Junkyard Find: 2005 Dodge Sprinter Cargo Van

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

The European-style vans sold by Mercedes-Benz, Freightliner, and Dodge have been with us here in North America since 2001, and have held their value very well since that time. Depreciation of even the most useful vehicle is relentless, however, and it was inevitable that used-up Sprinters would begin showing up in big self-service wrecking yards at some point.

That day has arrived; I spotted the first of the discarded Sprinters in my junkyarding experience, this one in a Phoenix yard over the summer.

As is always the case with the first of a valuable vehicle type to appear in a cheap wrecking yard, this one has been picked nearly clean of running gear and trim parts. In another five years, the market for used first-generation Sprinter parts will be saturated and these vans will be attacked less ravenously by wrecking yard vultures.

This one is a diesel-powered, Dodge-branded Sprinter with automatic transmission.

These vans are very efficient cargo haulers, though you didn’t see them every day back in 2005. This one doesn’t seem smashed, so perhaps it donated its drivetrain to another truck in its fleet before being dispatched to the knacker’s yard.

Perhaps there is a bit of acceleration exaggeration going on in this ad.





Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Autoblog, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars and Capital One.

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  • DownUnder2014 DownUnder2014 on Nov 25, 2017

    I've never seen a rusted Sprinter of this generation in my part of the world, but I have seen an early 2nd Generation (2008 model) with rusted-through rear doors (at the bottom). Then again, it is a Refrigerated van, so that might be part of the reason... I am in a temperate climate though so YMMV.

  • MrAnnoyingDude MrAnnoyingDude on Nov 25, 2017

    Fun fact about Sprinters: In Poland, where I live, the 32-seat bus versions of them are the staple of cheap transport. You can get a trip from Puławy, where I live, to Lublin (ca. 65 km/40 miles), for 7 PLZ (a bit below $2) in one.

  • Paul Alexander The Portuguese sports car.
  • Bd2 I hope they are more successful with Hyundai. Quality and ATPs only stand to improve with solid union support.
  • Dave M. In 2005 I remember my cousin texting me that he couldn't wait to show me his new car on my next visit home that summer. It was a gorgeous Pontiac, he said. I'm thinking Bonneville, Gran Prix....something suitable for a mid-40s debonair kind of guy. A few months later when I was home he drove up in his champagne colored Sunfire. My pangs of jealousy immediately melted away.He gladly inherited his mom's Camry 4 years later....
  • TMA1 I guess they're not expecting big things from a 5,800 lb sports car.
  • Lichtronamo The current Accord and forthcoming Camry are heavlily revised models, not all new. GM could have probably done the same with Malibu just to stay in the space. GM (and Ford's) retreat from cars seems like a path to nowhere but shrinking marketshare that just feeds into Toyota's continual growth. It seems shocking that GM and Ford have become so small in the US (notwithstanding full-size trucks) and other markets around world.
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