1969 Camaro With Yenko Trim Beautiful Black With Red Interior California Car on 2040-cars
Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Body Type:Coupe
Engine:350
Vehicle Title:Clear
For Sale By:OWNER
Interior Color: Red
Make: Chevrolet
Number of Cylinders: 8
Model: Camaro
Trim: 2 DOOR HARDTOP
Warranty: Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty
Drive Type: REAR WHEEL
Mileage: 34,000
Power Options: Air Conditioning
Sub Model: YENKO
Exterior Color: TUXEDO BLACK
SUPER SHARP 1969 CAMARO IN BEAUTIFUL TUXEDO BLACK WITH RED YENKO STRIPES
BE SURE TO CHECK OUT THIS LINK TO MAY MORE DETAILED PICTURES OF THIS CAR :
| http://CLASSICAMERICANMUSCLECARS.fototime.com |
FOR A WALK AROUND VIDEO OF THIS CAMARO RUNNING FOLLOW LINK BELOW:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t7zoTQZkezU
PLEASE EMAIL DAN400GTO@HOTMAIL.COM OR CALL 513-615-5755 WITH ANY QUESTIONS
IF YOU NEED SHIPPING I HAVE A SHIPPING SOURCE THAT HAS VERY REASONABLE RATES AND SHIPS IN A TIMELY MANNER.
IF YOU NEED FINANCING HERE ARE SOME VERY GOOD SOURCES:
JJ BEST 1-800-USA-1965
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1-800-689-1789 CAPITAL ONE AUTO
TERMS:
Notice To Bidders: High Bidder to send $700.00 non-refundable deposit within 48 hours of the close of this auction. Funds to be paid with Certified Check, Bank Transfer, or Cash in person within 5 days of auction ending. All sales final. Vehicle is sold in "as is " condition. All inspections and confirmation of condition are the responsibility of the buyer. May sell to the highest bidder if reserve is not met and will entertain offers before end of auction. I reserve the right to terminate this auction at any time. Shipping costs are the responsibility of the purchaser but I will try to help anyway I can. Negative feedback bidders or ZERO feedback bidders please contact me before bidding. Do not bid unless you intend to buy. Thank you and good luck! You are entering into a legal binding contract to purchase the vehicle described above. If you do not intend to purchase this item, do not bid! Bidders must be able to pay cash or have all loans pre-approved before bidding on this vehicle! Unqualified bidding, Deadbeat bidding, or Auction interference will be subject to legal prosecution to the fullest extent of the law. Thank you very much for your understanding.
POSSIBLE CLASSIC CAR LOAN OPTIONS:
http://www.hagerty.com/finance/finance_index.aspx
http://www.woodsidecredit.com/
http://www.jjbest.com/
http://www.motorcarsfinancial.com/
BE SURE TO CHECK OUT THIS LINK TO MAY MORE DETAILED PICTURES OF THIS CAR :
| http://CLASSICAMERICANMUSCLECARS.fototime.com |
EMAILS TO DAN400GTO@HOTMAIL.COM OR CALL 513-615-5755 THANKS
NOTE: PLEASE CALL ME AT 513-615-5755 WITH ANY QUESTIONS OR OFFERS THANKS
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Auto Services in Ohio
Zig`s Auto Service ★★★★★
Zeppetella Auto Service ★★★★★
Willis Automobile Service ★★★★★
Voss Collision Centre ★★★★★
Updated Automotive ★★★★★
Tri C Motors ★★★★★
Auto blog
Chevy might've pulled out of NASCAR if it weren't for new Gen 6 car
Wed, 20 Feb 2013We've been on the fence with NASCAR for some time now. On one hand, it's some of the closest racing anywhere in motorsports, with actual passing and door-handle-to-door-handle action as a matter of course. But on the other, it's become template racing - a personality-driven sport more about the drivers than any sort of loyalty to a particular automaker. The Car Of Tomorrow format really rammed that message home, with a racecar's identity coming down to little more than headlamp stickers slapped on the nose. That's not necessarily a bad thing in and of itself, but we've wondered for some time what's in it for the automakers, who pay big money to stay in a series that has had little increasingly little do with street car sales, let alone innovation.
Apparently General Motors was beginning to wonder the same thing. In a new ESPN report, Rick Hendrick, team owner of Hendrick Motorsports, suggests that GM would have seriously considered leaving NASCAR if it wasn't for the move away from the COT to the new Gen 6 racer. According to Hendrick, GM North America boss Mark Reuss spearheaded the charge away from the 2007 COT and toward a racecar with clearer automaker ties - cars like the new Chevrolet SS racer shown above. Learn more about the fight for a closer-to-production look in the ESPN story at the link.
Now, if we could just get more rear-wheel drive V8 coupes into showrooms....
GM program sees dealers taking on way more loaner cars
Wed, Dec 17 2014Given the volume of vehicles we're talking about, this is a significant development for GM's bottom line. Bring your car into the dealership for service, and you may need a loaner car in exchange. And with so many recalls being carried out, that means a lot of loaners – especially at General Motors dealerships. That could be one of the reasons why GM is massively expanding its loaner fleet program. While many Chevrolet and Buick-GMC dealerships have an on-site rental car location operated by a third party like Enterprise (which may or may not provide a GM vehicle), others manage their own loaner fleets. But while the range of dealerships operating such fleets was once small, reports Automotive News, the number has been growing rapidly: from the locations responsible for only 20 percent of those brands' sales two years ago to about 90 percent today. The impetus for that growth comes down to a massive expansion of GM's Courtesy Transportation Program. The initiative encourages dealers to ramp up their loaner fleet to a maximum size determined by GM, with a mix determined by the dealer itself, so that a showroom in Texas can be bolstered with a fleet of pickup trucks and a dealer in California can employ more Volt and Camaro Convertible loaners. The dealership gets a $500 credit for each vehicle its puts in its fleet, and can use those vehicles as loaners for service customers, as multi-day test drivers or to rent out separately. The vehicles remain in the dealer's fleet for 90 days or 7,500 miles, then they can be sold as used, but with new-car incentives. The dealer gets a fleet of loaners, customers get to use the loaners, try out a new car overnight or buy a barely used car with attractive incentives, and GM gets to clock more sales. But therein lies the kicker: the automaker counts the dispatch of the loaner new vehicle to the dealership as a new-car sale, which could end up distorting its sales figures. Counting loaner vehicles as sold vehicles is something of an industry-standard practice, but given the volume of vehicles we're talking about, this is a significant development for GM's bottom line. One dealership - Paddock Chevrolet in Kenmore, NY, for example - had no loaner fleet two years ago, but now runs a fleet of 50 vehicles. Multiply that by the 4,000 or so dealers GM has across America and you're talking about the potential for hundreds of thousands of these sorts of sales.
General Motors and EVs: No stranger to firsts, but where's the leadership?
Tue, Apr 7 20152015 is already shaping up to be the year of "affordable, 200-mile EV" concepts. Nissan and Tesla have each been talking about them for some time, the latter promising to unveil its Model 3 at the North American International Auto Show in January before balking when the time came. Instead, Chevrolet beat them all by unveiling the Bolt concept at the same event, followed shortly thereafter with suggestions of a 2016 launch – potentially offering the first nationwide EV with anything close to that range. It was the ballsiest EV-related move General Motors has made in a quarter century. But will it remain so? Exactly 25 years before the Bolt rolled up onto the turntable, then-Chairman Roger Smith unveiled GM's last ground-up EV concept, the even-more-unfortunately-named Impact, at the Los Angeles Auto Show in January 1990. A few months later, he surprised most of his colleagues by announcing its intended production in honor of Earth Day. It was the first modern foray into electric vehicles for the US by any automaker, one that was rewarded by the State of California with what is now known as the Zero Emissions Vehicle mandate. The program not only forced other automakers into competing with Roger's pet project, but inspired all of them to fight it like small children against bedtime. Some years later, the drivers themselves weighed in, with a biting documentary about that obstinance and the leadership it cost both GM and the country. Within months, GM was first back into the fray of plug-in vehicles. Many criticized the company for starting with a PHEV rather than jump straight back into EVs. The choice wasn't totally out of the blue – even EV1 was meant to be followed by a PHEV. And especially on the heels of Who Killed the Electric Car?, some skittishness was understandable: even a successful EV would invite a "we told you so" public reaction, underscoring their mistake in ending the EV1 program. If a new EV didn't do well, they'd be convicted in the public eye as serial killers. All while seeking a federal bailout. For all the flak, the resulting Chevy Volt was and is a better car than GM has ever gotten credit for. But the company seemed to grow weary of having to overcome its varied past, and while the current owners remain happy, much of the stakeholder and community engagement that so effectively built early goodwill and sales growth faded not long after launch. Marketing has been spotty in both consistency and effectiveness.























