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

Volvo Xc V70 Awd Turbo Cross Country on 2040-cars

Year:2001 Mileage:121243
Location:

Keyport, New Jersey, United States

Keyport, New Jersey, United States
Advertising:

  2001 VOLVO XC V-70  Turbo powered AWD  Cross Country Wagon.. ..Beautiful wagon 5 cylinder, economical, fully loaded all power options including moon roof ,comfortable supple leather interior. .. Vehicle is in very good condition , no issues... Roomy & comfortable , Excellent vehicle for  traveling / family / daily driver....Vehicle sold as is.. no guarantee or warranties implied...Paypal deposit required, after auctions end.. Balance paid Chk, M/o, Ca, Bank tran...

Volvo XC (Cross Country) for Sale

Auto Services in New Jersey

Xclusive Auto Tunez ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Window Tinting, Tire Dealers
Address: 100 Henry St, Delaware
Phone: (570) 872-9277

Volkswagen Manhattan ★★★★★

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Vito`s Towing Inc ★★★★★

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Address: 65 Clifton Blvd, East-Rutherford
Phone: (973) 773-2929

Vito`s Towing Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Automotive Roadside Service
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Phone: (973) 773-2929

Singh Auto World ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Used Car Dealers, Wholesale Used Car Dealers
Address: 2001 Hanover Ave, Phillipsburg
Phone: (610) 432-7595

Reese`s Garage ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Inspection Stations & Services
Address: 120 E Main St, Milltown
Phone: (215) 257-6052

Auto blog

Volvo PV444 turns 70

Sun, 31 Aug 2014

Volvo has made all manner of vehicles over the course of its long history, including coupes, convertibles, hatchbacks, sedans, wagons and SUVs. But the vehicle that started it all was the PV444.
Or rather, we should say, the PV444 is what re-started it all. Because while it wasn't Volvo's first model, it was the first one it produced after the war. Monday, September 1, will mark 70 years since the PV444 first debuted at the Royal Tennis Hall in Stockholm pictured above, where the company received 148,437 visitors.
That presentation there took place shortly before the end of World War II when the vehicle wasn't even finished yet. A team of 40 engineers and designers were still fine-tuning the final version, but were eager to show the public what it would start building after the last bullet was fired and peace would return to Europe.

Volvo uncovers widespread cheating by its Chinese dealers

Tue, 26 Mar 2013

According to a report in Reuters, the findings of an internal investigation conducted by Geely-owned Volvo is that its Chinese dealers vastly overreported their sales numbers in 2011, then even more vastly underreported their 2012 sales figures. About "half the dealers" out of the 151 total outlets gamed the system in order to get incentives for reaching volume objectives, falsely recording about 7,000 more units sold than was actually the case. Instead of 47,140 cars sold in China in 2011, the real number should have been 39,871.
Volvo corporate books a sale once it ships a car to a dealer, so that meant there were 7,000 more cars in inventory than there should have been. To restore the balance, the dealers underreported their 2012 sales while they unloaded those extra cars since, naturally, they couldn't claim the sale again. That made it look like sales declined by 11 percent in 2012, even though they actually increased year-on-year. The adjusted sales number for 2012 totalled 45,896.
Volvo has met with its dealers and told them to stop the deceitful practice. The discrepancies weren't so great that the company plans to restate its historic numbers, but from now on, it apparently plans to occasionally check inventory to make sure the numbers match and that it has a true picture of how individual models are selling.

When Android Automotive goes in the dash, Google wins — and automakers lose data

Tue, May 22 2018

You've gotta hand it to Google for the way the Silicon Valley tech giant has made indelible inroads into the car on multiple fronts. The most obvious is with its pioneering self-driving car technology that's caused car companies to get their act together on autonomous vehicles — and also collaborate with Google. Google has more directly extended its influence and data-mining capabilities into the car with its Android Auto smartphone-projection platform that most major automakers have adopted along with Apple's CarPlay. And now it's preparing to dig even deeper into dashboards by deploying its open-source operating system, Android Automotive, beginning with Audi and Volvo. Volvo recently announced that its next-generation Sensus infotainment system will run Android Automotive as an OS and include Google's Play Store for cloud-based content, Maps for navigation and Google Assistant for voice recognition, which can even command a car's climate control. By embedding Google in the dash, Volvo says owners will get an improved connected experience. "Bringing Google services into Volvo cars will accelerate innovation in connectivity and boost our development in applications and connected services," Volvo senior vice president of R&D Henrik Green said in a statement. "Soon, Volvo drivers will have direct access to thousands of in-car apps that make daily life easier and the connected in-car experience more enjoyable." Having Android Automotive onboard could benefit drivers — and provide a big win for Google, since it opens a deep and lucrative new data-mining vein for the company. But it's a wave of a white flag for car companies when it comes to delivering their own cloud-based content and services. It also represents a massive data giveaway and, for Audi, a reversal of earlier reservations about letting Google get too much access to car data. Not long after Android Auto and Apple CarPlay were introduced in 2014 and most automakers eagerly embraced the technologies, several German automakers second-guessed their decision when they realized what was at stake: data. At a conference in Berlin in 2015, Audi CEO Rupert Stadler said car owners "want to be in control of their data, and not subject to monitoring." A few months earlier, Stadler stated that "the data that we collect is our data and not Google's.