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

87 Ferrari Mondial 3.2 Convertible 48k Miles Florida Car Full Service Just Done! on 2040-cars

Year:1987 Mileage:48561
Location:

Thornhill, Ontario, Canada

Thornhill, Ontario, Canada
Advertising:

As a proud eBAY member with 100% POSITIVE FEEDBACK - I am helping by friend sell his beautiful 1987 FERRARI MONDIAL 3.2 CABRIOLET IN EXCELLENT ORIGINAL CONDITION  WITH ONLY 48,000 MILES WITH FULL SERVICE JUST DONE!

This FERRARI MONDIAL 3.2 CABRIOLET just had a fresh NO EXPENSE SPARED FULL SERVICE BY BRETT AT GRAND TOURISMO!

For a full video of FERRARI MONDIAL 3.2 CONVERTIBLE - see the link below:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xZh-PEIRGh4


In my opinion THIS IS THE NICEST MONDIAL 3.2 CABRIOLET THAT I HAVE EVER SEEN - IT IS ABSOLUTELY STUNNING!

THIS IS WHAT WAS SPENT ON THIS FERRARI:

ENGINE: 

  • CAM BELTS
  • TENSIONERS
  • SUSPENSION
  • STEERING RACK
  • FUEL INJECTION SERVICE
  • professionally done at GRAND TOURISMO with fully documented invoices.

BODY/PAINT

  • The car is an original FLORIDA car and was never winter driven
  • Perfect gaps and the doors close like a new car!
  • No Rust
  • Nice glossy paint

FACTORY ORIGINAL INTERIOR

  • Totally original interior: TAN
  • EXCELLENT ORIGINAL FACTORY TAN INTERIOR - NOT PERFECT - HAS SOME WEAR & TEAR

THIS FERRARI RUN AND DRIVES PERFECT - YOU WILL SURPRISED HOW NICE IT DRIVES!

COMES WITH THE FOLLOWING:

BLACK TONNEAU COVER

BLACK BOOT COVER

SHIPPING

I WILL ASSIST THE BUYER IN SHIPPING ANYWHERE IN THE USA OR EUROPE OR ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD AT THE BUYER'S EXPENSE.

THIS IS A VERY RARE OPPORTUNITY TO BUY ONE OF BEST FERRARI 3.2 CABRIOLET!

PLEASE SERIOUS BUYERS ONLY AND YOU CAN REACH ME AT 289-597-3017

CHEERS!




Auto blog

2015 Austrian F1 Grand Prix switches to alternating current

Mon, Jun 22 2015

It's called the Red Bull Ring, guests are welcomed by a statue of a leaping bull, and dominating its layout demands powerful cars that can run it hard. Perhaps all that aggression is what led both Mercedes-AMG Petronas cars to run off the track in the final qualifying session on their final hot laps, a little too aggressive on the charge. Lewis Hamilton was first into the gravel at Turn 1 when he lost his car under braking, but he was still fast enough to get pole ahead of teammate Nico Rosberg, who spun at Turn 8. Rosberg started second. Or perhaps it wasn't the red bull but the scarlet horse that caused The Silver Arrows to muck it up: Ferrari driver Sebastian Vettel had Mercedes' attention all weekend, and he'd line up in third just 0.355 off Hamilton's time. Williams truly rediscovered its power, Felipe Massa going fourth fastest, teammate Valtteri Bottas in sixth. Between them was newly-minted Le Mans winner Nico Hulkenberg, yet again – can we say that enough? – pulling the still-not-updated Force India to fifth place on the grid. Max Verstappen led the Renault-powered top-ten duo in his Toro Rosso in seventh, Infiniti Red Bull Racing driver Daniil Kvyat behind him in eighth. Kvyat, however, would start down the order because of a ten-place grid penalty for needing a fifth Renault engine. After that it's back to Mercedes Ferrari power, Felipe Nasr in the Sauber in ninth, Romain Grosjean in with Mercedes power in the Lotus in tenth – but fellow Lotus driver Pastor Maldonado actually started in tenth because of Kvyat's demotion. Before we get to the race, can we take a moment to talk about the shenanigans and gaudy penalties? Kimi Raikkonen waved the Ferrari flag in Canada after a season that's been full of "We didn't get it right this time," and we thought he was back. But no. In Austria the refrain returned, the Finn kicked out of Q1 after another miscommunication with the team – he qualified 18th. If the scenario plays to form, we'll now wait for team boss Mauricio Arrivabene to issue a clarification that suggests Raikkonen missed a step. Daniel Ricciardo parachutes ten spots back for the same reason as his teammate Kvyat, needing a fifth Renault power unit, dropping him to 18th on the grid and forcing him into a five-second time penalty when he comes in to pit.

Hot Wheels loses Ferrari diecast contract to Chinese company

Thu, Dec 11 2014

If you're anything like this writer, chances are you've got a diecast model or two kicking around the house. And if one of those models replicates a Ferrari, chances are it's made by Hot Wheels. The Mattel brand secured an exclusive contract from the Maranello automaker in the late 1990s, but the latest word from Hemmings has it that Ferrari has ended its partnership with Hot Wheels and awarded it instead to the May Cheong Group. Unless you're an avid diecast collector, you may not have heard of May Cheong, but you may have heard of its brands Maisto and Bburago. Both brands are longtime players in the model car market, but it's the Bburago part of the deal that's particularly interesting. Founded in Italy, Bburago made a name for itself largely due to the scale Ferrari models it made back in the day. But when the Prancing Horse marque awarded the exclusive contract to Mattel, and with increasing competition from the Far East, Bburago collapsed. May Cheong swept in and scooped it up, and now the Italian model brand, along with its onetime rival Maisto, will be producing diecast Ferraris once again. Whether Bburago will use any of its old tooling to resume production of Ferrari scale models or start from scratch with all-new equipment remains to be seen, as does the matter of whether either it or Maisto will be able to produce the same quality of models as Hot Wheels has with some of its higher-end offerings. Like most collectors, this writer's looking forward to finding out. Looks like it's time to buy another display case.

Race Recap: Canadian F1 Grand Prix is one story with a thousand dramas

Tue, 11 Jun 2013

There were rain and wind and sun, sometimes all at once. There was the Wall of Champions. There was nothing happening in first place and nothing happening back in sixth during the race, but everywhere else - from the time the weekend began - it was surprises, passes, spins, more passing, flying carbon fiber and finally a couple more last-minute surprises. The Canadian Formula One Grand Prix was a proper race for all the right reasons... well, except for the part where the crowd booed the winner.