For 1980, the B-Series was redesigned for the first time since 1967 production. Again sharing model commonality with the medium-duty F-Series, the model line saw significant external design changes; in place of the long-running full-width hood, Ford shifted to a narrower hoodline combined with separate fenders. In another change, the grille shifted its design influence from F-Series light trucks to the L-Series "
Louisville" heavy trucks. In production across 19 model years, this is the longest-produced version of the B-Series; for 1995, the model line received a redesign of the hood.
1980–1994 For 1980, the sixth-generation B-Series was derived from the F-700, F-800, and F-8000 (diesel). As a cowled chassis (produced without a cab) with no interior, the B-Series was produced with a revised dashboard from the previous generation. For 1984, the medium-duty F-Series and B-Series adopted the Ford Blue Oval emblem, replacing the "FORD" lettering in the center of the grille; other revisions were made to cowl badging. As an option, a tilt-forward hood was introduced alongside the standard rear-hinged hood; on the B-series, the tilting hood would become standard by the end of the 1980s. ;Engines For its 1980 launch, the sixth-generation was offered with three engines. Alongside the 6.1L (370) gasoline V8 and the Caterpillar 3208 V8 diesel (Ford B-8000), a Detroit Diesel four-stroke 8.2L V8 was introduced as an option. For 1982, Ford introduced a 7.0L gasoline engine as an option. During the 1980s and early 1990s, the engine offerings would undergo several revisions. For 1985, as part of a joint venture with New Holland, Ford introduced a 6.6L and 7.8L inline-6 diesel sourced from Brazil. For 1991, the Caterpillar 3208 and Detroit Diesel V8s were withdrawn (following the discontinuation of the latter); it would also serve as the final year for the 6.1L gasoline V8. For 1992, Ford introduced Cummins 6BT and C8.3 diesels; for 1993, they would replace the Ford-New Holland diesels entirely. ;Gasoline • Ford
385/Lima V8 (1980–1991) • Ford
385/Lima V8 (1982–1994) ;Diesel • 8.2 L Detroit Diesel "Fuel Pincher" V8 (1980–1990) • 6.6 L and 7.8 L Ford-New Holland I6 (1985–1992) • 5.9 L Cummins
5.9 6BT I6 (1992–1998) • 10.4 L Caterpillar "3208" V8 (1983–1990) • 8.3 L Cummins "C8.3" I6 diesel (1992–1994)
1995–1998 For 1995, the medium-duty F-Series underwent a model revision, improving the aerodynamics of the hood design, with the B-series following suit. With few changes made to the chassis, the B-series retained the same steering column and instrument panel used since 1980. For the first time, a tilt-steering column was offered as an option (distinguished by Ford-badged steering wheels sourced from
International). The badging of the B-Series underwent a revision, ending the use of external B-700/B-800 designation; all cowl badges used "B-Series" badging. After a 50-year production run, the final B-series cowled bus chassis was produced as the sixth-generation medium-duty Ford F-Series ended its model cycle after the 1998 model year. ;Engines While the 7.0L gasoline engine remained standard on the medium-duty F-Series, the 1995 B-series shifted entirely to diesel-fuel engines, using Cummins-sourced 5.9L and 8.3L inline-6 engines. • 5.9 L Cummins
5.9 6BT I6 diesel (1992–1998) • 8.3 L Cummins
8.3 I6 diesel (1994–1998) ==Discontinuation==