2003 Extra Clean ! Acura Cl 2dr Cpe 3.2l Type S Black ! Low Reserve ! on 2040-cars
Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey, United States
Vehicle Title:Clear
Make: Acura
Drive Type: FWD
Model: CL
Mileage: 109,326
Trim: Type-S Coupe 2-Door
2003 EXTRA CLEAN ! Acura CL 2dr Coupe 3.2L Type S BLACK ! Low Reserve !
This car is very clean and very well maintained, serious buyers can ask for the copy of Carfax report with all maintenance records, drives 100% GOOD, new tires, brakes are good, inside is very clean, outside: hood have some paint damage like many Acura's, otherwise very clean. 2003 is the last year production of CL, and Type S is the best ! This is low reserve auction, bidders with 0 or low feedback call or email before bidding. I have NJ clean title in hand. I ship world wide.
917 719 6889
Happy Bidding!
Acura CL for Sale
- 1997 acura cl premium coupe 2-door 2.2l(US $2,500.00)
- Acura cl 2003(US $4,299.00)
- Runs great, very good condition, orig owner,almost new tires.due for brakes(US $4,500.00)
- One owner smoke free clean excellent condition low miles 2 door coupe rare used(US $7,495.00)
- (C $49.99)
- 1999 acura cl, no reserve
Auto Services in New Jersey
Wales Auto Body Repair Shop ★★★★★
Virgo Auto Body ★★★★★
VIP Car Care Center Inc. ★★★★★
Vince Capcino`s Transmissions ★★★★★
Usa Exporting ★★★★★
Universal Auto Repair, Inc ★★★★★
Auto blog
New Honda ad has Senna, Type R, Asimo, and astronauts
Mon, Aug 17 2015Now that Honda is back into the guts-and-performance game, automotively speaking, the Japanese company has hit the throttle on hardcore imagery. Its latest is in an ad for the company itself highlighting a small selection of its ample range of products, from motorcycles to an airplane and the coming Acura NSX, branded Honda in other markets. Called "Ignition," Wieden+Kennedy created the 90-second spot for Honda Motor Europe, with the tagline "Dare to do what others only dream of." The theme is a space launch, to give that "feeling of daring and human endeavor," perfectly supported by the print artwork with Asimo the robot up front and fabulously complicated hybrid V6 power units spewing flames from the Formula 1 cars in back. Then there's the family in the HR-V in the middle, defying gravity and sipping from juice boxes, because space is for everyone. Ayrton Senna makes a cameo again, and a Stanley Kubrick aesthetic hangs all over the production. You can check out the ad in the video above.
Acura teases 17 seconds of the NSX on Vine and Instagram
Tue, 30 Jul 2013Acura won't roll out the prototype NSX until August 4 when it shows up at Mid-Ohio Raceway for the Honda 200 IndyCar race, and the genuine production car isn't scheduled to arrive until 2015. Acura will, though, make the car a Vine and Instagram video star with snippets of the mid-engined roarer lapping the test track in both the dry and the wet.
After unleashing a six-second loop on Twitter's video service yesterday, it gave fans a bit more by uploading a nine-second clip on Instagram of the coupe throwing up rooster tails and sliding around bends. Best of all is the sound - it's like no Acura you've ever heard outside of a race track. You can check out both videos below.
2014 Acura MDX SH-AWD
Thu, 15 May 2014There are certain vehicles on sale today that are affected by what I call 'Camry Syndrome.' Named after Toyota's ubiquitous family hauler, Camry Syndrome affects a fair number of cars and trucks, many of which are exceedingly popular with consumers.
The issue I have with these vehicles is that while they're adequate, they lack ambition. Their looks are clean and reasonably attractive, but they're not particularly stylish, let alone adventuresome or - heaven forbid - polarizing. Their interiors are comfortable and well screwed together, with the sort of popular features that consumers expect at a given price point. Their engines are decently powerful and vocal enough to set the heart very slightly aflutter, yet they're not too thirsty. Their transmissions are invisible and their rides are best described with whatever buzzword synonym Joe Consumer might come up with for "sporty" or "luxurious." In short, they're boring.
In reality, provided they sell well, there's really nothing wrong with automakers building Camry Syndrome vehicles - they're reasonably competent at everything and clearly meet a need. The problem is that I want some aspects of my vehicle to be better than others, because contrast breeds character. I wish someone at Acura felt the way I did when it redesigned this MDX for 2014, because for me, there's so much of this premium crossover that's merely middle of the road.