U.S. Postal Service to Seek Bids for $6.3B Fleet

Feb. 16, 2015

Feb. 16, 2015—The U.S. Postal Service is in the market for roughly 180,000 new mail-carrying vehicles, and is asking automakers to place bids to develop a commercial van that will replace the 200,000 Grumman Long Live Vehicles currently in use, according to a report from the Automotive News.

The Postal Service is willing to spend between $25,000–$35,000 per vehicle, which values to the contract for potential bidders up $6.3 billion.

The new mail-carrying vehicles are asked to have low costs of upkeep, and good fuel economy, as the Postal Service fleet consumed 154 million gallons of gasoline last year alone. The payload capacity is also asked to be at least 1,500 lbs, and offer 155 cubic feet of cargo space to better accommodate the large packages sent by way of online shopping.

Sponsored Recommendations

Best Body Shop and the 360-Degree-Concept

Spanesi ‘360-Degree-Concept’ Enables Kansas Body Shop to Complete High-Quality Repairs

How Fender Bender Operator of the Year, Morrow Collision Center, Achieves Their Spot-On Measurements

Learn how Fender Bender Operator of the Year, Morrison Collision Center, equipped their new collision facility with “sleek and modern” equipment and tools from Spanesi Americas...

Maximizing Throughput & Profit in Your Body Shop with a Side-Load System

Years of technological advancements and the development of efficiency boosting equipment have drastically changed the way body shops operate. In this free guide from GFS, learn...

ADAS Applications: What They Are & What They Do

Learn how ADAS utilizes sensors such as radar, sonar, lidar and cameras to perceive the world around the vehicle, and either provide critical information to the driver or take...