2002 Silver 4-door Sedan, Body & Interior In Good Condition on 2040-cars
Ochelata, Oklahoma, United States
This car is a 2002 Saturn L-series with a V6, 4L engine. The timing belt broke on it, and the engine jumped time. For the right person with the appropriate skill set, it could be repaired and driven for many more years. Or it could be used for parts. The exterior and interior are in good condition with only a few minor flaws. The tires on the car are almost brand new, just replaced in 2/2014. The air conditioning and heating run beautifully. The seats are leather, and the front seats are heated. There is a moonroof. Power locks and windows. Cruise control. Spacious.
|
Saturn L-Series for Sale
- 2001 saturn lw300 power 4-door 3.0l **super clean car**
- L-200 auto 2.2l cd 2.2 liter 4 cylinder engine 4-cyl 4-speed a/t a/c automatic(US $4,499.00)
- 2003 saturn l-series l200 sedan automatic 4 cylinder no reserve
- Beautiful car, ready for the road(US $18,000.00)
- 1999 bmw 528i silver, very good, sedan, sunroof, low miles!(US $4,995.00)
- 2003 saturn l200 base sedan 4-door 2.2l
Auto Services in Oklahoma
U-Haul ★★★★★
Tulsa Auto Service & Sales ★★★★★
Topline Autoworks ★★★★★
Tobler`s Automobile Service Center ★★★★★
Specialized Auto Sales ★★★★★
Smart Auto Wholesale ★★★★★
Auto blog
VIDEO: Saturn's demise? We blame Jim Gaffigan*
Fri, 02 Oct 2009
Click above to view the video after the jump
When the deal to sell Saturn to Penske Automotive fell through, there were likely a lot of surprised people at General Motors' Detroit, MI headquarters. Penske released a statement saying that the reason the deal fell through after months of good faith negotiations was that a suitable post-GM supply of vehicles could not be found. However, after reacquainting ourselves with over eight minutes of outtakes from Jim Gaffigan's old Saturn commercial, we're thinking the comedic pitchman is to blame.
Report: Saturn owners offered $2,000 to stick with GM products
Mon, 15 Feb 2010After its decision to euthanize Oldsmobile, General Motors knows exactly what happens when it mothballs one of its brands: GM loses market share to the competition. The General is trying to stop history from repeating itself with Saturn customers by offering $2,000 on the hood of every car and crossover donning the ringed planet badge. Automotive News says the offer actually started on February 2 and runs until the end of March. To be eligible for the $2,000 bounty Saturn owners must have leased or purchased their Saturn at least six months ago. Interestingly, those owners don't even have to turn in their Saturn to be eligible for the cash.
AN reports that research company R.L. Polk says even before Saturn went on the endangered species list, it lagged other GM nameplates in the all-important aspect of customer retention. The mass exodus from Saturn loyalty predictably intensified at the end of 2008 as customers became anxious over the future of the brand. For its part, GM insists that all Saturn warranties will be upheld and customers looking for service can still go to a GMC, Chevy, Buick or Cadillac dealership.
[Source: Automotive News - sub. req.]Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Recalled Saturn Ion facing separate federal safety probe
Fri, 21 Mar 2014General Motors may be staring down another recall campaign for one of its models already embroiled in its high-profile ignition recall. The 2003-2007 Saturn Ion is already among the 1.6-million vehicles being recalled for faulty ignition switches, and now new light is being shed on a National Highway Traffic Safety Administration investigation over 2004-2007 models centering on a loss of power steering.
The government safety regulator has received 846 complaints about the problem and claims that GM has had 3,489 reports of failure. Of those cases, there have been 16 accidents and 2 injuries reported, according to Automotive News. While NHTSA has been conducting an investigation since September 2011, no recall has been issued yet.
The inquiry's length was brought to light by an organization called the National Legal and Policy Center that alleges GM and NHTSA have known about the problem but are delaying a recall. It has sent a letter to CEO Mary Barra asking "to recall Saturn Ions for the model years 2004 through 2007 without further delay." The letter in question is available in full on the group's website.