1984 Chevrolet K10 Scottsdale 1500 350 Engine 4x4 on 2040-cars
Barre, Vermont, United States
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This 1984 Chevy Silverado K10 4x4 nicknamed "The Texas Beast" is a great truck in need of a good home. While it was born in Canada, it was raised in South Texas and we brought it up with us to Vermont about 2 years ago. This truck has been a part of the family for almost 20 years. While we would love to keep it ourselves, we have realized that we just do not have a good place to properly care for this truck at this time. It is 100% driveable and until last week was being driven back and forth to work 5 days a week, and we recently took it with us on a camping trip. We currently have it parked and ready to go to its new home. It has a CB radio, but may need new antenna, a locking tonneau cover, dual fuel tanks, heater works great, a/c works great, driver side power lock works, and tires are in good shape. This truck was well cared for and maintained and had only one other previous owner. Great to drive as is, or to take in as a project to restore.
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Buick takes top spot in 2022 J.D. Power Initial Quality Study
Tue, Jun 28 2022People, economies, and supply chains weren't the only things continuing to get sick over the past year. The 2022 J.D. Power Initial Quality Study (IQS) is out, showing the average rate of problems per 100 vehicles (PP100) during the first 90 days of ownership increased overall. The average figure for the 32 ranked manufacturers in 2020 was about 166 problems per 100 vehicles. In the 2021 IQS, that dropped to an average of 162. This year, the average jumps to 180 problems. J.D. Power says that figure is a record high over the 36-year history of the study. Buick leapt to the top of the rankings this year with the fewest issues, at 139 problems per 100 vehicles in the first 100 days of ownership. After Dodge became the first American automaker to lead the IQS in 2020, followed by Ram in 2021, this year marks a three-peat for U.S. carmakers. Dodge took second this year at 143 PP100, Chevrolet third with 147 PP100, Genesis the first luxury maker on the chart in fourth with 156 PP100. Between February and May, this year's study gathered responses to 223 questions from more than 84,000 new 2022-model-year car owners and lessees. The questions are designed to zero in on real-world problems new owners encounter with nine categories of vehicle features: Infotainment; features, controls and displays; exterior; driving assistance; interior; powertrain; seats; driving experience; and climate. As has been the case in the past few year, infotainment has proved to be the most problematic bugbear making scores worse. Considering features individually, six of 10 of the worst problem areas dealt with infotainment, causing infotainment's score of 45 PP100 to be 19.5 PP100 worse than the second-placed feature. Consumers ranked getting Android Auto and Apple CarPlay to connect reliably as the most troublesome. GM didn't just score with Buick, which was one of only nine of the 33 ranked brands to show improvement this year. The conglomerate earned first place with the fewest PP100 among all the automaker groups, and scored the most model-level awards with nine, ahead of BMW with eight and Hyundai Group with three. This year's study again showed a gap between luxury and mass-market makers, thought to be down to the amount of tech in luxury vehicles that consumers aren't properly informed about or that doesn't act as expected — that latter issue exacerbated by the chip shortage.
Auto sales in March and first quarter down nearly across the board
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Nissan Leaf is now the best-selling plug-in vehicle of all time in US
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