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

2002 Mercedes-benz C240 Base Sedan 4-door 2.6l on 2040-cars

US $6,300.00
Year:2002 Mileage:113500
Location:

Huntington Beach, California, United States

Huntington Beach, California, United States

2002 Mercedes Benz C240

-V6 Automatic
-113,200 Miles, that is an average of 9,000/year. (Industry avg is 12-15,000/year!)
-Kenwood 7" Entertrainment Center (Bluetooth, USB, Aux, Pandora)
-Sunroof/Moonroof
-Excellent transmission with no problems
-Engine with no leaks or squeals.
-Ice cold A/C

NEWLY ADDED

MOBIL-1 0-40 SYNTHETIC MOTOR OIL !!
NEW BRAKE PADS FRONT & BACK !!

THIS VEHICLE BEING SOLD ON BEHALF OF HUNTINGTON BEACH AUTO GROUP

CALL 562-506-7767 FOR ANTHONY OR 562-900-9504 FOR MICHAEL

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    Auto blog

    This woman owns the first Ford Mustang sold in the US

    Wed, 11 Dec 2013

    As Ford celebrates the 50th anniversary of the Mustang with the unveiling of the all-new sixth-gen design, one Chicago women can lay claim to a piece of Mustang history. According to CBS Chicago, Gail Wise was the first person in the US to buy a Mustang in 1964, and she did so two days before the car was even unveiled to the public.
    Wise, then a 22-year-old teacher, went into the Chicago Ford dealership wanting to buy a convertible, and a salesperson ushered her over to car covered by a tarp. That car was a baby blue Mustang convertible, which she still owns today - along with the documentation. After sitting for almost 30 years and undergoing a full restoration, the car now looks to be in original condition. The report says that this $3,400 purchase could be worth anywhere between $100,000 and $250,000. While this worked out well for Mrs. Wise, we wouldn't recommend anyone going into a dark, back room of a dealership hoping to get a jump on the purchase of a 2015 Mustang.
    Scroll down to watch the video report.

    Ford Explorer is America's new favorite police car

    Mon, 24 Mar 2014

    There is a new vehicle that you should keep an eye out for when you're going a little too fast down the Interstate. Ford's Explorer-based Police Interceptor Utility was the bestselling new law enforcement model in the country last year, and signs show that won't be changing anytime soon.
    Ford sold 14,086 Interceptor Utilities in 2013, up 140% from the year before, and 10,897 Interceptor Sedans, up 31%, according to USA Today. Overall, the brand's police sales were up 48 percent, and they were enough to boost the company's law enforcement vehicle market share by 9 points to nearly 50 percent.
    The success comes just a few years after it made the decision to finally retire the long-serving Crown Victoria-based cruiser for two more modern vehicles. "We had to reinvent the category," said Chris Terry of Ford Communications to Autoblog. The automaker had to convince police departments that a unibody chassis without a V8 could perform better than a model that had been a law enforcement staple for years.

    Ford talking unibody Ranger replacement

    Mon, 18 Feb 2013

    Now here's some welcome news. Car and Driver reports Ford is seriously mulling a replacement for the recently deceased Ranger, but the successor to the compact pickup's throne may not look anything like what we've seen from the nameplate in the past.
    While speaking at the 2013 Chicago Auto Show, Doug Scott, marketing manager for Ford Trucks, said there's still a market for a smaller pickup, but that buyers expect to see a larger differentiation between the smaller utility vehicles and their full size counterparts in price, capability and fuel economy.
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