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No Reserve 1998 Jaguar Xj8, 4.0l V8, Leather Seating, Moonroof on 2040-cars

Year:1998 Mileage:93656 Color: British Racing Green
Location:

Wilmington, North Carolina, United States

Wilmington, North Carolina, United States
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Whitey`s German Automotive ★★★★★

Automobile Parts & Supplies, Machine Shops
Address: 6042 Asheville Hwy, Horseshoe
Phone: (828) 684-0684

Transmission Center ★★★★★

Automobile Parts & Supplies, Auto Transmission
Address: 1309 Cotton Grove Rd Ste D, Salisbury
Phone: (336) 249-8769

Tow-N-Go LLC ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automotive Roadside Service, Towing
Address: Proctorville
Phone: (910) 286-3745

Terry Labonte Chevrolet ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, New Car Dealers, Automobile Parts & Supplies
Address: 1401 Bridford Pkwy, High-Point
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Sun City Automotive ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Brake Repair, Tire Changing Equipment
Address: 409 Featherson Rd, Wesley-Chapel
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Show & Pro Paint & Body ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting
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Auto blog

Jaguar and Land Rover to consolidate dealerships

Thu, 29 Nov 2012

Jaguar and Land Rover are set to merge their sales facilities, according to Inside Line. Jaguar Land Rover North America President Andy Gross says 45 percent of Jaguar owners also have an SUV in their stable, so it makes sense to give customers as much exposure to the cat's high-riding cousins and possible. The number of overall outlets will remain the same, and the brands will reportedly remain separate on the showroom floor, however.
So far, just one dealer has made the move to combine under the roof of one 68,000 square-foot facility in Paramus, New Jersey (above), though a further 20 are ready to make the shift and become Jaguar Land Rover outlets. Gross believes the shift is necessary so that his company's dealer network will accurately reflect the company's products. We'll see how cozy the brands are when Jaguar starts rolling out its own SUVs in a few years.

Jaguar testing hardcore F-Type R-S GT?

Wed, 16 Apr 2014

Some automakers make a hardcore model, then sit back and revel in its awesomeness. Jaguar does things a little differently. It takes a standard production model, gives it more power, bigger brakes and a tighter suspension and slaps the letter R on it. Then it gives it even more power, even bigger brakes and an even tighter suspension and calls it an R-S. Sometimes the engineers in Coventry don't even think that's enough, so they strip out some weight and dial things up even further and call it an R-S GT.
So far, they've only gone that far with the XK (transformed first into the XKR, then the XKR-S, and finally the XKR-S GT), but with that model on its way out, Jaguar seems to be preparing to give the newer F-Type a similar treatment. Now we can't be sure that what we're looking at is an F-Type R-S GT, especially since the 550-horsepower engine from the XKR-S and XFR-S is already powering the existing F-Type R Coupe, but it does seem to have all the makings of a hardcore performance model.
Compared to the existing F-Type, the development model pictured here has a bigger front splitter (like the one on the Project 7 concept), a big rear wing and a set of what looks like pretty big lightweight alloys. It's also, tellingly, a roadster, which (unlike the coupe) has until now topped out at 500hp with the V8 S model. So while it may be hard to say exactly just what Jaguar has in store for us here (or what they'll call it), one thing's for sure: it's gonna be fast and loud.

Lapping Le Mans with 1956's version of a dash cam

Wed, 01 May 2013

Mike Hawthorne and Ivor Bueb won The 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1955 driving a Jaguar D-Type. The following year, a few days before the race, a British broadcaster put cameras on Hawthorne's car, hung a mic from a plate on his race suit and had him narrate a lap of the Circuit de la Sarthe.
It is compelling viewing. A new pit complex was built after the massive accident on the front straight in 1955, but this was still a time when crews prepped for the race on roads that were open to the public. Hawthorne's lap includes maneuvers to avoid bicyclists and cars, and gems like letting us know that doing 185 miles per hour down the Mulsanne Straight was where you could "relax a little, recover your energy." Watch him work it like the men of old in the video below.