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

2002 Mercury Sable Gs Series! 78k Miles Only Low Miles! on 2040-cars

US $3,175.00
Year:2002 Mileage:78763 Color: Mirrors
Location:

Belleville, New Jersey, United States

Belleville, New Jersey, United States
Advertising:

IMPORTANT NOTE: WE ARE A WHOLESALER. WE DO NOT GIVE ANY GUARANTEE; BUT WE SELL IT for $600/year. ALL OUR CARS ARE SOLD AS IS. NONE OF THEM HAS ANY MAJOR PROBLEMS, ALL RUN SMOOTHLY. THERE MIGHT BE SOME DETAILS THAT WE MAY MISS. THIS DOESN'T MAKE US BAD. PLEASE BE TOLERANT AND KEEP THAT IN MIND: WE ARE READY TO ANSWER ALL YOUR QUESTIONS BEFORE YOU BUY.
All items are sold locally; so the item that you are watching may end anytime, unless you 'buy it now' and make the deposit payment via PayPal. As all cars are 3, 5, 10, 15 years old, please be realistic and don't expect to get a perfect vehicle. If possible, we strongly suggest you to stop by our lot on 90 Washington Ave, Belleville, NJ 07109 and see the car, touch it, drive it and smell the inside of it by yourself. All NJ buyers need to pay %7 state sales tax, except the dealers. If you are out-of-state, we'll put a temporary plate or ship it to you at your own cost.
Please remember: In addition to the vehicle fee, you will be responsible for the document, processing and dealer fee, which is $200 per car.

Vehicle Features & Options
Standard Features
Comfort:
  • Front Air Conditioning
    Convenience:
    • Center Console
    • Cruise Control
    • Keyless Entry
    • Power Steering
    • Remote Trunk Release
    • Tilt-Only Steering Wheel
    Drivetrain /
      Suspension:
    • Power
      Entertainment /
        Telematics:
      • Cassette
      • Clock
      • AM/FM Radio
      • Tachometer
      Rims / Tires:
      • 16 Inch Wheels
      • Steel Rim
      Roof / Glass:
      • Intermittent Front Wipers
      • Power Windows
      • Rear Defogger
      Safety:
      • Anti-Theft Alarm System
      • Power Exterior Mirrors
      • Dual Front Airbags
      • Power Door Locks
      Seating:
      • Split-Bench Front Seats
      • Bench Seating
      • Cloth Upholstery

      Auto Services in New Jersey

      World Class Collision ★★★★★

      Automobile Body Repairing & Painting
      Address: 338 S Governor Printz Blvd, Paulsboro
      Phone: (610) 521-4650

      Warren Wylie & Sons ★★★★★

      Auto Repair & Service
      Address: 2 Red Hill Rd, Sussex
      Phone: (973) 293-8185

      W & W Auto Body ★★★★★

      Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting
      Address: 550 S Oxford Valley Rd, Delran
      Phone: (215) 946-3550

      Union Volkswagen ★★★★★

      New Car Dealers
      Address: 2155 US Highway 22 W, Fanwood
      Phone: (908) 687-8000

      T`s & Son Auto Repair ★★★★★

      Auto Repair & Service
      Address: 880 Route 9 N, Long-Beach-Township
      Phone: (609) 294-1500

      South Shore Towing ★★★★★

      Auto Repair & Service, Towing, Automotive Roadside Service
      Address: 311 S Main St, Ship-Bottom
      Phone: (609) 597-9964

      Auto blog

      Question of the Day: Most degraded car name?

      Fri, May 27 2016

      When Ford came up with a not-so-sporty version of the Pinto and slapped Mustang badges on it in 1974, that was a low point for the Mustang name. When Chrysler applied the venerable Town & Country name on perfectly functional but unglamorous minivans, it saddened many of us. But perhaps the biggest demotion for a once-proud model came when, in 1988, General Motors imported a misery-enhancing Daewoo from Korea and called it the Pontiac LeMans. The original Pontiac LeMans was a great-looking midsize car with fairly advanced (for the time) suspension design and engine options including potent V8s and a screaming overhead-cam straight-six. The Daewoo-based Pontiac LeMans was a cramped, shoddy hooptie that served only to ruin the LeMans name forever, while stealing sales from the Suzuki-based Chevrolet Sprint. Sure, using the once-respected Monterey name on the Mercurized Ford Freestar was bad, but Mercury didn't have long to live at that point. I say the downward spiral of the LeMans name was the most agonizing in automotive history. What do you think? Related Video: This content is hosted by a third party. To view it, please update your privacy preferences. Manage Settings. Auto News Ford Mercury Pontiac Automotive History Classics questions ford pinto names

      Junkyard Gem: 1989 Mercury Tracer Four-Door Hatchback

      Sat, Mar 6 2021

      During the life of the Mercury brand, which began in 1939 and ended in 2011, nearly every Mercury sold in North America was a cosmetically enhanced version of some Ford model also sold here. The exceptions to this rule came when Mercury sold Fords originally designed for non-North American markets, and for which no Ford-branded version existed on our shores. The 1991-1994 Capri was such a car, as was the 1999-2002 Cougar (the Mondeo-based Cougar was unique among all Mercuries in that no other cars in the sprawling Ford Empire shared its body). The 1970-1978 Capri was sold through Mercury dealers here, but never had Mercury badging. One of the rarest of all these Mercury cars was the first-generation Tracer, a Mazda design that made its way here via Australia. The bloodline of the Tracer goes back to the Mazda 323, the ancestor of today's Mazda3 and the platform used for all those US-market Ford Escorts of the 1990s. Starting in 1991, the Tracer name went onto badge-engineered Escorts, according to Mercury tradition, but the 1988-1989 Tracers were based on the Australian-market Ford KE Laser. Underneath all of those cars (as well as the early-1990s Capris) lived Mazda 323 running gear, of course. This one nearly made it to the 175,000-mile mark during its time on the road, which is respectable by the standards of 1980s Mazdas. With an automatic transmission transferring the 84 horses from its Mazda B6 engine to the front wheels, this car wouldn't have offered a great deal of driving excitement. 1989 Tracer buyers could choose between a two-door hatchback, a four-door hatchback, and a four-door wagon. Not many Americans hurried over to their local Mercury dealers to buy Tracers, despite the fact that the nearest Ford-badged identical twins were on the other side of the globe. Mercury still seemed relevant in the late 1980s, but its days were numbered. The actress driving the Tracer in this TV commercial seems to have the same deer-in-headlights facial expression of the hapless driver-training students in the 1968 AMC Rebel commercial.

      Junkyard Gem: 1992 Mercury Grand Marquis LS

      Thu, Nov 24 2022

      We've all been seeing the instantly familiar Ford Crown Victoria P71 Police Interceptor on North American roads for what seems like forever, though in fact the very first of the aerodynamic Crown Vics didn't appear until a mere 31 years ago. Yes, after more than a decade of boxy LTD Crown Victorias, Dearborn took the late-1970s-vintage Panther platform and added a brand-new, Taurus-influenced smooth body and modern overhead-cam V8 engine, giving us the 1992 Ford Crown Victoria. The rule was, since 1939, that (nearly) every Ford model needed a corresponding Mercury, and so the Mercury Division applied different grille and taillights and the rejuvenated Grand Marquis was born. Here's one of the first of those cars to be built, now residing in a Denver-area self-service boneyard. The Marquis name goes respectably far back, to the late 1960s and a Mercurized version of the Ford LTD hardtop. TheĀ Grand Marquis began life as the name for an interior trim package on the 1974 Marquis Brougham (also LTD-based), eventually becoming a model in its own right for the 1979 model year. Today's Junkyard Gem came off the Ontario assembly line in March 1991, making one of the very first examples built. For 1992 (and through 2011), the Grand Marquis was a Crown Victoria with slightly enhanced bragging rights. This one has the top-grade LS trim, with an MSRP of $20,644 (that's about $44,370 in inflation-adjusted 2022 dollars). The corresponding Ford-badged model (built on the same assembly line by the same workers) would have been the Crown Victoria LX, which actually cost a bit more: $20,987 ($44,910 now). The very cheapest civilian 1992 Crown Vic cost just $19,563 ($42,045 today). There weren't any powertrain differences between the Crown Victoria and Grand Marquis in 1992. The only engine available was this Modular 4.6 SOHC V8, rated at either 190 (single exhaust) or 210 (dual exhaust) horsepower. The transmission was a four-speed automatic with overdrive. How many miles are on this one? Can't say! Based on the worn-out interior, I'm going to guess 221,719 miles passed beneath this car's wheels during its 32-plus years on the road. I've seen some very high-mile Police Interceptors, of course, including one with 412,013 miles, but Ford didn't go to six-digit odometers in the Grand Marquis until a bit deeper into the 1990s. Thanks to flawed speech-to-text applications on smartphones, the Grand Marquis is known as the "Grandma Keith" to many of us today.