01, was the force behind the Transit Connect, and I think the result is one of the most stylish and appealing mass-market commercial/utility vehicles of the modern era. It’s not a large vehicle, but it maximizes its useful volume, with a stubby hood and a large, tall cab/cargo area right behind. The side window line features an interesting little jog up, and there’s a series of three corrugations on the lower body sides, reminding me a bit of old Citroën 2CV-based commercial vehicles:

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2cvcargo

These little commercial vehicles managed to have a bit of charm despite their entirely utilitarian purpose, which I think is a pretty grand achievement. You could get Transit Connects in three common variants: the pure cargo version, lacking rear side windows and almost invariably white, but there were versions that had a rear side window and sometimes seats, as well as an actual passenger-hauling version with rear seats and multiple rear windows.

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These passenger-carrying variants lead me to my favorite fact about the Transit Connect. You see, for a lot of complicated and now-ridiculous seeming reasons, after WWII the United States got into trouble because we flooded Europe with plump, juicy chickens, severely impairing the European poultry industry. European countries retaliated with a big tariff on American chickens, and in 1963, a pissed-off President Lyndon Johnson slapped a huge 25% tariff on potato starch, brandy, dextrose, and, most significantly for what I’m talking about, commercial vehicles.

The focus of the tariff was really aimed at West Germany and the Volkswagen Type 2 cargo vans and pickup trucks, which were making significant inroads into the American commercial vehicle market at the time.

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The thing is, long after air-cooled VW Type 2 vans and trucks were gone and the whole chicken business had long been forgiven and forgotten, the Chicken Tax remained. And still remains. That’s why if you see a commercial vehicle from a foreign carmaker in America, it’s likely built in an American factory or some manner of shenanigans are used to get around the tariff, like how  Mercedes-Benz’ Sprinter van factory in South Carolina is actually just re-assembling Sprinter bodies to their chassis, which have been shipped on separate vessels from Germany, so that they are technically “built” in America.

Perhaps even more bonkers was Ford’s approach with the Transit Connect. They all came to America from Turkey with rear windows and back seats, as “passenger vehicles,” not cargo/commercial vehicles and hence free from the Chicken Tax. This is sort of the same approach Subaru took with the BRAT, which had a pair of absurd seats stuck in the bed to make it a “passenger” vehicle.

Cs Subarubrat Seats

Unlike the Brat, which just kept the seats, Ford actually removed rear seats and rear side windows from Transit Connects, converting them back into cargo vehicles when they got to America, circumventing the 25% tariff.

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In 2013, US Customs and Border Protection decided that Ford shouldn’t get away with such a hilariously obvious work-around, and charged the company for all the back tariffs on the imported vans. I really want to know what they did with all the removed rear seats and windows, though – were they sent back to Turkey for re-use? Were they the same ones as used for the actual passenger variants? I haven’t found out yet, but I’m terribly curious.

Modern versions of the Transit Connect are made in Spain, and while the new one is a respectable machine, I think it lacks the charm and appeal of the original. I’ve always thought that a passenger version of the first-gen Transit Connect would make a great family car, and I stand by that.

Blurtransitconnect

So, the next time you see an old Transit Connect trundling around, take a moment and reflect on the fact that this little van is a low-key Turkish immigrant, and came to America pretending to be a passenger car, which it (usually) very much was not.

Happy Thanksgiving, everybody! I hope you have whole full-sized Transitfuls of things to be thankful for.

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Slow Joe Crow
Slow Joe Crow
5 months ago

The tiny van reminds me to share my latest automotive amuse bouche, the shorty version of the second generation Renault Kangoo which dispenses with the center section and sliding doors to create a cute little 2 door panel truck.
Back on topic I’ve seen camper conversions of the Transit Connect. Also Otokar, Turkey’s other big vehicle maker license built Landrover Defenders and kept the 300 TDI in production during the early oughts after LR switched to the TD5

Mr Sarcastic
Mr Sarcastic
5 months ago

Whoa this story hit me like a full course turkey dinner. Tryptophan anybody? But I want to know taillight guru is what vehicle has taillights like the hit and run story vehicle?

Mr E
Mr E
5 months ago

This style Transit Connect is also the only Ford product sold in the US in recent memory that required the user to flip open the Ford emblem in the grille and insert the key in order to pop the hood/bonnet.

Flyingstitch
Flyingstitch
5 months ago

I was disappointed when the Transit lost the competition to replace the Crown Vic as New York’s official taxi The aesthetic felt just right for Manhattan: tall, angular, functional and no-nonsense. Plus the Ford continuity and the cosmopolitan origin story. Had it become just a little iconic, I’m sure they could have worked around the importation shenanigans.

Jack Trade
Jack Trade
5 months ago
Reply to  Flyingstitch

Me too! Though I was even more disappointed that Ford didn’t enter the Flex as a contestant – plenty of cargo and passenger room, easy enough on parts/service, and had a funkiness that would have made a perfect iconic taxi in the years to come.

VanGuy
VanGuy
5 months ago
Reply to  Jack Trade

I don’t know if this would factor into taxi use, but the 60 side of the 60/40 middle row seats in the Flex have a notorious problem with the folding mechanism breaking with regular use.

Ours broke on our 2010 Flex and cost us $700ish to get fixed. Then it broke again later. We just worked around it from then on, didn’t bother repairing it.

In short, the seat would sometimes still be able to fold to a flat inclined plane with the folded-down back row, but pulling the latch again, which was supposed to tilt it forward for ingress/egress for the back row, would absolutely not work under any circumstances.

And what I found to DIY repair it did not look easy, although it’s been a while since I looked into it.

Apparently coolant got into our engine at 180,000 miles in 2018ish and that was the end of that car. Shame, cuz yeah, we generally liked the thing.

Jack Trade
Jack Trade
5 months ago
Reply to  VanGuy

That could be (should be?) a factor I bet, at least in a contest for a good all-around transport vehicle. Of course the old Crown Vics didn’t really have such a feature (I’m not even sure if the seats could fold down in the taxi models), but these days, it would seem key to have that functionality.

I always liked the funk-factor of the Flex and appreciated that Ford kinda took a chance on an unusual solution to a modern family vehicle.

Baja_Engineer
Baja_Engineer
5 months ago
Reply to  Flyingstitch

A few years ago I hopped on a Transit Connect taxi in Las Vegas and it felt particularly roomy. I liked the tall roof and sliding doors for easy in and out. And the cargo area was huge.
The driver said he was happy with the TC as it saved so much gas compared to the Crown Vic

Mr Sarcastic
Mr Sarcastic
5 months ago
Reply to  Flyingstitch

So you thought smooth comfortable limo ride would be replaced by metal cargo hold ride? I guess you don’t taxi much?

Flyingstitch
Flyingstitch
5 months ago
Reply to  Mr Sarcastic

Well, it was anyway. Although the Nissan was a flop.

Freelivin2713
Freelivin2713
5 months ago

Happy Thanksgiving!
Since there’s also chicken in this article, I have to share a long time joke which is just from an anti-drug commercial from the 90’s…basically, the kid says
“I’m not a chicken, you’re a turkey!”
(I was also given a T-shirt that says it!)

https://youtu.be/AqaocGXy1uM?si=UaUtnt-mKLffJl1n

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
5 months ago
Reply to  Freelivin2713

You sure showed that drug pusher! Good job kid!

Now take your adderall, codeine and tramadol like the nice doctors told you to.

Last edited 5 months ago by Cheap Bastard
Bongo Friendee Harvey Park
Bongo Friendee Harvey Park
5 months ago

Useless factoid of the day: that 2CV commercial vehicle was called a fourgonnette. Some madman made a modern version that’s corrugated all around:

https://www.cnet.com/roadshow/news/citroen-berlingo-2cv-fourgonnette-caselani-retro-coachbuilt-van/

The fourgonnette was basically sheet metal with a motor. Postwar Europe wasn’t exactly rolling in it so they made do.

GertVAG
GertVAG
5 months ago

Happy thanksgiving there over the big blue water from Belgium. Thankful for the diversity of topics and people swirling together here to maintain a wholesome community. Feels like my favourite car meeting !

Cam.man67
Cam.man67
5 months ago

I, too, am a fan of the 1st-gen Transit Connect. Very nearly convinced my wife to buy one when we were looking for a family vehicle but she liked the Escape better. Matchbox makes a nice diecast version.

Andy Individual
Andy Individual
5 months ago

So instead of a Cold Start today we have to go Cold Turkey?

MrLM002
MrLM002
5 months ago

Turkey makes some great stuff.

Personally I’m a big fan of their firearms industry. They’re still making revolver shotguns and they’re making the Beretta 86 Cheetah tip up barrel copies that Beretta won’t make.

Last edited 5 months ago by MrLM002
Eggsalad
Eggsalad
5 months ago

From my recollection, the “rear seats” that were removed at port were simple hard plastic (or maybe fiberglass) shells, something like you’d find on a cheap city bus. They barely met the legal definition of “seat”, and weren’t anything you’d want to actually sit in for more than 10 minutes.

I mourn the US demise of the small commercial van. It’s not clear to me why Ford and Ram and Nissan gave up on them, but From the numbers I see on the roads, they weren’t poor sellers.

Baja_Engineer
Baja_Engineer
5 months ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

it started as a decently sized market with players from Ford, Nissan, Ram and even Chevy with a blatant badge engineered version of the Nissan.
Out of all these the Nissan had the biggest chance of surviving as it was made in Mexico hence no Chicken Tax.
But the best seller was always the TC and I believe it started off with a competitive MSRP. But when the 2nd gen debuted its MSRP crested past $30K quite easily and the sales never got above 50K. Chicken Tax might have kept profit slim and my guess is Ford was hoping to achieve more sales maybe in the livery business but it was never a good seller in that market. Business owners seem to love them, though.

If I wasn’t mistaken a few years ago there was this plan about building the next TC in Mexico which would’ve brought profits up and it was a no brainer given the platform mates Maverick and Bronco Sport also built there. But why build a lower margin TC while you could’ve built a higher profit and hot selling Bronco Sport instead?

Last edited 5 months ago by Baja_Engineer
Gubbin
Gubbin
5 months ago

Wow, the musical style of “Ford Transit” by dZihan & Kamien seems so appropriate now.

Jalop Gold
Jalop Gold
5 months ago

Hey, Charleston started building real sprinters a few years ago when they expanded the plant! Only the Metris is still just a knock down kit.

Also, the transit connect had poor seats and ride for family use. Great for trades in the city though!

Manwich Sandwich
Manwich Sandwich
5 months ago

Jason… what I want to know is… years ago you came up with a Ham-powered car idea. I would like to know if there have been any further developments on your Ham-power idea?

Maybe what you need is some inspiration from a Roast Beef transmission…

Freelivin2713
Freelivin2713
5 months ago

Yes! People want to know…sounds delicious!

A. Barth
A. Barth
5 months ago

As Jim Goose once said, “Hey fella! You’re a turkey, ya know that??” 🙂

There’s something satisfying about a Goose talking to a turkey in a comment about an article about turkeys and chickens, but frankly I’m winging it. Hope it wasn’t too fowl.

Happy Thanksgiving and Happy Thursday to the Autopian birds of a feather!

Jack Trade
Jack Trade
5 months ago
Reply to  A. Barth

Hope it wasn’t too fowl.

I dunno, I just got here myself… 😉

Jack Trade
Jack Trade
5 months ago

To be the anti-Torch, I always liked the headlights on this gen Transit Connect…remind me of the first gen Fusion and how both brought Euro styling back to the states in a way we hadn’t really seen since the ’80s.

Happy Thanksgiving to everyone, and I’m always thankful for our non-USA autopians – our cultures may be different at times, but a genuine love of vehicles for themselves is something we all share and connect over. And dare I say, is the kinda thing for which the internet was intended.

Last edited 5 months ago by Jack Trade
Geoff Buchholz
Geoff Buchholz
5 months ago

The Transit Connect is a smart piece of functional design — I’m starting to see them converted into little camper vans, which strikes me as a sensible option for a weekend getaway.

Happy Thanksgiving to all! Hoping David and his gf are bringing shower spaghetti to the Autopian holiday potluck.

Last edited 5 months ago by Geoff Buchholz
Maymar
Maymar
5 months ago

Early North American Toyota C-HR’s were also Turkish-built, but there’s nothing else really fun to say about those.

CSRoad
CSRoad
5 months ago

Happy Thanksgiving to the USA folks.
Eat responsibly. (-;
Happy belated Harvest Festival to Adrian Clarke.
I’m still recovering from Canadian Thanksgiving and it was 5 weeks ago.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
5 months ago
Reply to  CSRoad

“Eat responsibly.”

Absolutely not! Else what’s the point?

Col Lingus
Col Lingus
5 months ago

Happy Turkey Day to all you poor bastards.
Thanks for another year of great content, and efforts.
Appreciate all of you there.

Bill Garcia
Bill Garcia
5 months ago

Regarding the seats and windows, maybe they just had a specific amount of stock juet for that – (1) ship the seats/windows on the new cars to the US, (2) remove them from cars, (3) repack and ship back to Turkey, (4) build “new cars” with the “used windows/seats”, (5) $$$

I doubt that’s the case, but it would be hilarious.

I would be very curious to know what they did really with them!

Austin Vail
Austin Vail
5 months ago
Reply to  Bill Garcia

IIRC They shredded the rear seats. Recycling/reusing them would be too much effort I guess.

Last edited 5 months ago by Austin Vail
Adrian Clarke
Adrian Clarke
5 months ago

Happy Treason Day ungrateful colonials.

VolksWinkle
VolksWinkle
5 months ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

Adrian as our hapless politicians tout our “special relationship” I am comforted in knowing that our centuries old rivalry and bitterness still shine through! Happy Thursday to you good sir!

Dar Khorse
Dar Khorse
5 months ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

Hey now! Treason Day is Jan 6th here in the USA. And Revolt Against the British Overlords Day is July 4th. Thanksgiving happened long before revolution was even a gleam in the eye of the British colonists.

But we love you anyway, Adrian. And we’re thankful for your good natured grumpiness.

Last edited 5 months ago by Dar Khorse
Col Lingus
Col Lingus
5 months ago
Reply to  Dar Khorse

Bite me Adrian!

Marlin May
Marlin May
5 months ago
Reply to  Col Lingus

Careful, @Col Lingus! Before making such utterances, be certain if it will be received as an insult or as an invitation.

Adrian Clarke
Adrian Clarke
5 months ago
Reply to  Col Lingus

I’ll have the hounds do it, if it’s all the same to you.

Adrian Clarke
Adrian Clarke
5 months ago
Reply to  Dar Khorse

It’s a multi purpose insult. The best kind of insult.

JunkerDave
JunkerDave
5 months ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

Nah, Treason Day is 4 July. Today is “the day we threw a dinner party and the guests never went home”, according to my Native friends.

Last edited 5 months ago by JunkerDave
Adrian Clarke
Adrian Clarke
5 months ago
Reply to  JunkerDave

Being a commit Amerophile I of course know this. But I never miss an opportunity to use a good insult

Col Lingus
Col Lingus
5 months ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

Bless you, you crazy bastard.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
5 months ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

Oy! So little gratitude after we saved your butts in 1917 and again in 1940… Not even a word of thanks for all the spam.

😉

Last edited 5 months ago by Cheap Bastard
Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
5 months ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

Those wars started in 1914 and 1939. And the US didn’t enter WW2 until December 1941.

So thanks for eventually turning up, we couldn’t have made those wars desperate enough without your early absence.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
5 months ago
Reply to  Captain Muppet

“thanks for turning up, we couldn’t have made those wars”

FIFY.

Last edited 5 months ago by Cheap Bastard
Adrian Clarke
Adrian Clarke
5 months ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

My understanding is it’s the far east that treat Spam as a delicacy. In the UK we have taste buds.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
5 months ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

Mmm yes, taste buds for haggis, jellied eels, spotted dick and “meatballs made from minced off-cuts and offal” with a name which as an American I’m not allowed to say in polite company* even right after a British delicacy named like a nasty venereal disease.

By these standards Spam is haute cuisine.

* https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faggot_(food)

Last edited 5 months ago by Cheap Bastard
Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
5 months ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

That’s the food we give to tourists, just to see if they’ll eat it.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
5 months ago
Reply to  Captain Muppet

We give ’em California pizza.

Adrian Clarke
Adrian Clarke
5 months ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

That’s an oxymoron if ever I heard one.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
5 months ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

No less so than Hawaiian.

Besides have you had the pizza in southern France? I’m pretty sure that’s where California got the idea.

Last edited 5 months ago by Cheap Bastard
Adrian Clarke
Adrian Clarke
5 months ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

No, but I have had pizza from a local pizzeria in Lake Como. That is the standard my friend.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
5 months ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

Yet another reason to buy one of those one euro Italian houses.

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
5 months ago

Funny that the Turks named their auto plant after Japanese Fathers….
…it’s not even Father’s Day.

Last edited 5 months ago by Urban Runabout
Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
5 months ago

Happy Thanksgiving, Torch and family! I’m thankful for The Autopian, the wonderful staff, contributors, and enthusiasts who comprise the passionate, knowledgeable and, so often, very funny readership. Have a great day; I’m off to stuff a Ford Transit Connect.

Jakob K's Garage
Jakob K's Garage
5 months ago

I DO like the looks of the Transit Connect. It reminds me of back when all Playmobil vehicles were generic. The 15 year old boxy Land Rover Discovery (don’t remember the number) also has that 🙂

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