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

2003 Saturn Ion Great Gas Saver on 2040-cars

US $2,900.00
Year:2003 Mileage:98690 Color: Daytime Running Lights
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 keep that in your mind: 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
Convenience:
  • Power Steering
  • Remote Trunk Release
  • Tilt-Only Steering Wheel
Drivetrain /
  Suspension:
  • Power
    Entertainment /
      Telematics:
    • AM/FM Radio
    • Tachometer
    Exterior:
    • Daytime Running Lights
      Rims / Tires:
      • 14 Inch Wheels
      • Steel Rim
      Roof / Glass:
      • Intermittent Front Wipers
      • Rear Defogger
      Safety:
      • Dual Front Airbags
        Seating:
        • Bucket Front Seats
        • Split-Bench Seating
        • Cloth Upholstery

        Auto Services in New Jersey

        Tony`s Auto Service ★★★★★

        Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Auto Oil & Lube
        Address: 4710 N Crescent Blvd, Haddon-Heights
        Phone: (856) 661-0077

        T&T/PH Automotive Repair Spcl. ★★★★★

        Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Electrical Equipment, Trailers-Automobile Utility
        Address: 13935 Queens Blvd, West-New-York
        Phone: (718) 725-2558

        T & D Automotive Inc ★★★★★

        Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Automobile Diagnostic Service
        Address: 1400 S 25th St, Frenchtown
        Phone: (610) 253-0212

        Super Towing ★★★★★

        Auto Repair & Service, Towing, Automobile Transporters
        Address: 251 Front St, Lyndhurst
        Phone: (917) 497-6888

        Summit Auto Repair ★★★★★

        Auto Repair & Service
        Address: 239 Forsgate Dr, Tennent
        Phone: (866) 595-6470

        Station Auto Repair ★★★★★

        Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Inspection Stations & Services, Automobile Electric Service
        Address: 155 Main St, Quakertown
        Phone: (908) 534-4997

        Auto blog

        Guess when this car will plunge through the ice, win $1,500

        Mon, Feb 18 2019

        In Michigan's Upper Peninsula, a sad-sack Saturn raises money for charity while awaiting an icy fate. The 1998 Saturn is a bright orange beacon inviting folks to make a bet on the coming of spring. When the weather warms up enough and this Saturn sinks, someone is going to take home $1,500. It's the Iron Mountain–Kingsford Rotary Club's annual car-plunge contest, a fundraiser that takes bets on when this car will fall through the ice. The contest had been run in years past and was resurrected in 2015. In the old days, the hapless cars sank to the bottom of the lake, which is actually a flooded old iron mine. In today's more enlightened environmental era, this Saturn is attached to a cable affixed to an anchor on shore, allowing it to be yanked out of the water. It also has been drained of all fluids, degreased, and had its powertrain, battery, and radiator removed (which means it weighs about 1,800 pounds). The lake sits alongside a main highway, assuring maximum visibility for the car and the contest. But it's not only locals who are invited to take a chance; anyone 18 and over can bet via this online link. Ten dollars buys three chances. Whoever most closely guesses the date and time that the Saturn slips under the waves takes home $1,500. Betting closes March 15. The past four years have seen the car fall through on March 17, April 2, April 4, and April 26 — although, as they say, past performance is no guarantee of future returns. And remember: Bet with your head, not over it. Here's video of last year's fateful moment ...

        Car thief lands Saturn on Fresno roof

        Fri, 06 Jan 2012

        Residents of a Fresno, California apartment building recently awoke to debris falling from their ceiling after a car thief managed to execute a perfect parking job on the structure's roof. Police say 26-year-old Benjamin Tucker stole the Saturn sedan from a nearby house before striking either a curb or some rocks, vaulting the vehicle into the air and onto the roof. After seeing his predicament, Tucker leapt from the roof and fled the scene. Or at least he tried to. Tucker broke his leg in the fall and only made it around a quarter of a mile from the crash when police picked him up.
        No one else was harmed in the stunt.
        Tucker had two outstanding warrants for his arrest at the time for a hit-and-run and evading police. A special crane had to be called in to remove the Saturn from the apartment roof and the structure will indeed require repairs. Hit the jump for a news report on the incident.

        US database may have overstated deaths in GM ignition switch recall

        Fri, Mar 14 2014

        The FARS analysis didn't take into account fatal accidents where the airbags weren't supposed to deploy. Earlier today, we reported that the actual death toll attributable to GM's ignition switch problem had crested the 300 mark according to new research, well up from the original reports of 12 to 13 deaths. Now, word is breaking that the US government database that informed the study that the report was based on may have significantly overstated the correlation between the study and the GM recall. The initial study was conducted by Friedman Research on behalf of the Center for Auto Safety, and used something called the US Fatality Analysis Reporting System. To recap, the study claimed that over a 10-year period, 303 people were killed in Chevrolet Cobalt and Saturn Ion coupes and sedans when their airbags failed to deploy. These undeployed airbags were then linked to GM's ignition switch recall, which as we've explained before, can turn the ignition out of the "run" position and into the "off" or "accessory" position, disabling the airbags in the process. Now, according to a report from The Detroit News, which cites research from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety and the National Study Center for Trauma and EMS at the University of Maryland, the FARS analysis didn't take into account fatal accidents in conditions where the airbags weren't supposed to deploy (which isn't to say crashes and deaths weren't caused by loss of control from the ignition switching off in the GM vehicles). According to the report, this was a significant number of the cases. There is another potential problem, too. According to that same report, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration uses both FARS and another database on fatalities, called the National Automotive Sampling System/Crashworthiness Data System (NASS/CDS). Where FARS uses what the DetNews calls "not always reliable" police data to record vehicular deaths within 30 days of a crash, NASS/CDS relies on what's known as a probability sample. It collects data on 5,000 crashes each year – including some found in the FARS database – to calculate a probability figure. According to a 2009 IIHS study, "Among crashes common to both databases, NASS/CDS reported deployments for 45 percent of front occupant deaths for which FARS had coded nondeployments." In plain English, FARS doesn't provide a reliable count airbag deployments.