95 Dodge Stealth R/t 3.0l Dohc 5 Spd Fwd Sun Roof, P/w, P/d on 2040-cars
Meshoppen, Pennsylvania, United States
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Hi, I am selling my Stealth that I have had for many years. I bought it with only 60K miles on it with a bad clutch. I replaced the clutch in about three hours with my sons help. It's not a hard job. Well it needs a new clutch again. It comes with a new one in the box. I just don't have time with work and all my other projects going on. The car has been great at 222 HP stock. 27 MPG on the highway. It also handles tight, it grips the road like it glued down. The car is not perfect and does need some TLC, besides the clutch, it has a small amount of rust you can see in the pic.The brakes just went to the floor, so I believe a line blew out. it comes with a sirius radio but no stereo. Back like eight years ago I did hit a deer and the insurance company totalled the car. Well it was not that much damage. they listed parts at 800 for the hood, 806 for the headlight, and since they can not "fix" a wire harness that was 1000 to buy. I have pictures for the car after I hit the deer and how bad it really was. So I bought it back from the insurance co and fixed it myself. I did replace both headlights with the 94 glass ones and did the robo mod on them. it does have HID low beam headlights.
Please ask any questions. Thank you. |
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Auto blog
The Dodge Neon is alive!
Tue, Nov 6 2018"Holy crap! It's a new Dodge Neon! Like a new new one." Oddly, no one else on the Cancun resort shuttle seemed to notice. Or care. Ogling Mexican-market compact sedans is apparently something exclusive to automotive journalists on vacation. Yet there it was, fittingly on Dio de los Muertos, in all its resurrected glory. With a margarita in hand and an ocean in front of me, ignored, I turned my attention to my phone to get to the bottom of Neon version 3.0. Introduced for 2016, today's Dodge Neon is based upon and built alongside the Fiat Tipo/Egea, a C segment compact sedan co-developed by Fiat and Turkish industrial outfit Koc Holding. More than 125,000 were sold last year in Europe, with another 47,000 in Turkey. It's also sold in the Middle East and Africa, with Mexico alone getting the Neon version. Exterior styling is really the only difference, and then, only the crosshair grille manages to identify it as a Dodge. Then again, the same could be said for the not-so-dearly departed Dart, which belonged to the same segment. It was much bigger, though, with an extra 6 inches of overall length and 3 inches of wheelbase (which, as I just discovered, is "distancia entre ejes" en espanol). The Neon interior, not surprisingly, is pretty much the same as its Fiat siblings. The dash has two variations. A bigger, upgrade touchscreen resides in a dash-mounted, tablet-style infotainment pod, but the standard stereo head unit or 5-inch touchscreen upgrade fits into a binnacle shared with the instrument panel. It's a bit more like the Challenger, Charger, and yes, Dart in this regard, but in total, the Neon's cabin design is also less blocky and more organic in appearance. The switchgear is pure Fiat, but the steering wheel has the same control layout as Dodges, Jeeps and Chryslers. Power comes from the Challenger Scat Pack's 6.4-liter Hemi V8. No, it doesn't, I totally got you. The standard engine, dubbed FIRE, is a 1.4-liter naturally aspirated four-cylinder good for 95 horsepower and 94 pound-feet of torque. So, less than the Scat Pack. The optional engine, dubbed E.TorQ, which is in no way related to the Ram's eTorque mild hybrid system and not especially eTorquey, is a 1.6-liter naturally aspirated four-cylinder good for 110 hp and 112 lb-ft. Sadly, the Neon color selection is in no way neon, which probably doesn't matter since virtually every car on the Yucatan peninsula is painted white.
Daily Driver: 2015 Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat
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Dodge to resurrect Scat Pack?
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Automotive News is reporting that Chrysler recently renewed its trademark on the Scat Pack name, and while this is in no way a guarantee that the name will return, AN talked to Tim Kuniskis, Dodge President and CEO, who stoked the fire a little more. In the article, Kuniskis said that the name is "a very important part of our history" and added that "we like the whole idea of having a Scat Pack of cars." Scat Pack models were identified by their bumblebee stripes and helmet-wearing bumblebee logo, and the idea of a modern Scat Pack doesn't seem all that outlandish in light of recent vehicles like the Charger SRT Super Bee and the Ram 1500 Rumble Bee Concept.
What do you think, is this a cool idea, or is it just an unwelcome bit of nostalgia? Have you say in Comments.


















