![]() 06/13/2015 at 15:59 • Filed to: None | ![]() | ![]() |
For he who drives a late model diesel Ford Mondeo wagon in America surely can work some sort of magic. I thought I saw it a week or so ago, but didn’t want to post anything because I figured I’d get a bunch of “that’s b.s, it was probably a volvo”. But now I have seen it clearly, I am not going crazy. And I have some pictures, although blurry, but they are proof enough, there is a wild mondeo in Orange, Ct.
![]() 06/13/2015 at 16:04 |
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Those look like EU plates.
![]() 06/13/2015 at 16:05 |
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The photos really add to the Sasquatch level odds of seeing this car. Find out who owns it, become their best friend.
![]() 06/13/2015 at 16:06 |
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Yawn. See like 10 of those daily. #JustEuropeanThings.
Plates do look EU like another user mentioned. Recently imported maybe?
![]() 06/13/2015 at 16:06 |
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Who the hell pays to have their Mondeo shipped stateside for a vacation? :o
![]() 06/13/2015 at 16:07 |
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Most likely German or possibly UK.
![]() 06/13/2015 at 16:15 |
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I will MOST definitely be keeping an eye out for it, I’ll have my friends do the same. Hopefully this car is here stateside permenantly, if i could only buy it, and title it as a focus or something... One can dream...
![]() 06/13/2015 at 16:19 |
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Definitely not UK! They never really adopted the EU style plate pattern. (Plates in the back are yellow) French, German, Spanish, Czech, whatever....
![]() 06/13/2015 at 16:45 |
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Ah, I always forget if the yellow plate is front or back. But yeah now I think of it, there are a ton of white plates throughout Europe.
![]() 06/14/2015 at 03:50 |
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That’s a second generation (MkIV) which won’t be U.S. legal for at least another ten years. Definitely E.U. style plates. Maybe from a French colonial dependency? Such as St. Pierre and Miquelon off the coast of Newfoundland.
![]() 06/14/2015 at 21:05 |
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It’s not the photographer’s fault!