1999 Hummer H1 on 2040-cars
Portland, Oregon, United States
1999 H1 HMCO
This vehicle was owned in MT and WY before I relocated it to OR in late 2012, so no east coast rust / road salt
issues. I purchased the truck stock at around 85,XXX miles and made all of the high value adds so it’s ready to
roll for summer.
For those of you new to the H1 game, the typical story is to buy a truck that has not been maintained and has much
of the original wear gear still intact. So after plunking down your dough, you then get to spend the next several
months maintaining or improving all of the deferred maintenance that did not get addressed by the prior owner.
I keep the truck maintained to make it reliable and trail ready. I started by rebuilding the entire suspension
(bushings, mounts, shocks, springs, halfshafts, input / output seals, centerlink, idler and pittman), new brake
rotors and calipers all around, removing the cooling stack to clean the radiator and replace all belts and hoses,
adding a new tensioner, replacing the alternator, ABS modulator and rebuilding the transfer case.
Hummer H1 for Sale
- 2000 hummer h1(US $30,000.00)
- 1999 hummer h1 4-door wagon all options(US $21,300.00)
- 1993 hummer h1(US $15,500.00)
- 1994 hummer h1(US $17,800.00)
- 1995 hummer h1(US $14,800.00)
- 1997 hummer h1(US $23,600.00)
Auto Services in Oregon
Uncle Al`s Automotive Service ★★★★★
Toyota of Gladstone ★★★★★
Tommy`s Window Tinting ★★★★★
Three Sisters Automotive ★★★★★
Peoria Electric ★★★★★
Oak Valley Honda ★★★★★
Auto blog
Subcompact Crossover Comparo Roundtable | Autoblog Podcast #599
Tue, Oct 15 2019This week, we've got a special episode of the Autoblog Podcast, wherein you'll hear the extended version of the roundtable discussion from our Subcompact Crossover Comparison. In it, Editor-in-Chief Greg Migliore is joined by Consumer Editor Jeremy Korzeniewski, Senior Editor, Green, John Beltz Snyder and Associate Editor Joel Stocksdale. After extensive testing (and filming) in Northern Michigan, our editors break down what they liked and loathed about the Honda HR-V, Hyundai Kona, Jeep Renegade and Kia Soul. Grab a cup of coffee with us, and enjoy. Autoblog Podcast #599 Get The Podcast iTunes – Subscribe to the Autoblog Podcast in iTunes RSS – Add the Autoblog Podcast feed to your RSS aggregator MP3 – Download the MP3 directly Feedback Email – Podcast@Autoblog.com Review the show on iTunes Related Video:  Â
GMC shows how the 2022 Hummer could have looked even more futuristic
Fri, Oct 23 2020Excitement filled the room when GMC asked its designers to resurrect the Hummer in April 2019, but a tinge of uneasiness permeated the department after executives locked in an early 2020 unveiling date. Luckily, stylists knew what they wanted early on in the development phase, and preliminary design sketches give us a fascinating look at how they shaped the electric off-roader that ended up making its global debut online in October 2020. Hummer, the brand, unceremoniously shut down in 2010 after General Motors failed to sell it to the Chinese, but its design DNA was so strong that stylists were able to pick up where their predecessors left off. All of the sketches published on Instagram by the official General Motors Design account show a boxy truck with a tall front end, a short windshield, and a generous amount of ground clearance. These styling cues trace their roots to the AM General Humvee that entered production in 1984 and made its combat debut when the United States invaded Panama in 1989. Even the wildest drawings still depict a pickup that's immediately recognizable as a Hummer. Most of the early design sketches wear some variation of the seven-slot grille that characterized Hummer's production models; it's a styling cue that hints at a heritage shared with Jeep under the American Motors Corporation (AMC) umbrella. Oddly, none wear the round headlights seen on the H2, the H3, and the HX concept that nearly became the H4. Was GMC afraid that its Hummer would end up looking too much like a Jeep? And, at least one sketch shows a fold-down windshield, a feature that will not make it to the assembly line. Sketches never reach production without modifications made in the name of packaging and safety concerns, and the Hummer is no exception, but stylists did a good job of reinventing the brand's design language without copying or erasing the past. If the company had stuck around long enough to make a second- and a third-generation H2, odds are it would look a lot like the GMC-branded model that will enter production in a year. GMC remains on track to start 2022 Hummer deliveries in late 2021, though it told Green Car Reports that it still hasn't built a fully functional prototype yet. When it arrives, this outdoorsy pickup will land in a burgeoning segment of the truck market that numerous models (including the Rivian R1T and Ford's electric F-150) will also call home.
Cadillac Celestiq, Lyriq, Hummer, other future GM electric cars: Here's everything we saw at ‘EV Day’
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