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

No Reserve 2005 Chrysler Crossfire Srt6 Convertible Navi Absolute Sale Repo! on 2040-cars

Year:2005 Mileage:78000
Location:

Bloomfield, New Jersey, United States

Bloomfield, New Jersey, United States
Advertising:

2005 CHRYSLER CROSSFIRE SRT6 CONVERTIBLE 77K MILES
Images Hosted by Use.com

Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com Images Hosted by Use.com

2005 CHRYSLER CROSSFIRE SRT6 CONVERTIBLE
VIN- 1C3AN75NX5X055948
78,000 MILES
BANK REPO:
ABSOLUTE SALE!
NO RESERVE!
HIGH BID WINS!

ANY QUESTIONS?
CALL JIM MCDERMOTT AT 201 394 0500
ALL ARE WELCOME TO BID!!
THE CAR HAS NORMAL WEAR 
THE CAR RUNS AND DRIVES EXCELLENT

THE CAR IS A 2005 NOT A 2014. 
REMEMBER THAT.
ALL ARE WELCOME AND ENCOURAGED TO 
INSPECT OUR VEHICLES.
THE CAR IS LOCATED AT 
135 ARLINGTON AVE BLOOMFIELD NJ 07003
THE CAR WAS JUST SERVICED AR BEYER CHRYSLER.
PLEASE LOOK AT ALL THE DETAILED PICTURES.

THIS CAR WILL BE SOLD TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER

JIM MCDERMOTT 201 3940500 
AT THE CLOSE OF THE SALE.
$500 NON-REFUNDABLE DEPOSIT IS DUE TO SECURE THE VEHICLE.
THE BALANCE IS DUE WITHIN 7 BUSINESS DAYS.
THE TITLE WILL NOT EXCHANGE HANDS UNTIL THE FUNDS ARE VERIFIED.
BID WITH CONFIDENCE.
WE ONLY OFFER QUALITY VEHICLES TO THE PUBLIC.
WE CAN ASSIST WITH WORLD WIDE SHIPPING.
WE ARE A LEADER IN THE EXPORT DIVISION.

THE BUYER IS RESPONSIBLE FOR ALL SHIPPING COSTS.
WE DO EXPECT ONLY SERIOUS BIDDERS!
YOU WILL BE TREATED BY A PROFESSIONAL STAFF.
GOOD LUCK! HIGH BID WINS!
NO RESERVE! ABSOLUTE SALE!
THERE IS NO HIDDEN FEES.
WHAT YOU BID IS THE PRICE.
NJ RESIDENTS MUST PAY 7% SALES TAX.
TEMPORARY TAGS ARE AVAILABLE IF NEEDED. THE COST IS $50 WITH A VALID DRIVER'S LICENSE AND A VALID PROOF OF INSURANCE FOR THIS VEHICLE.

ANY QUESTIONS? JIM 201 394 0500

 

Auto Services in New Jersey

Zp Auto Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 372 Lafayette St, Kearny
Phone: (212) 995-2377

World Automotive Transmissions II ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Auto Transmission
Address: 453 Van Houten Ave, Garfield
Phone: (973) 471-5505

Voorhees Auto Body ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 210 Cherry St, Audubon
Phone: (856) 354-8840

Vip Honda ★★★★★

New Car Dealers
Address: 700 US Highway 22, Califon
Phone: (908) 753-1500

Total Performance Incorporated ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Auto Transmission
Address: 18 Ramapo Valley Rd, Wyckoff
Phone: (201) 529-4353

Tony`s Auto Service ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Auto Oil & Lube
Address: New-Gretna
Phone: (856) 661-0077

Auto blog

Sergio: Two-tier wage structure eliminated in FCA deal with UAW [w/video]

Wed, Sep 16 2015

The two-tiered wage structure that governs the way domestic car companies pay their unionized employees – and rankles many of them in the process – could soon be a thing of the past. In a tentative deal seen as a bellwether for other ongoing negotiations, the United Auto Works and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles reached a tentative agreement on a four-year contract that would disband the two-tier structure, in which some workers earn higher hourly wages for performing the same job, over time. Officials who announced the tentative agreement late Tuesday in Detroit were short on details of its contents and union members still must ratify it. But FCA CEO Sergio Marchionne said the two-tiered structure will disband by the end of the contract. "The team has crafted together a very thoughtful process, where the issue will go away, go away over time," he said. Further details weren't divulged. Union negotiations with Ford and General Motors are ongoing, so hammering together a deal that sheds the two-tier structure with Chrysler first could set a precedent followed by the other members of Detroit's Big Three automakers. Other key issues that emerged in negotiations with FCA included escalating health-care costs and rewarding workers for the health of the auto industry. But dealing with the two-tier structure, born as GM and Chrysler circled bankruptcy during the Great Recession, was something the UAW wanted to confront. "The UAW has a philosophy about the economic balance of this country and the inequality, and our mission is to bridge the gap in this country," UAW president Dennis Williams said. "It's gotten out of whack. ... We don't want to share anything, and I truly believe that corporations that have that set of mind have lost their way." The UAW's executive board was expected to review the tentative agreement this morning before a union membership vote is scheduled. For Marchionne, who skipped the Frankfurt Motor Show to shepherd the negotiations during their final hours, the tentative agreement means he can shift his concern back toward pushing an FCA merger with General Motors or another company and touting the idea of industry consolidation in general. "The other side of this is capital usage in this business, which is something that remains unsolved," he said. "It makes the labor side sort of pale in comparison, given the magnitude of the potential synergies and benefits we'd be deriving from an intelligent approach.

Jeep Cherokee faces on-sale delay

Sat, 23 Mar 2013

A report in The Wall Street Journal looks at some of the obstacles to the 2014 Jeep Cherokee that go beyond its mootable yet "very contemporary" looks, almost all of them based on Fiat's financial position. Starting with that sheetmetal, in defense of it SRT president Ralph Gilles and Jeep design head Mark Allen said they wanted to "make sure the design still looks modern five years from now."
The WSJ piece doesn't cite longevity as a factor, instead saying that its features originated in a design for an Alfa Romeo, the transformation into a Jeep design meant allowing Chrysler get it to market more quickly and save "hundreds of millions of dollars" in engineering.
The need for Fiat to save money while it weathers the European situation has cut budgets for development, engineering and the pace of retooling the Toledo, Ohio plant to build the Cherokee. In a familiar case of snowballing at work, among the effects will be pushing back the Cherokee's volume sales date and delaying updates to some of Chrysler's other products.

The mad genius of killing the Dodge Dart and Chrysler 200

Thu, Jan 28 2016

Sergio Marchionne isn't crazy. At least not with respect to the recent announcement that Fiat Chrysler Automobiles will cease production of the Dodge Dart and Chrysler 200. Instead of crazy I'd call this CEO ruthlessly pragmatic, and perhaps short-sighted. The latest revisions to FCA's most recent five-year plan tell some truths about the company's finances. In other words, it can't afford to build mainstream sedans. With only 87,392 units sold in 2015, the Dart is an also-ran in the segment. The axe falls easily there - Chrysler hasn't had a compact-car hit since the second-generation Neon. The 200 isn't so cut and dried: Last year sales increased 52 percent, and the 177,889 total for 2015 is more than those for the Subaru Legacy and Kia Optima. But looking at the overall FCA picture the Chrysler 200 has to go, at least from a short-term perspective. The vehicles that make big money – Ram trucks; Jeep's Cherokee, Grand Cherokee, and Wrangler – can't be made fast enough. FCA can't afford to idle the 200's Sterling Heights, MI, assembly plant to cut back on inventory when other plants are running flat out. It seems crazy to throw away 265,000 sales, but FCA is leaving money on the table by not building more profitable vehicles. The Wirecutter's Senior Autos Editor (and former Autoblogger) John Neff agrees. "As bold as it looks from the outside, he's really making a safe bet that their money is better spent on designing better and building more crossovers and trucks. He's probably right about that." But according to Jessica Caldwell, Executive Director of Strategic Analytics at Edmunds, "FCA's strategy of eliminating the Dart and 200 might be short-sighted if gas prices were to rise and Americans, once again, flocked to small vehicles. FCA must have plans to expand the lineup of small SUVs and position them as small-car alternatives in terms of price and fuel efficiency for this strategy to make sense." FCA's latest announcement focuses mainly on the profitable brands and nameplates. There's hardly a mention of Chrysler, Dodge, or Fiat. And future planning is where the plot holes appear. This realignment cuts dead weight from the product portfolio, but FCA's latest announcement focuses mainly on the profitable brands and nameplates. There's hardly a mention of Chrysler, Dodge, or Fiat. So what's Sergio up to? David Sullivan of AutoPacific thinks Marchionne is still looking for another CEO to hug.