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

2005 Ferrari 430 on 2040-cars

US $27,930.00
Year:2005 Mileage:40500 Color: Gray /
 Gray
Location:

Carpinteria, California, United States

Carpinteria, California, United States

Ferrari F430
Clean Title
40,xxx Miles
Excellent Condition
Grigio Titanio Metallic Exterior
Bordeaux Red Interior
A/C was recharged in June

Excellent Mechanical and Cosmetic condition. The car just had a brand new clutch, flywheel, Throw out bearing, rear
main seal, spark plugs, fluids and a lot more stuff all done two thousand miles ago.

Auto Services in California

Zoll Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 247 California Dr, Foster-City
Phone: (650) 595-2777

Zeller`s Auto Repair ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 1732 Yajome St, Vallejo
Phone: (707) 252-6567

Your Choice Car ★★★★★

Used Car Dealers, Wholesale Used Car Dealers
Address: 5650 Eastgate Mall, Firestone-Pk
Phone: (858) 622-0022

Young`s Automotive ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Towing, Recreational Vehicles & Campers-Repair & Service
Address: Navarro
Phone: (707) 279-0116

Xact Window Tinting ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Window Tinting, Glass-Auto, Plate, Window, Etc
Address: 181 S Wineville Ave Ste Q, Mira-Loma
Phone: (909) 605-0422

Whitaker Brake & Chassis Specialists ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Brake Repair, Wheels-Aligning & Balancing
Address: 317 W Main St, Santa-Maria
Phone: (805) 925-3676

Auto blog

Hot Wheels loses Ferrari diecast contract to Chinese company

Thu, Dec 11 2014

If you're anything like this writer, chances are you've got a diecast model or two kicking around the house. And if one of those models replicates a Ferrari, chances are it's made by Hot Wheels. The Mattel brand secured an exclusive contract from the Maranello automaker in the late 1990s, but the latest word from Hemmings has it that Ferrari has ended its partnership with Hot Wheels and awarded it instead to the May Cheong Group. Unless you're an avid diecast collector, you may not have heard of May Cheong, but you may have heard of its brands Maisto and Bburago. Both brands are longtime players in the model car market, but it's the Bburago part of the deal that's particularly interesting. Founded in Italy, Bburago made a name for itself largely due to the scale Ferrari models it made back in the day. But when the Prancing Horse marque awarded the exclusive contract to Mattel, and with increasing competition from the Far East, Bburago collapsed. May Cheong swept in and scooped it up, and now the Italian model brand, along with its onetime rival Maisto, will be producing diecast Ferraris once again. Whether Bburago will use any of its old tooling to resume production of Ferrari scale models or start from scratch with all-new equipment remains to be seen, as does the matter of whether either it or Maisto will be able to produce the same quality of models as Hot Wheels has with some of its higher-end offerings. Like most collectors, this writer's looking forward to finding out. Looks like it's time to buy another display case.

Maranello cracks down on rent-a-Ferrari rackets

Mon, Dec 7 2015

A crackdown by policy makers in Maranello, Italy, means that visitors to Ferrari's headquarters and museum can't as easily experience the brand's famously sonorous engines for themselves. Several businesses in the city had rented the Prancing Horse's sports cars to tourists for brief drives, but the screaming powerplants got on locals' nerves enough to force new rules to curtail these joyrides. According to CNBC citing an Associated Press report, the various rental businesses had 37 Ferraris and offered a variety of packages to tourists. For example, a 10-minute drive in a F430 Spider was as inexpensive as 80 euros ($87 at current rates). The drivers wanted to get the most from their brief time at the wheel and often sped around the city. While there were no major accidents from the vehicles, the local cops still pulled over 450 of these folks through the first nine months of 2015. The new legislation in Maranello and Fiorano limits the times the test drives can happen and bans the companies from luring customers outside of the Ferrari museum. "We have lost 80 percent of business," the owner of one of these firms said in the report. The rental agencies already challenged the measures in court but lost. It doesn't offer quite the same experience, but Ferrari fans can still get the occasional earful from the brand's engines by staking out the Fiorano test track. We often see the company's future and sometimes classic models there making wonderful noises. Related Video: News Source: CNBCImage Credit: Marco Vasini / AP Photo Government/Legal Ferrari Driving Safety Performance Supercars test drive maranello

NHTSA fines Ferrari $3.5 million for missing reports

Fri, 31 Oct 2014

Ferrari will pay a $3.5 million penalty for family to comply with oversight requirements set forth by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
The federal agency that oversees road safety in the United States announced Friday morning that Ferrari had not submitted early warning reports for the past three years. These reports help the agency identify potential or existing safety threats.
In the wake of the rolling recalls for defective General Motors ignition switches, there has been considerable scrutiny of NHTSA's handling - or mishandling - of these early warning reports. Friday's fine is an indication the agency is taking its enforcement mandates more seriously, albeit against a manufacturer that has no large-scale presence on American roads.