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

2005 Chevrolet Tahoe Ls Sport Utility 4-door 5.3l on 2040-cars

US $7,499.00
Year:2005 Mileage:112000
Location:

Lyme, New Hampshire, United States

Lyme, New Hampshire, United States

2005 Chevy Tahoe, LS, 4WD, Tan, interior gray cloth, running boards, roof rack, 3rd row, all season tires in good shape.  This has been a wonderful and reliable family car.  The carpet on the floor in the back seat has some stains.  The outside of the car is in good shape - some very small and unnoticeable dings, but besides that the car is in good shape.  The only known issue is a leak above the gas tank - the local Chevy dealer said for parts and labor it will be $1,600 to fix.  Kelly's Blue Book states that for this car in fair confition the price should be $8,784.

Auto Services in New Hampshire

Val`s Foreign Auto Repairs ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Used Car Dealers, Automobile Parts & Supplies
Address: 1208 Boston Rd, Newton
Phone: (978) 374-9527

Phil & Son`s Auto Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Diagnostic Service Equipment-Service & Repair, Gas Stations
Address: 345 Merrimac St, Newton-Junction
Phone: (978) 465-4720

Pete`s Auto Repair ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Gas Stations
Address: 102 Route 13, Hollis
Phone: (603) 672-9520

Performance Plus Autobody ★★★★★

Automobile Body Repairing & Painting
Address: 113 Congress St, Hollis
Phone: (978) 446-7800

National Wrecker Service ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Truck Service & Repair, Towing
Address: Candia
Phone: (603) 436-3200

Majestic Motors ★★★★★

Automobile Parts & Supplies, Automobile Salvage, Used & Rebuilt Auto Parts
Address: 734 Daniel Webster Hwy Ste R,# R, Londonderry
Phone: (603) 261-2025

Auto blog

A conversation with GM's Mark Reuss on MPG, aluminum and Corvettes

Wed, Feb 19 2014

There was plenty to talk about when General Motors hosted its annual mid-December holiday media reception a few months ago. GM had just decided to pull its global Chevrolet brand out of major European markets, where Chevys have competed directly with GM Europe Opel and Vauxhall vehicles, and the US government had sold its last remaining shares of GM stock. But most important was the company's just-reshuffled leadership. Post-bankruptcy CEO Dan Akerson had announced that he would step aside and that 52-year-old Mary Barra would replace him on January 15. Not only would she be the first woman to lead a major automaker, she would also be GM's first engineer CEO since Bob Stempel in the early 1990s. "I look at 2013 and 2014, as the retooling of General Motors" - Mark Reuss Replacing her as executive VP for global product development (and purchasing and supply chain) would be 49-year-old Mark Reuss, who had served a stellar four years as North American president, and elevated to corporate president (from executive VP and CFO) would be 42-year-old Dan Amman. All three are relatively young auto enthusiasts who are liked and respected inside and outside the company, and their collective talents and experience are highly complementary. I've interviewed Barra and found her smart, personable and knowledgeable, though she carefully walks the corporate line in speaking and answering questions. I met and chatted with Ammann for the first time at that holiday reception, and he made a good first impression. But I've known Reuss for some time as a genuinely good guy and a highly capable and inspiring leader, and I believe he is exactly the right person for the global product responsibility once famously held by the outspoken, oft-controversial Bob Lutz. So I jumped at an opportunity to join a group interview of Reuss (with mostly business reporters) at the Detroit Auto Show in January. It was an interesting session of mostly good questions, which he answered with refreshing candor and humor. "I look at 2013 and 2014, as the retooling of General Motors," Reuss said. "We've taken down almost every plant in North America, converted and turned it this last year, and to do that with award-winning vehicles and pretty flawless launches is key. We have to keep the train rolling on great product, because the rest won't happen without the best product, period." A reporter asked whether GM was pushing big trucks, SUVs and Corvettes again because gas is cheap. "No," Reuss said.

Motor Trend puts Chevy Camaro Z28 and Porsche 911 GT3 Head 2 Head

Mon, Dec 29 2014

Motor Trend admits, "This is an unfair comparison." But that doesn't make it any less fun to watch when they pit a Camaro Z/28 against the Porsche 911 GT3. The former has a 7.0-liter V8 with 505 horsepower and 481 pound-feet of torque shifted through a six-speed manual. The latter has a 3.8-liter flat-six with 475 hp and 324 lb-ft shifted through a seven-speed dual-clutch transmission. Yet those are only the little disparities – the big disparities are mass and money: the Camaro weighs 3,882 pounds and costs $76,150 as-tested, the Porsche weighs 3,267 pounds and costs $145,785. But they're both about hardcore performance, so MT takes them out on the street, to the drag strip, to the parking lot for figure eights and a skidpad test, and finally to Big Willow for Randy Pobst to give his professional assessment. Remember when a lotta people spent a lotta time debating Pirates vs. Ninjas? This is like that, only it's the "haul-ass good-time car" vs. the "track surgeon." Enjoy the debate in the video.

Vert-A-Pac train cars kept your Chevy Vega's price in check

Fri, 01 Mar 2013

Our apologies to those who've seen this before, but for the rest of the class, how awesome are these pictures of the Vert-A-Pac shipping system General Motors came up with to ship the Chevrolet Vega back in the 1970s? Developed along with Southern Pacific Railroad, GM was able to double the amount of Vega models it could ship by packing them into the unique storage cars vertically.
At the time, rail cars could fit 15 vehicles each, but Chevrolet was able to lower shipping costs by making it possible to ship 30 Vegas per rail car, in turn allowing the price of the Vega to remain as low as possible. Each rail car had 30 doors that would fold down so that a Vega could be strapped on, and then a forklift would come along and lift the door into place. All the cars were positioned nose down, and since they were shipped with all of their required fluids, certain aspects had to be designed specifically for this type of shipping, including an oil baffle in the engine, a special battery and even a repositioned windshield washer reservoir. See for yourself in our image gallery above.