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No Reserve , Long Wheelbase . on 2040-cars

Year:1998 Mileage:126514
Location:

Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey, United States

Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey, United States
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Auto Services in New Jersey

Xclusive Auto Tunez ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Window Tinting, Tire Dealers
Address: 100 Henry St, Delaware
Phone: (570) 872-9277

Volkswagen Manhattan ★★★★★

New Car Dealers
Address: 540 W 38th St, Kearny
Phone: (212) 627-7711

Vito`s Towing Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Automotive Roadside Service
Address: 65 Clifton Blvd, East-Rutherford
Phone: (973) 773-2929

Vito`s Towing Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Automotive Roadside Service
Address: 65 Clifton Blvd, Pine-Brook
Phone: (973) 773-2929

Singh Auto World ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Used Car Dealers, Wholesale Used Car Dealers
Address: 2001 Hanover Ave, Phillipsburg
Phone: (610) 432-7595

Reese`s Garage ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Inspection Stations & Services
Address: 120 E Main St, Milltown
Phone: (215) 257-6052

Auto blog

Watch a Jaguar tow a man on skis to 117 mph

Tue, Oct 3 2017

Jaguar wagons are fun. Skiing is fun. Combine the two, and you get the above, which looks extra fun. Apparently there is a Guinness world record for top speed skiing while being towed by a vehicle. According to the video, that record was just under 70 mph. While we're not experts on high-speed skiing, that actually seems a little low, and so did Jaguar and Olympic skier Graham Bell. So Jaguar and Bell went to an undisclosed location in the Arctic Circle to break the record. Jaguar brought along an XF S Sportbrake, a 380-horsepower wagon that is now available in America (yay!). They hooked up a line to the back, Bell suited up, held on, and rode along to a final speed of about 117 mph, a full 47 mph faster than the last record. Frankly, we found this to be a pretty cool activity (no pun intended). We think maybe it should be considered for a new Olympic sport. Sure would be better than ice dancing. It could look something like the Bonneville Speed Week, with a big multi-mile stretch of snow to be towed along. Think about it, International Olympic Committee, you still have time before the 2018 Winter Olympics. Related Video: Image Credit: Jaguar Jaguar Wagon Luxury Videos jaguar xf sportbrake skiing

Jaguar Land Rover building new R&D center for hybrids, EVs, autonomous cars

Wed, 25 Sep 2013

The success of Jaguar Land Rover in recent years has largely been down to a resurgent product lineup, but a recent move into the research and development will see the British-based, Indian-owned brands take the fight to its German rivals more aggressively than ever before.
JLR is investing 50 million pounds ($80,345,000, as of this writing) in a joint R&D center in central England. The move will more than triple its staff dedicated to research, from 150 to 500, with Wolfgang Epple, JLR's Director of Research and Technology telling Automotive News Europe, "In order to play among the big animals in automotive and to be anchored in the mind of customers you have to have offered something unique, to be first in market. We want to be one of the key premier automotive manufacturers."
Jaguar Land Rover's 50-million-pound contribution represents more than half of the 94-million-pound tab, on the so-called National Automotive Innovation Campus. Based at Warwick University, Tata's European Technical Center, Warwick Manufacturing Group and the Higher Education Funding Council, an agency of the British government, are all chipping in for the facility.

Reliving the Jaguar XJ220 with a father-son duo

Sat, Mar 14 2015

Jaguar may have canceled the C-X75 project, but there was a time when the Leaping Cat marque did make supercars. Sure, there were the XJR-9 and XJR-15 homologation specials made by TWR, but more famous was the XJ220. Although its reign may have lasted only a year before the McLaren F1 came along, for a brief time in the early 1990s, the XJ220 was the fastest car in the world – which is even more impressive when you consider that it was only powered by a 3.5-liter twin-turbo V6 when its rivals were using mostly V8s and V12s. That makes the XJ220 a rather noteworthy supercar from the dawn of the 200-mph era. The thing is, while Jaguar has come to embrace the XJ220 as an exceptional part of its history, it doesn't have the time or energy to devote to servicing the 275 that were made between 1992 and 1994. So it turns to Don Law Racing. The father-son team – made up of a master mechanic and his hot-shoe offspring – is tasked with keeping the XJ220 alive both in body and in spirit, and do so with a great deal of well-deserved pride. Drive went out to their workshop in Staffordshire to tell their story.