1989 Ferrari Mondial on 2040-cars
San Diego, California, United States
Please contact me at : doloresdwwanta@ukdirectors.net .
Excellent example of the beautiful 1989 Ferrari Mondial T Cabriolet. Low Mileage car that has been very well
maintained since new with factory books and extensive service records. The body is nice and straight with its
original paint. The interior is also in excellent shape for its age. The original carpets are showing a bit of age
but overall still in good condition. There is no shrinkage in the dash at all. All gauges, lights, signals etc
works as they should. The soft top and boot covers are also in great condition as you can see in the pictures.
This Mondial T has extensive service record going back to almost new with just completed 30k major belt service
which include full clutch kit replacement along with new fuel pressure regulators and a new battery. Full brake job
was done several years ago but only driven about 1000 miles since. Engine and trunk compartments are very tidy and
comes with factory jack roll and books. The picture shows it has a Clarion stereo head unit but now has been
replaced back with Alpine head units that previously came with the car.
Ferrari Mondial for Sale
- 1982 ferrari mondial(US $15,400.00)
- 1986 ferrari mondial cabriolet(US $17,000.00)
- 1991 ferrari mondial mondial t(US $23,700.00)
- 1990 - ferrari mondial(US $16,000.00)
- Place your self behind the wheel of this mastered machine with 18,227k miles !!!
- 1985 ferrari mondial quattrovalvole convertible 2-door 3.0l
Auto Services in California
Windshield Repair Pro ★★★★★
Willow Springs Co. ★★★★★
Williams Glass ★★★★★
Wild Rose Motors Ltd. ★★★★★
Wheatland Smog & Repair ★★★★★
West Valley Smog ★★★★★
Auto blog
2014 Ferrari F12 Berlinetta
Tue, 18 Feb 2014Most cardiologists and physiologists maintain that a human's maximum heart rate is calculated with a mathematical formula: subtract a person's age from 220. But some leading doctors are now questioning the established academics, which trace their origins back to 1970, claiming that a simple formula isn't accurate for people of all ages, in particular those who are older. Rather than endorse the time accepted calculation, this progressive group argues that maximum heart rate equals 208 minus 0.7 times age.
While medical science continues its debate, I recently discovered a more elementary approach that disregards age and physical condition, and it requires no math.
To reveal a human's true maximum heart rate, I propose strapping test subjects into the driver's seat of a Ferrari F12 Berlinetta and then firing up its ferocious V12.
$11.55 million 1964 Ferrari 250 LM highlights RM Auctions' first night in Monterey
Sat, 16 Aug 2014Some of the biggest auto auctions of the year are held during the weekend of the Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance. Millionaires gather in hopes of outbidding their contemporaries for incredibly rare cars. As Bonhams' record sale on Thursday of a 1962 Ferrari 250 GTO for $38 million showed, these days the world's most expensive vehicles are found at auctions, often with a prancing horse on the nose.
RM Auctions' Friday sale reinforced this even more when a 1964 Ferrari 250 LM topped the evening by bringing in $11.55 million, after the 10 percent commission. It wasn't the only million-dollar vehicle of the event, though. A 1965 Ford GT40 Roadster Prototype garnered $6.93 million, and a 1966 Shelby Cobra 427 brought $1.705 million. Even a classic 1948 Tucker 48 had a final price of $1.57 million.
Surprisingly, some rather new cars actually brought in quite big money, too. A 2013 Bugatti Veyron 16.4 Vitesse Le Ciel Californien sold for $2.42 million, and a 2006 Ford GT with just 13 miles sold for $407,000.
Father's ultra-rare Ferrari to leave family for a good cause
Wed, 24 Jul 2013It isn't every day that the rarest of Ferrari models change hands. In fact, you can count your fingers to get the number of 275 GTB/4*S N.A.R.T. Spyders that ever existed. The 1967 Ferrari you see here is one of those ten Spyders, and it has stayed in the same family since it was bought new.
The car was bought through Luigi Chinetti, Ferrari's US importer at the time, by the late Eddie Smith Sr., a Ferrari collector and businessman from North Carolina. Smith kept it - and kept driving it - until the day he died six years ago. Since then, this remarkable machine has been collecting dust. Smith's son, Eddie Smith Jr., spent some time with Petrolicious to give a history of the car and explain why he and his family are going to do the one thing his father never could: sell it. The catch? All of the money it earns on the auction block will be donated to charity.
"It'll be a bittersweet thing, because we know the fact that all the money is going to charities that he would approve of," Smith Jr. said about his father, and it "will really make him smile, because he loved to give back."