Find or Sell Used Cars, Trucks, and SUVs in USA

1988 3.2 V8 5-speed Rosso Corsa Red Tan Leather Cabriolet Convertible 20k Miles on 2040-cars

Year:1988 Mileage:20700 Color: Red
Location:

Fredericksburg, Virginia, United States

Fredericksburg, Virginia, United States

Auto Services in Virginia

Wynne Ford ★★★★★

New Car Dealers, New Truck Dealers
Address: 1020 W Mercury Blvd, Fort-Monroe
Phone: (866) 595-6470

Wilson`s Towing ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Towing, Truck Wrecking
Address: Williamsburg
Phone: (757) 565-2516

Wards Truck & Auto Ctr ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Truck Service & Repair, Towing
Address: Lake-Ridge
Phone: (703) 221-3000

Virginia Auto Glass Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Windshield Repair, Windows
Address: 905 Boulevard, Colonial-Heights
Phone: (804) 748-4899

Valley Collision Repair Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Automobile Restoration-Antique & Classic
Address: 23101 Old Valley Pike, Luray
Phone: (540) 459-2005

The Parts House ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 2400 E Indian River Rd, Norfolk
Phone: (757) 963-2213

Auto blog

CA man accused of stealing same Ferrari twice

Thu, 11 Sep 2014

Cars get stolen all the time. It's an unfortunate reality, but a reality nonetheless. It's just unusual when the same guy steals the same car twice, but that's what apparently occurred recently in Fontana, CA.
That's where one Earnie Hooks was arrested late last month driving a black Ferrari 458 Spider. According to police, Hooks was intoxicated when he arrived at a roadside checkpoint, and when they ran the plates, they found the car was reported as stolen.
Hooks managed to evade police (not too hard to imagine given the car he was driving) and later abandoned the car, which was taken to the impound. Around 3 am the next morning, though, someone broke into the impound and stole the car... again. Hooks was found five days later in Studio City, still driving the stolen Ferrari. He was arrested and somehow still had the gall to plead not guilty to the charges of car theft and resisting arrest.

Petrolicious gets super Seventies in a Ferrari Dino 208 GT4

Thu, 01 Aug 2013

The Ferrari Dino 308 GT4 was the automaker's first sports car with a V8 mounted amidships, and that formula quickly became the Italian automaker's bread and butter. The 308 in the name denotes a 3.0-liter V8, but for the Italian market, where a tax was imposed on cars with engines larger than two liters, Ferrari decided to de-bore the V8 to avoid the tax. Thus the 2.0-liter Dino 208 GT4 was born, and New York resident Bradley Price likes his 1976 model just the way it is.
Price initially was attracted to the Bertone-styled wedge because it "fit into the whole aesthetic of the space age and of the boundless possibility of [the late 1960s and 1970s]," he says in the Petrolicious video, adding that the opening scene of the original The Italian Job struck a chord with him, and the feeling never left. With 170 horsepower on tap, the 208 isn't very quick, but, in his opinion, it has a sweeter song than the bigger V8 and the driver-centric interior is one of his favorites.
Watch Price snake the original wedge through some East Coast back roads in the video below, and, just for kicks, we've also included the opening sequence of The Italian Job.

James Glickenhaus teases sleek SCG 003 supercar

Thu, 19 Dec 2013

He may not have known it at the time, but James Glickenhaus started a small revolution when he commissioned Pininfarina to turn his Ferrari Enzo into a tribute to the legendary 330 P3/4. The P4/5 is what resulted, and Ferrari gave its blessing for it to wear the Prancing Horse emblem - something it hadn't done for a coachbuilt custom in decades. A slew of rebodied Ferraris followed, prompting the factory to launch its own coachbuilding division. But Jim wasn't out of the picture.
The former Hollywood filmmaker and investment banker followed up with the P4/5 Competition based on the 430 Scuderia, and started Scuderia Cameron Glickenhaus to race it. Now SCG is returning with a new project, and has released this teaser video (which you can view in the embedded Facebook post below) to keep us on our toes.
From the few glimpses the video provides of a rendering, it's hard to tell much, but from what we can see, it looks pretty slick. Just what sort of technical details will form the underpinnings remains to be seen, but we're looking forward to seeing how it turns out.