Ford: F-150 Rocky Ridge Phantom on 2040-cars
Nunez, Georgia, United States
Message me at : agfwilliamsoverwhelming@ravemail.com
This is a gorgeous red and black 2014 F150 FX4 with a Rocky Ridge Phantom package. Truck has a professionally installed 6 inch lift with 20 inch wheels and 35 inch Mickey Thompson ATZ tires. It has black running boards and a black bull bar with custom high intensity lights on the bar. Inside is all leather with heated and cooled seats, navigation system with touch screen and Bluetooth, a 700 watt stereo upgrade, powered sunroof and a very cold AC. This truck also has a lifetime power train warranty as well and literally has every option except DVDs in the headrest. Truck has 27000 miles but it is my daily driver so it will go up. I am the original owner and it has never been off road. The Vargas lists one accident but I literally bumped someone from behind with the bull bar and it didnt even scratch my truck so there was no damage to the truck. Only reason I am getting rid of it is to buy an SUV. This truck retailed for over 65000 new and it still looks new. Good luck and thanks for looking.
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Auto Services in Georgia
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Auto blog
Why the Detroit Three should merge their engine operations
Tue, Dec 22 2015GM and FCA should consider a smaller merger that could still save them billions of dollars, and maybe lure Ford into the deal. Fiat-Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne would love to see his company merge with General Motors. But GM's board of directors essentially told him to go pound sand. So now what? The boardroom battle started when Mr. Marchionne published a study called Confessions of a Capital Junkie. In it, Sergio detailed the amount of capital the auto industry wastes every year with duplicate investments. And he documented how other industries provide superior returns. He's right, of course. Other industries earn much better returns on their invested capital. And there's a danger that one day the investors will turn their backs on the auto industry and look to other business sectors where they can make more money. But even with powerful arguments Marchionne couldn't convince GM to take over FCA. And while that fight may now be over, GM and FCA should consider a smaller merger that could still save them billions of dollars, and maybe lure Ford into the deal. No doubt this suggestion will send purists into convulsions, but so be it. The Detroit Three should seriously consider merging their powertrain operations, even though that's a sacrilege in an industry that still considers the engine the "heart" of the car. These automakers have built up considerable brand equity in some of their engines. But the vast majority of American car buyers could not tell you what kind of engine they have under the hood. More importantly, most car buyers really don't care what kind of engine or transmission they have as long as it's reliable, durable, and efficient. Combining that production would give the Detroit Three the kind of scale that no one else could match. There are exceptions, of course. Hardcore enthusiasts care deeply about the powertrains in their cars. So do most diesel, plug-in, and hybrid owners. But all of them account for maybe 15 percent of the car-buying public. So that means about 85 percent of car buyers don't care where their engine and transmission came from, just as they don't know or care who supplied the steel, who made the headlamps, or who delivered the seats on a just-in-time basis. It's immaterial to them. And that presents the automakers with an opportunity to achieve a staggering level of manufacturing scale. In the NAFTA market alone, GM, Ford, and FCA will build nearly nine million engines and nine million transmissions this year.
Ford reserving 50th Anniversary Mustangs for service members
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Daily Driver: 2015 Ford Flex
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