1987 Jaguar Xj6 Base Sedan 4-door 4.2l on 2040-cars
Chattanooga, Tennessee, United States
Engine:4.2L 4235CC l6 GAS DOHC Naturally Aspirated
Vehicle Title:Clear
Body Type:Sedan
Fuel Type:GAS
For Sale By:Private Seller
Sub Model: XJ6
Make: Jaguar
Exterior Color: British Racing Green
Model: XJ6
Interior Color: Tan
Trim: Base Sedan 4-Door
Warranty: Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty
Drive Type: RWD
Number of Cylinders: 6
Options: Sunroof, Leather Seats
Power Options: Air Conditioning
Mileage: 91,400
1987 Jaguar XJ6
My father bought this car a couple of years before he died in 2008. It is a 1987 British Racing Green Jaguar XJ6 4 door sedan with 91,xxx original miles.
This car was owned by a lady in Atlanta who had it serviced at Nalley Jaguar. The service records are with the car. She traded the car at Nalley and an employee bought it for re-sale and my father bought it shortly after.
This car is a dream to drive. It handles well and has the luxury you expect from a Jaguar. The original leather is still very nice. Everything about this car is original –the wheels, radio, paint….. It has the bullet proof in line 6 cylinder engine.
The car has a sunroof but since it came out of storage, it doesn’t work. I ssuspect is a corrode switch, but don’t know. When my father bought the car, the a/c would work for about a week before it lost its charge. He did not pursue the repair. The original paint is beginning to show its age, but is very presentable. The chrome is still bright. Like most of the olds Jags, the headliner is beginning to droop.
All in all the car is a great driver with low miles and it comes with service records to show its maintenance.
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Jaguar I-Pace makes transition to production with hardly any changes
Fri, Mar 31 2017It looks like Jaguar designer Ian Callum wasn't kidding when he said the I-Pace concept was "a preview of a five-seat production car that will be on the road in 2018." Based on these spy photos, the production I-Pace will look darn near identical to the concept. The prototype seen above, in a unique and rather groovy green camouflage wrap, retains the swoopy cab-forward design of its concept predecessor. The headlights have the same shape and still sweep back nearly to the front wheel wells, and the door handles are still flush mounted ovals placed low on the doors. At the back, the crisp crease marking the trailing edge of the hatch is intact, as well as the triangular points on the rear spoiler. There have been a few minor changes here and there. At the front, the grille doesn't have quite as much depth as the concept, and the base of the front bumper doesn't have as aggressive an air dam. The big heat extractor vent in the hood is also gone. The rear bumper has also been rounded off a bit more with a simpler rear diffuser. The side glass is in production form, so now there are seams that show where the glass rolls down. It appears the rear doors will have quite a small glass opening, as the seam is roughly at the half-way point of the window. If the mechanicals of the concept end up as unchanged as this prototype's exterior, expect the production I-Pace to have a pair of electric motors that will produce 400 horsepower and 516 lb-ft of torque. Jaguar estimates these will propel the car to 60 mph in about 4 seconds. The motors will be supplied with power from a 90 kWh lithium-ion battery, which Jaguar says will provide a range of 220 miles. With a target date of 2018, we would expect to see the production model revealed at the end of 2017 or early in 2018. Related Video:
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Tue, 19 Nov 2013Forget Tawny Kitaen. If you want to make a Jaguar XJ rock, just do what this guy did: stuff a heavily modified and turbocharged General Motors V8 under the hood, and take it to the track.
The video calls this Series 1 XJ a sleeper, but with its open exhaust and obvious turbo whistle, the once-gentlemanly sedan is anything but. The owner says that the engine is GM LQ9 V8 that has been stroked to 402 cubic inches putting out around 720 horsepower with 12 pounds of boost (in standard form, this 6.0-liter V8 was used in the second-gen Cadillac Escalade). Check out the video below to see what that kind of power does for this classic Jaguar in the eighth-mile.
Jaguar CEO says people just don't want EVs right now
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