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

1997 Ferarri F355 Spyder W/ 19k Miles! No Reserve!!!! on 2040-cars

US $52,995.00
Year:1997 Mileage:19807
Location:

Bismarck, North Dakota, United States

Bismarck, North Dakota, United States
Advertising:

WHAT A NICE CAR! LOCAL CAR! GREAT CONDITION!
NO RESERVE!!!

The Ferrari F355 was built by Ferrari from May 1994 to 1999.

THIS FERRARI F355 ONLY HAS 19K MILES ON IT!

ONLY PRODUCED 2664 OF THESE CARS WITH A SIX SPEED MANUAL.
HAS BEEN FULLY DETAILED AND IS READY TO GO TO A NEW HOME.


**TIRES ARE ALL LIKE NEW WITH 9/32 - 10/32.

***ONLY A FEW MINOR BLEMISHES ON THE PAINT, COUPLE ROCK CHIPS IN THE LIP OF THE HOOD, AND A ON THE EDGE OF BOTH DOORS. VERY MINOR AND FIXABLE. THE POWER TOP IS HAVING AN ISSUE FOLDING BUT WE ARE CURRENTLY WORKING ON FIXING THE ISSUE. (CONTROL SWITCH ISSUE NOT MOTORS, TOP MOVES BUT DOES NOT GO BACK BEHIND THE SEATS.)

THIS CAR IS A BLAST TO DRIVE, AND GETS THE LOOKS!

CAR IS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE.


HAPPY BIDDING!
FEEL FREE TO EMAIL ANY QUESTIONS (PLEASE INCLUDE A NAME AND PHONE NUMBER FOR QUICK RESPONSE, OR ELSE I WILL EMAIL IN A TIMELY FASHION)

Auto Services in North Dakota

Steve`s Auto Repair ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Brake Repair, Auto Oil & Lube
Address: 212 S Bell St, Sterling
Phone: (701) 223-7055

Steele-Dawson Towing ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Towing
Address: Edmunds
Phone: (888) 279-5615

Steele Auto Body & Lube Center ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Auto Oil & Lube
Address: 102 1st St NE, Driscoll
Phone: (701) 475-2830

Vern`s Auto Sales ★★★★

New Car Dealers, Used Car Dealers
Address: 1495 Highway 5 NE, Souris
Phone: (866) 595-6470

Tim`s Automotive ★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: PO Box 88, Newburg
Phone: (866) 595-6470

Moorhead Auto Center ★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Used Car Dealers, Wholesale Used Car Dealers
Address: 1108 1st Ave N, Harwood
Phone: (866) 595-6470

Auto blog

Mercedes sues Ferrari-bound F1 engineer for stealing secrets

Tue, Dec 8 2015

Mercedes is suing one of its Formula One engineers, one Benjamin Hoyle, claiming he was planning to take sensitive data to a competitor. An experienced powertrain engineer, Hoyle came to Mercedes AMG High Performance Powertrains in 2012 with previous experience at Prodrive and Cosworth. One of four team leaders at the company, Hoyle headed up the performance application department until he notified his employers of his intention not to seek renewal of his contract that expires at the end of this year. Once they found out that Hoyle was switching to Ferrari, the higher-ups at Mercedes reassigned him to other, less sensitive duties, however Hoyle was reportedly discovered accessing race reports and other sensitive data relating to the performance of the team's engines. In response, Mercedes has filed suit against Hoyle, claiming that he "and potentially Ferrari have gained an unlawful advantage." The German automaker is seeking the return of all documents and the payment of its legal fees. It also seeks to prevent Hoyle from working for another F1 team throughout next season. Mercedes AMG High Performance Powertrains is the Daimler's F1 engine division. Based in Brixworth, UK, it was founded back in 1983 together with Ilmor before Mercedes bought it outright. Aside from the company's own works team, the outfit this year powered Williams, Lotus, and Force India, and previously worked with McLaren as well as Sauber. This is not the first time that a case of industrial espionage has emerged in F1. A similar controversy erupted in 2007 surrounding engineers Nigel Stepney and Mike Coughlan. The highly publicized incident became known as "Spygate" or "Stepneygate" and involved the illegal sharing of secrets between Ferrari, McLaren, and Renault. News Source: BloombergImage Credit: Martin Meissner/AP Government/Legal Hirings/Firings/Layoffs Motorsports Ferrari Mercedes-Benz F1 industrial espionage

The 2016 Spanish Grand Prix flipped all the scripts

Mon, May 16 2016

The Monaco Formula 1 Grand Prix circuit and the Hungaroring fly the flag for processional races, yet Spain's Circuit de Catalunya is arguably as bad. Before this weekend, the pole-sitter won the race 19 times out of the last 25 years. The front row of the grid produced 23 winners in the past 25 years. The racing gods edited that script this year, when a first-lap crash and two mid-race strategy changes kept things open until the end of the 66-lap race. It started when Mercedes-AMG Petronas teammates Nico Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton took each other out on Lap 1. After Rosberg passed pole-sitter Hamilton into Turn 1, Rosberg's car slowed through Turn 3, somehow in the wrong mode. Hamilton closed in on Rosberg so quickly that once the Brit ducked inside for the pass, he couldn't back out. Rosberg, however, closed the door so suddenly that Hamilton had no choice but to drive onto the grass. When Hamilton spun, he collected Rosberg and both Mercedes' ended up in the gravel trap. The stewards deemed it a racing incident. The crash put Red Bull teammates Daniel Ricciardo and Max Verstappen in the lead, followed by Toro Rosso driver Carlos Sainz and the Ferrari duo of Sebastian Vettel and Kimi Raikkonen. Both Ferraris cleared Sainz by Lap 10, leaving 56 laps for them to haul in the Red Bulls. Ferrari loosely followed Red Bull's pit strategies. Ricciardo pitted on Laps 11 and 28, Vettel pitted on Laps 15 and 37. Verstappen pitted on Laps 12 and 35, Raikkonen pitted on Laps 13 and 36. Pirelli predicted a three-stop race as the fastest and that the medium tire could only go about 23 laps. Verstappen and Raikkonen didn't get those memos. So while Ricciardo and Vettel came in for third stops the Dutchman and the Finn stayed out, with Verstappen ahead of Raikkonen at the front of the race as of Lap 43. That's when Verstappen – 18 years and 227 days old – proved how good a driver he is, lapping perfectly as second-place Raikkonen closed the gap to a little more than half a second. The Finn still couldn't get past the Dutchman down the pit straight even with the help of DRS, nor under braking at the only real passing opportunity into Turn 1. At the end of Lap 66 Verstappen crossed the line ahead of Raikkonen, a victorious end to Verstappen's first race weekend after being promoted to Red Bull. Further back, Vettel and Ricciardo fought for scraps, the German staying ahead to finish third.

Ferrari-Maserati dealer folds in Las Vegas casino

Thu, Oct 22 2015

The ten-year-old Penske Ferrari Maserati dealership located inside the Wynn resort in Las Vegas, where non-Ferrari owners had to pay $10 to walk among the cars, is closed. Word is that the Ferrari franchise is moving to Towbin Motorcars, which you'll know for being the home of the former "King of Cars," and more recently where Floyd "Money" Mayweather has bought 100 cars, including three Bugatti Veyrons. According to Ferrari Chat almost the entire Penske-Wynn staff will make the move, including the highly regarded service department. This being Las Vegas there are, naturally, various theories about why the only Ferrari franchise in the state of Nevada is leaving one of the state's marquee locations. We got a tip a month ago from reader Johnny Autos that Ferrari pulled the franchise, and if there is any truth to that, rumors at Ferrari Chat suggest it part of the reason could have been Steve Wynn flipping his LaFerrari before the 18-month no-sale period had elapsed. Wynn supposedly sold his $1.5 million supercar to Naples Motorsports in Florida for $3.5 million, Naples is asking $5 million for it and using it for the elementary school run in the meantime. On the other hand, Vegas Tripping says Wynn is letting the dealership go in order to get ready for the Alon – another casino – to open across the street in three years. That story believes Wynn will build a pedestrian bridge and rearrange shops on the Wynn side so that customers enjoy the kind of grand entry he would want. And then there's the theory that Penske is getting out of the Ferrari dealership business to focus on commercial trucks. No matter where the truth is in all of this, what matters to you is that you won't be able to spend $10 to check out Ferraris on the strip anymore. Which means more money for the penny slots.