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

1999 Mazda B3000 Se Extended Cab Pickup 2-door 3.0l on 2040-cars

Year:1999 Mileage:263000 Color: White /
 Gold
Location:

Glen Burnie, Maryland, United States

Glen Burnie, Maryland, United States
Advertising:
Vehicle Title:Clear
Engine:3.0L V6 Cylinder Flex Fuel Capability
Fuel Type:FLEX
For Sale By:Private Seller
Transmission:Manual
Body Type:Extended Cab Pickup
VIN: 4F4ZR17V2XTM47594 Year: 1999
Warranty: Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty
Make: Mazda
Model: B-Series Pickups
Options: 4-Wheel Drive, CD Player
Trim: SE Extended Cab Pickup 2-Door
Safety Features: Driver Airbag, Passenger Airbag
Power Options: Air Conditioning
Drive Type: 4WD
Mileage: 263,000
Exterior Color: White
Interior Color: Gold
Number of Cylinders: 6
Condition: Used: A vehicle is considered used if it has been registered and issued a title. Used vehicles have had at least one previous owner. The condition of the exterior, interior and engine can vary depending on the vehicle's history. See the seller's listing for full details and description of any imperfections. ... 

Before we start if your feedback is zero call first before bidding. Thank you
Hello, up for sale is a used Mazda B3000 that needs repairs this truck has MOTOR PROBLEMS and the RADIATOR is cracked. 
This truck still runs but I think it may have head problems or a hair thin cylinder block wall crack.
A lot of people change the head gaskets and never check the inside of the cylinder wall, on the 3.0 there cracked and that pushes compression into the coolant area.

I never owned this truck as my personal truck I am a towing company and I brought it from a customer.

Anyone looking at this truck may know about the 3,0 motor and sometimes the first sign of a head or hair line cylinder wall problem is a cracked radiator because of the pressure build up from engine compression getting into the coolant walls and cracking the radiator and then it is slowly down hill from there.

When I started the truck there was a lot of white smoke for about 1 minute. and then it went away. at first I thought it was just condensation

But I want to sell this truck with the buyer understanding the worst case scenario.
The other problem I see it the damage to the left front, it looks to me if you replace the bumper the other parts can be bent back into shape without having to repair or paint them.

 After the first bid is placed I am going to take the clear title I have and put it into my name so I can sign it over to you, this process will take 10 days to get the new title in the mail.
I will not take any money until I have the new title.
But I would need the truck picked up within 3 days after the new title comes.

The truck will need to be towed away NO DRIVE AWAY FOR TWO REASONS.

1. I don't think you will make it far because of the motor problems and cracked radiator.

2. If the truck is in my name, that makes me liable for driving a vehicle not registered without insurance. I will not chance that I will not sell it even if you won it, please don't asked 

If you need it towed, let me know and I will give you a discount rate.

The miles are high but I think with some work this would make a nice pickup truck.

It looks like the last owner was trying to take care of it.

Thank You
Good Luck

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Four automakers agreed to a $553 million settlement to address class-action economic loss claims covering owners of nearly 16 million vehicles with potentially defective Takata airbag inflators, according to court documents filed on Thursday. Toyota's share of the settlement costs is $278.5 million, followed by BMW at $131 million, Mazda at $76 million and Subaru at $68 million. According to a press release from Plaintiffs' Committee for Takata Airbag Product Liability Litigation, the funds for the settlement are aimed at getting more cars with faulty airbags fixed. At the time of writing, Toyota had the greatest recall completion percentage of 31.89 percent followed by Subaru with 31.37 percent. Mazda has completed repairs on 18.16 percent of affected cars, and BMW brings up the rear with 16.48 percent completion. Some settlement funds will go to an outreach campaign to increase awareness, while other funds will be used to reimburse people for any costs accrued to get their cars fixed. These costs can include rental cars, child care, lost wages, or any other reasonable costs associated with bringing in a vehicle for repairs. Furthermore, a customer support program will be funded with settlement money to handle any additional repairs or adjustments that could become necessary in the 75,000 miles following the airbag replacement. Lawsuits against Honda, Ford and Nissan have not been settled, lawyers said. Takata inflators, which can explode with excessive force and unleash metal shrapnel inside cars and trucks, are blamed for at least 16 deaths and more than 180 injuries worldwide. The safety defect has prompted recalls worldwide of about 100 million inflators by more than a dozen major automakers. Reporting by David Shepardson, additional details by Autoblog's Joel StocksdaleRelated Video: Government/Legal BMW Mazda Subaru Toyota

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Mazda has a long motorsports history, and one that is peppered with fascinating cars. The latest chapter in Mazda's racing story has just been written, as Joel Miller and Andrew Carbonell have driven the Visit Florida Racing Mazda6 Skyactiv-D to the car's first ever victory at the Rolex Grand-Am GX race at Road Atlanta. The win marks the first ever for Mazda's diesel-burning, production-car based Skyactiv-D racer, and the first win for a diesel-powered car in a Grand-Am event.
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How Mazda got Skyactiv-X to work is incredible

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"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.