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

2008 Mazda Mazda3 I Touring Value on 2040-cars

US $10,947.00
Year:2008 Mileage:97264 Color: Black Mica /
  Charcoal / Black
Location:

1810 S Main St, High Point, North Carolina, United States

1810 S Main St, High Point, North Carolina, United States
Advertising:
Fuel Type:Gasoline
Engine:2.0L I4 16V MPFI DOHC
Transmission:4-Speed Automatic
Condition: Used
VIN (Vehicle Identification Number): JM1BK32F081182648
Stock Num: S39801
Make: Mazda
Model: Mazda3 i Touring Value
Year: 2008
Exterior Color: Black Mica
Interior Color: Charcoal / Black
Options:
  • 4 Door
  • AM/FM/Satellite-capable Radio
  • Audio controls on steering wheel
  • Body-colored bumpers
  • Bucket front seats
  • Cargo area light
  • Center Console: Full with covered storage
  • Clock: In-radio display
  • Cloth seat upholstery
  • Coil front spring
  • Coil rear spring
  • Cupholders: Front and rear
  • Digital Audio Input
  • Door pockets: Driver
  • Door reinforcement: Side-impact door beam
  • Dual vanity mirrors
  • Engine immobilizer
  • Floor mats: Carpet front and rear
  • Fold forward seatback rear seats
  • Four-wheel Independent Suspension
  • Front and rear suspension stabilizer bars
  • Front Head Room: 39.1"
  • Front Hip Room: 53.8"
  • Front Leg Room: 41.1"
  • Front reading lights
  • Front Shoulder Room: 54.9"
  • Front Ventilated disc brakes
  • Fuel Capacity: 14.5 gal.
  • Fuel Type: Regular unleaded
  • In-Dash single CD player
  • Independent front suspension classification
  • Independent rear suspension
  • Instrumentation: Low fuel level
  • Integrated roof antenna
  • Left rear passenger door type: Conventional
  • Max cargo capacity: 11 cu.ft.
  • Mechanical remote trunk release
  • Multi-link rear suspension
  • Overall height: 57.7"
  • Overall Length: 177.4"
  • Overall Width: 69.1"
  • Passenger Airbag
  • passenger and rear
  • Privacy glass: Light
  • Rear bench
  • Rear center seatbelt: 3-point belt
  • Rear door type: Trunk
  • Rear Head Room: 37.4"
  • Rear Hip Room: 52.5"
  • Rear Leg Room: 36.3"
  • Rear seats center armrest
  • Rear Shoulder Room: 54.0"
  • Rear Stabilizer Bar: Regular
  • Regular front stabilizer bar
  • Right rear passenger door type: Conventional
  • Seatback storage: 1
  • Seatbelt pretensioners: Front
  • Spare Tire Mount Location: Inside under cargo
  • Speed Sensitive Audio Volume Control
  • Speed-proportional power steering
  • Steel spare wheel rim
  • Strut front suspension
  • Suspension class: Regular
  • Tachometer
  • Tilt and telescopic steering wheel
  • Tire Pressure Monitoring System
  • Tires: Prefix: P
  • Two 12V DC power outlets
  • Variable intermittent front wipers
  • Vehicle Emissions: SULEV II
  • Wheelbase: 103.9"
Drive Type: FWD
Number of Doors: 4 Doors
Mileage: 97264

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Young`s Auto Center & Salvage ★★★★★

Automobile Parts & Supplies, Used & Rebuilt Auto Parts, Automobile Electrical Equipment
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Auto Repair & Service, Auto Transmission
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Phone: (336) 472-0755

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Auto blog

2014 Mazda3 configurator zoom-zooms to life

Thu, 29 Aug 2013

The 2014 Mazda3 is probably going to be on a lot of shopping lists, thanks to its striking good looks, clean interior treatment, fuel economy and driving character. If it happens to be on your personal list of new cars to test, you'll be happy to see that the configurator for Mazda's newest product has officially gone online.
In terms of build-your-own web items, configuring a 3 isn't much of a departure from the rest of the Mazda range. Most of the work comes from choosing one of the three trim levels - Sport, Touring and Grand Touring - and selecting either the 155-horsepower, 2.0-liter, Skyactiv four-cylinder or its larger sibling, the 184-horsepower, 2.5-liter, Skyactiv four. From there, a simple range of color and interior finishes are available, before a slim list of packages, options and accessories. Really, Mazda's made it easy to get through this build process.
Click on over to the configurator and take a look at the options, colors and prices for Mazda's newest five-door hatchback.

Mazda builds 4-millionth Mazda3

Tue, 25 Feb 2014

To say that the Mazda3 is a vital product for Mazda would be one heck of an understatement. In fact, the model line accounts for about 30 percent of the manufacturer's sales. Fortunately for Mazda, they're selling well.
These days, the Japanese automaker is building the Mazda3 (known domestically as the Axela) in Japan, China, Thailand and, as of last month, in Mexico. The company's expanded global production capacity has helped Mazda reach four million units of the Mazda3 sold around the world since the first model was introduced over ten and a half years ago.
Over the course of that decade since its introduction in June 2003, Mazda has gone through three generations of Mazda3, the newest model benefiting from the company's Skyactiv technology and even encompassing a hybrid model in the Japanese Domestic Market.

How Mazda got Skyactiv-X to work is incredible

Thu, Jan 25 2018

"Take everything you know about engines and turn it around," Mazda North America Vehicle Development Engineer Dave Coleman says, patiently and with a look of benevolent pity, as he's quizzed about the particulars of the company's new engine. The Skyactiv-X engine is enigmatic — and deceptively simple in operation. And the bottom line for American consumers is that they'll be able to buy a car (or crossover; we don't know yet what vehicle will first get it) by late 2019 that provides diesel-like fuel economy but runs on regular old gasoline. In between diesel and spark ignition, but it's neither To truly understand it, you have to dive into the contradictions. Take that regular old gasoline: Contrary to common sense, the lower the octane, the better it works. In the lab, the Skyactiv-X engine loves 80 octane. The lowest Americans get is 87, so the engine is tuned for that octane. Go higher and you lose some low-end torque. Coleman was right. It's hard to wrap your head around an engine that thrives just at the point when most gas engines would aggressively self-destruct. It uses a supercharger to pump additional air — but not additional fuel. It uses spark plugs to start a combustion cycle that normally doesn't need a spark. And, quixotically, it's not displacing Mazda's own American-market diesel engine, currently languishing in a seemingly endless hell of regulatory approval. More bizarre: Mazda is a tiny automaker facing real existential headwinds, and gasoline compression ignition is a massive challenge. GM and Hyundai announced compression ignition, or HCCI, projects (full name, homogeneous charge compression ignition) to great fanfare, but they never amounted to a production hill of beans, crippled by reliability issues or horrible vibrations. Worse, they only worked at an unusably narrow range — low RPMs and low loads. HCCI research improved direct-injection gas and diesel engine technologies for these companies, but HCCI itself remains untamed. The benefits of lean combustion Why even try to tame HCCI? The answer is much better fuel economy and lower emissions. Less burned carbon-based fuel, less carbon dioxide released. That's simple. But there are some thermodynamic reasons for the lean combustion you can achieve with compression ignition that are worth explaining. The ideal amount of fuel for a conventional engine to burn is about a 14:1 air-to-fuel ratio. That lets every molecule burn nicely, in theory.