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

1983 Ferrari 308 Gtsi With 26848 Original Miles. on 2040-cars

US $32,500.00
Year:1983 Mileage:26848
Location:

Southampton, New York, United States

Southampton, New York, United States
Advertising:


1983 Ferrari 308 GTS Quattro

Buy it today, call: 631-283-8819.

This is a 1983 Ferrari 308 GTSi with 26848 original miles. This car is a great value Ferrari and comes in the classic Ferrari color combination. Car comes with a service file and original tool kit. For more details call 631-283-8819


Stock: 42417

Color: Red

Interior color: Tan

VIN: ZFFMA13AXD0042417

Transmission: MANUAL

Body style: GTSi 

Year: 1983

Engine: 8 CYLINDER

Miles: 26848

For more details call 631 283 8819

For more details call 631 283 8819

For more details call 631 283 8819

For more details call 631 283 8819

For more details call 631 283 8819

For more details call 631 283 8819

Auto Services in New York

Walton Service Ctr ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 1634 State Route 54, Bluff-Point
Phone: (315) 536-6928

Vitali Auto Exchange ★★★★★

Used Car Dealers, Wholesale Used Car Dealers
Address: 236 Main St, Owego
Phone: (607) 797-7900

Vision Hyundai of Canandaigua ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, New Car Dealers, Used Car Dealers
Address: 2440 Rochester Rd Rte 332, Bloomfield
Phone: (585) 394-3800

Tony B`s Tire & Automotive Svc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Tire Dealers, Brake Repair
Address: 684 Main St, Port-Crane
Phone: (607) 729-8670

Steve`s Complete Auto Repair ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 425 E John St, Wyandanch
Phone: (631) 669-2189

Steve`s Auto & Truck Repair ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 6060 Route 353, Otto
Phone: (716) 938-9130

Auto blog

Ferrari releases teaser video for 458 Speciale

Thu, 22 Aug 2013

As is the specs weren't enough, Ferrari is helping us get ready for the reveal of the 458 Speciale at the Frankfurt Motor Show with a short teaser video. You won't get much in the way of a full-body modeling session, naturally, but there are plenty of close-ups of its intakes, scoops, vanes, seriously racy bucket seats and lots and lots of carbon fiber.
And showing how omnipresent on-camera surveillance can sometimes be a good thing, the harder 458 has already been caught being tinkered with in digital photos taken at Maranello. For the moving pictures, however, there's that video below.

Max Verstappen wins rain-soaked German Grand Prix

Sun, Jul 28 2019

HOCKENHEIM, Germany — Max Verstappen won a chaotic and rain-soaked German Grand Prix on Sunday as championship leader Lewis Hamilton finished 11th and his Mercedes teammate Valtteri Bottas crashed near the end. Verstappen kept his composure on a treacherous track to clinch his second victory this season and seventh of his Red Bull career, topping a surprise podium ahead of Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel — who started from last — and Toro Rosso driver Daniil Kvyat. "It was amazing to win, it was really tricky out there, you had to be focused," Verstappen said. "It was about trying to not make too many mistakes. You learn over the years. I'm very happy with the result." Following this week's crushing heatwave, wet weather caused Hockenheimring havoc as drivers took up to six pit stops for new tires and several crashed at the same spot where a section of tarmac was notoriously slippery. Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc was in contention for a podium, despite starting from 10th, but crashed after switching for quicker tires and slid off the track, over the gravel and into the barriers. Remarkably, Hamilton had the same mishap moments later, mangling his front wing after losing control at the same corner. He came in for a new wing and tires, but it took Mercedes by surprise and a painfully long stop cost him any chance of victory. For Vettel it was a remarkable turnaround, and almost the opposite to last year — when he crashed near the end after leading the race from pole position and Hamilton won, having qualified only 14th. "It was a lot of fun, it was very tough to read what the smartest move was in the conditions," Vettel said. "I stayed tidy in the whole race. Congratulations to Max, he was superb." The red-clothed Ferrari mechanics and engineers mobbed the four-time F1 champion, doubtless relieved after the team's botched qualifying on Saturday. Vettel could not even get out on track to set a time and Leclerc's qualifying bid was undone late in the session, forcing him to start 10th. For Kvyat it was a third career podium but, above all, a point proved. The 25-year-old Russian driver was ruthlessly replaced at Red Bull by Verstappen after just four races of the 2016 season, and could not even get a seat in F1 last year. "Amazing to be back on the podium," Kvyat said. "The race was crazy. Incredible roller-coaster, like my whole career." The track was drenched by the time the race started. For safety reasons, a safety car was deployed.

Ferrari production to increase under Marchionne

Sun, 14 Sep 2014

The head of any company has to juggle the relationship between supply and demand. Of course, that applies to automakers too, even ones as high-end as Ferrari. And as with many other decisions, the way Ferrari has addressed supply and demand has come down principally to the principal.
Enzo Ferrari may have only wanted to sell as many vehicles as he needed in order to fund his company's racing department, but with the F40 - the last model made under his watch - Ferrari ended up increasing supply to meet growing demand. However, after Luca di Montezemolo took over in the wake of Enzo's passing, he started constricting supply. He figured Ferrari could sell 400 units of the F50, for example, so he built 399. More recently, Montezemolo undertook a course of action that spread Ferrari into more markets, while simultaneously constricting supply to increase demand and thereby profitability.
It's been a winning formula for Ferrari. Just days ago, the company announced record earnings up by 14.5 percent in the first half of 2014 over the same period last year, which itself had seen a 7.1-percent increase over the year before. Clearly the strategy has worked, but Montezemolo's successor is already eying a different approach.