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

2013 Bmw 128i Base Convertible 2-door 3.0l...tech Pak With Nav..auto..leather on 2040-cars

US $34,800.00
Year:2013 Mileage:10590
Location:

Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, United States

Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, United States
Advertising:

THIS UNIT IS FLAWLESS...10K ON THE ODOMETER AN SERVICED AN MAINTAINED...WITH REMAINDER OF FACTORY WARRANTY...EQUIPPED WITH TECHNOLOGY PACKAGE AND NAVIGATION...CLEAN 1 OWNER CAR FAX AND AUTO CHECK...LIMITED EDITION RED LEATHER SEATS MAKES THIS VEHICLE STAND OUT FROM THE REST..BOUGHT NEW AND GARAGE KEPT....STEPTRONIC AUTO TRANSMISSION..HEATED SEATS...BLUETOOTH BMW ASSIST WITH SMART PHONE INTERGRATION..VOICE COMMAND .THERE IS A 189$ DOC AND TRANS FEE ADDED TO FINAL PRICE OF AUCTION...SC TAX AND TAG WILL ALSO NEED TO BE PAID IF REGISTERING IN SC..

Auto Services in South Carolina

West Specialty Products Used Cars ★★★★★

Used Car Dealers, Used Truck Dealers, Financing Services
Address: 1230 Gentry Memorial Hwy, Pickens
Phone: (864) 442-0410

Tuffy Auto Service Centers ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Brake Repair
Address: 9909 Charlotte Hwy, Catawba
Phone: (866) 595-6470

Star Automotive ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, New Car Dealers
Address: 3102 N Pleasantburg Dr, Greenville
Phone: (864) 846-9524

Stack`s Wholesale Auto Parts ★★★★★

Automobile Parts & Supplies, Automobile Accessories, Auto Body Parts
Address: 7307 Charleston Hwy, Bowman
Phone: (803) 829-3488

Scott`s Automotive ★★★★★

Automobile Parts & Supplies, Auto Body Parts
Address: 931 Central Ave, Summerville
Phone: (843) 875-1708

Reid`s Towing ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Towing, Repossessing Service
Address: 10117 John Price Rd, Lake-Wylie
Phone: (704) 208-9192

Auto blog

British automakers take costly precautions as Brexit 'no deal' fears grow

Wed, Sep 26 2018

LONDON — Carmakers in Britain have triggered some Brexit contingency plans, such as certifying models in the EU, and are working on redrawing production schedules and stockpiling more parts to defend against any loss of unfettered trade after Brexit. The moves are aimed at ensuring plants, which rely on the just-in-time delivery of tens of thousands of components, can keep operating after Brexit on March 29, but will add costs and bureaucracy which could risk their long-term viability. London and Brussels hope to agree a deal by the end of the year to avoid tariffs and trade barriers, but Prime Minister Theresa May's proposals have been criticized by both Brexiteers, who want a cleaner break from the bloc, and the European Union. McLaren Automotive is looking at having its cars certified by both a British and an EU agency to smooth sales. It is also planning to stockpile critical components and change shipments into the EU around Brexit if there is disruption. "I will sell a little more in January and February and plan to pick the volume up in May and give us a leaner period through the change point," Chief Executive Mike Flewitt told Reuters. BMW, which said last week it would move the annual summer-time shutdown of its British Mini plant next year to April, is looking for lorry parking areas and warehousing on both sides of the channel and is seeking to sign contracts to lease certain locations, a spokesman said. It is also investing in IT systems to handle any new red tape as carmakers estimate tens of thousands of new documents could be needed if tariffs and customs are imposed. The German carmaker's Brexit plans are costing millions of pounds, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters. But Honda, which builds 10 percent of Britain's 1.67 million cars at its Swindon plant in southern England, is not in the market to buy "huge amounts of warehousing space," its Europe boss Ian Howells told Reuters. "It's been a very precise calculation or estimation of what components need to be brought in," he said, adding the firm could also alter its output to sell more into the EU at the start of next year. Waste of money? Many British carmakers have also asked suppliers to look into how they would handle delays at ports, executives told Reuters, as thousands of parts, engines and finished models move between Britain and the continent every day.

Two rare Alpina BMWs given the Petrolicious treatment

Tue, 22 Jan 2013

Alpina is getting more and more ink because of because of that rolling cannonade known as the B7 and its closer ties with BMW. The company's tuning business dates to 1962 when Burkard Bovensiepen began fiddling with Weber carburetors, then his company began racing in 1968 and was eventually certified as an automaker in 1983.
Two of its rarer specimens from those early years have gotten a glance from the folks at Petrolicious: the E24 B10 and E24 B7S. Based on the BMW 6 Series, the Alpina versions made one of the most special coupes from the Eighties even more so. According to the video, there were only 44 B10s made, and the turbocharged, 333-horsepower B7S - this was in a luxury coupe in 1982, mind you - saw only 33 examples produced.
You won't be sorry to find out more about them - and see how they run - in the Petrolicious video below.

Why won't automakers slap on a turbo badge anymore?

Thu, Sep 10 2015

Where have all the turbos gone? Not the actual pieces that go in the engine, mind you, those are everywhere these days as automakers downsize cylinder counts and boost efficiency and CO2 claims. But the turbo badges and fanfare are missing. Back when turbos were something to get excited about there was "turbo-driven," "turbonium," and "The Turbo Zone," among other silly lines. But now that basically every car is getting some sort of boost even on the lowliest trims, automakers are almost sliding in the turbos under the radar. Or if you look at some of the nomenclature, pretending they don't exist at all. The 911 Turbo badge shows where the car goes from being sane to lunatic. It's an important border. The latest automaker to hide that it has boosted the turbo presence is Porsche with the 2017 911 lineup. Even the standard Carrera models now get turbocharged flat-six engines, meaning the 911 Turbo models aren't quite as special as they once were. Porsche is in a sticky situation with this. The 911 Turbo, after all, signifies where the 911 family takes off from being a sports car and becomes the Ferrari fighter. The 911 Turbo badge shows where the car goes from being sane to lunatic. It's an important border, but now Porsche has crossed it and is trying to downplay the fact. There are a lot of exaggerations with displacement badges today, with claims the 2.0-liter turbo four in a Mercedes C Class equates to a naturally aspirated 3.0-liter six to make a C300. Volvo is pretty far up there, too, saying an XC90 T8 means V8 power, even though it's a 2.0-liter turbocharged and supercharged four with electric assist. I don't know why BMW can't just call the car a 330i Turbo, rather than inflating the numbers up to 340i. Saab tried all of this back in the '90s when it decided to turbocharge its entire lineup, from light pressure units all the way up to models actually called "Saab 9-3 HOT" (for high-output turbo). But then the brand deleted any external reference to the turbo under the hood and people wondered why they were buying a $42,000 four-cylinder convertible. And that didn't turn out well. Even though these turbo replacements often make more power than their naturally aspirated predecessors, they're very different engines. People knew something changed when they exchanged their leased 328i with a 3.0-liter six for a 328i with a 2.0-liter turbo four.