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

2013 Chrysler 300c Luxury Edition Hemi, Cooled Seats! Loaded! Trade-in Price! on 2040-cars

US $28,500.00
Year:2013 Mileage:28850 Color: and Black leather interior
Location:

Huntersville, North Carolina, United States

Huntersville, North Carolina, United States
Advertising:

ASKING NADA TRADE-IN PRICE!  Here is your opportunity to purchase the only private owned 2013 Chrysler 300c that is for sale in NC! I lost my job and must sell!

 2013 Chrysler 300c Luxury Edition 5.7 HEMI w/eco mode and cylinder deactivation, Automatic step-tronic trans, Only 28k miles, Granite Crystal Metallic exterior and Black leather interior.

These have been redesigned in 2013 by Mercedes/chrysler top to bottom and have incredible quality, fit and finish, and refinement compared to past Chrysler vehicles. You will be very shocked your not sitting in a $70k mercedes! Get 28mpg on highway with almost 400hp!

 Optional Equipment: Luxury Edition Group - Rear Power Sunshade, Heated Steering Wheel, Heated Second-Row Seats, Heated/Cooled Front seats and Console Cup Holders, Bi-Xenon HID Headlights with LED running lights, Front and Rear LED Map Pockets/door pulls, Power Tilt/Telescoping Steering Column, Auto Adjust-in-Reverse Exterior Mirrors, Power Adjustable Pedals with Memory, Auto-Dimming Exterior Mirrors; Door Sill Scuff Pads; Trunk Mat; Uconnect 8.4N and CD/DVD/MP3/NAV, Alpine sound system with amplifier and subwoofer,  steering wheel controls, 18" Chrome Sport wheels with Touring tires

 This is the perfect option if you're in the market for a new car, without the sticker price!
 Sticker price new: $39,850

 Never wrecked, painted, or funny business. Clean title in hand and paid off!

 Click link for value:
http://www.nadaguides.com/Cars/2013/Chrysler/300/Sedan-4D-300C-Luxury-V8/Values

Brendan

704-458-6343

 SERIOUS BUYERS ONLY! DO NOT CALL or "buy it now" UNLESS YOU HAVE THE MONEY! DONT WASTE BOTH OF OUR TIMES! THANK YOU

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Auto blog

Are old airbags killers?

Sat, Jul 25 2015

Takata airbags may not be the only ones with some very serious problems. A new report from TheDetroitBureau.com claims that the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has opened its second investigation into bad airbag inflators, and this time, they aren't from Takata. The focus of this latest case is on the airbag inflators in some 500,000 older Chrysler Town and Country minivans and Kia Optima sedans, all of which come from ARC Automotive. While the Takata case looks at problems stemming from the engineering and production process, the ARC investigation focuses on the age of the inflators. As TDB explains, airbag inflators are essentially what the military refers to as shaped charges, sort of like Claymores (for fans of the Call of Duty series). In combat, they blow up in a specific direction, protecting those behind the explosion, although in the case of airbags, the explosion "[creates] a precise rush of hot gases" that inflate the bags. NHTSA's worry is that with the increased average age of today's vehicles, years and years of being bounced, jolted, and shaken about and exposed to often-radical temperature changes have altered the nature of the explosives in these vehicles, causing too big of an explosion. "It may be a reasonable assumption that as these things age they deteriorate." – Analyst George Peterson "It may be a reasonable assumption that as these things age they deteriorate," analyst George Peterson told TheDetroitBureau.com. NHTSA boss Mark Rosekind backed up aging angle. "Cars are lasting on the road a lot longer than ever before," Rosekind told TDB, adding that seals could start breaking down. "Is aging now an issue? That's part of the investigation going on." NHTSA has only identified two "incidents" so far, although according to Center for Auto Safety Director Clarence Ditlow, there's genuine concern that there could be additional unidentified cases. "Could we have missed more? That could be the case," Ditlow told TDB, citing the misidentified deaths in the Takata investigation. Ditlow was quick to point out that, even in older vehicles, airbags are much more likely to protect than harm. "No one is saying you should disable your airbags," the safety advocate told TDB. "You're far more likely to be helped than hurt by one if they go off." At least one automaker, meanwhile, has already been advised of the investigation by NHTSA and is checking its airbags.

Chrysler nets $1.6B income in Q4, Fiat profit up 5%

Wed, 29 Jan 2014

Chrysler announced its 2013 financial results today and unveiled its new name and decidedly bank-like logo. Amid the announcement, Chrysler posted big gains in income, while Fiat didn't perform to analysts' expectations.
For 2013, Chrysler had revenue of $72.1 billion, up 10 percent from 2012. Net income reached $2.8 billion, a 65-percent increase. It was the company's third straight year of annual profits.
In terms of unit sales, Chrysler sold 2.4 million cars worldwide in 2013, up 9 percent. According to Automotive News, 1.8 million of those vehicles were sold in the US, a 14-percent increase. The sales growth boosted Chrysler's US market share to 11.4 percent, up 0.2 percent.

Marchionne recruiting activist investors to prompt GM merger

Tue, Jun 9 2015

Sergio Marchionne may have been rebuffed in his previous advances at General Motors, but he's not about to give up that easily. According to The Wall Street Journal, the Fiat Chrysler chief is now turning to activist investors to help coax GM into joining forces. Marchionne has been a staunch and ceaseless advocate of the need for consolidation, arguing that the industry needs to amalgamate into larger groups that will share resources and reduce overhead. Under his leadership, the Fiat group consolidated its own operations, and officially merged with Chrysler last year. But he's also been pursuing additional mergers with the likes of Volkswagen, Peugeot, Ford, and Opel (to name just a few). Now he's pursuing a merger with GM, which has not shown much enthusiasm towards the idea. For one thing, GM is a much larger company, and probably doesn't need FCA as much as FCA needs it. For another, it has a troubled past with Marchionne, who in 2005 dissolved an agreed merger (of sorts) with GM, yet still managed to get the General to pay Fiat some $2 billion in the process. However, Marchionne is evidently hoping that the intervention of activist investors could compel GM CEO Mary Barra and company to proceed with a merger anyway. For precedent, he's looking at the recent negotiation between GM and some of its stakeholders that prompted the company to buy back $5 billion of its own shares, demonstrating Barra's willingness to deal with investors. The more compelling precedent, however, may have been set in 2006, when activist investor Kirk Kerkorian locked arms with Carlos Ghosn to get GM to consider joining the alliance between Renault and Nissan. GM ultimately declined, and Ghosn turned instead of Daimler (which of course has its own history of having merged with Chrysler). Only time will tell if this initiative will prove more successful, but one thing's for sure, and that's that Marchionne isn't about to relent in his pursuit of a major merger partner.