2002 Dodge Ram 3500, 6 Speed, Cummins Diesel, 4x4, Needs Work, Repo, No Reserve! on 2040-cars
Anniston, Alabama, United States
Transmission:Manual
Vehicle Title:Clear
Sub Model: SLT
Make: Dodge
Exterior Color: Red
Model: Ram 3500
Interior Color: Gray
Trim: Base Standard Cab Pickup 2-Door
Number of Cylinders: 6
Drive Type: 4WD
Mileage: 148,570
You are bidding on a 2002 Dodge Ram 3500, 6 speed, 4x4, Cummins Diesel. It has 148k miles. The truck was a repo from Wells Fargo bank. I bought the truck just how it sits. The engine has been taken apart. The truck is very clean and is a southern truck, no rust. The hood and roof have paint fading on it and there is a spot on the door the paint was chipped off. One of the inside tires is blown. Interior is very clean, it has the normal Dodge dash cracking. I have pictured the parts that were in the truck when I got it and will go with the truck. It looks like everything to put it back together from what I can tell. This is a no reserve auction. If you are the last bidder you own the truck.
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Auto Services in Alabama
Tire City & Automotive Service ★★★★★
Tint Spectrum ★★★★★
Southern Armature Works Inc ★★★★★
Shorty`s Car Care ★★★★★
Pruitt Radiator & Auto Repair ★★★★★
Premier Truck Centers ★★★★★
Auto blog
The Dodge Demon isn't the only way to a 10-second quarter mile
Tue, Jul 25 2017The Demon's rear tires smoke, the front tires lift – and in under ten seconds (after having spent $85,000) you've covered a quarter mile. In short, we fully get the attention shown Dodge's SRT Demonstrator. With disruption the operative word of the times, it's good to see a representative of the movement coming from Detroit. The SRT Demon delivers disruption in spades. There is, however, a viable alternative – and it doesn't require getting on the list at your Dodge dealer. If you want to do 0-60 in under three seconds or the quarter mile in around 10, the folks at Honda, Kawasaki, Suzuki and Yamaha – with any of their one-liter superbikes – have you covered. The gestation of what we now know as the superbike came roughly a decade after the debut of the muscle car. It was in the early '70s, as emission and safety regulations – along with rising insurance premiums – decimated the ranks of Detroit's fastest that motorcycle makers found their magical, almost mystical momentum. Honda's CB750 four was arguably the first, followed soon by Kawasaki's Mach III and Z-1. After that, it was Katie-bar-the-door, with more horsepower offered by Japanese OEMs until, invariably, insurance premiums went higher and, during the last recession, 20-somethings couldn't get affordable loans or insurance. Today, Japan's Big Four are once again engaged in a horsepower war, fueled by the rising interest in MotoGP, along with the rising profits available when selling a $20,000 motorcycle. And if that $20,000 - $10K per wheel – seems high, simple math tells you it's less than half of what you'll spend per corner if buying Dodge's Demon. The specs tell the tale. The Demon, fattened by both its flared fenders and a platform dating from the George Bush administration, supports its 4,200+ pounds on a wheelbase of 116 inches. That's in contrast to Suzuki's GSX-R1000 – redesigned for 2017 – which puts its 443 pounds atop a wheelbase of just 56 inches. To maximize its Hemi-supplied 800+ horsepower, Dodge diverts the air conditioning from the Demon's interior to the engine, which makes racing on a summer evening (you guessed it) devilishly hot. On Suzuki's GSX-R1000 – or similarly-equipped superbikes – almost all of the air at 100+ miles per hour is directed at you. To further underscore the differences, know that the GSX-R1000 and its like-minded competition can turn a quick corner, while the Demon is hard-pressed to execute a U-turn at the end of a quarter-mile straightaway.
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1985 Dodge Omni GLH | eBay Find of the Day
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