2007 Audi A4 2.0t With 134k Miles on 2040-cars
Orlando, Florida, United States
I am soon to be a freshman in college, I am just trying to sell my hand me down Audi because it's too much of a priority for me and not a first car for a college student. Trying to sell before I move out of state to college next month, so before August 10th. 2007 Audi A4 2.0 turbo in fair condition. No A/C due to right side damage to the bumper from being backed into. The A/C condenser is busted but the heat does work as well as the defroster. Sunroof, AM/FM radio w/satellite radio if you install it. Power windows and power drivers seat. Bluetooth wireless and a 6-cylinder engine. Semi-automatic w/S (speed) drive. Clean/decent inside, the middle counsel is broken but not the counsel itself just the cover; so it will need replaced but you can go to a junk yard or parts store and find one for it. Black leather interior/seats. The engine light is on due to needing new sensor cords for the engine but the engine itself is perfectly fine I promise. Good tires just got them rotated and just got a full synthetic oil change as well. If any questions please feel free to contact me by text, email or call. NO SCAMS PLEASE, I seriously do not have time for it. Asking for $6,420 or best offer, the lowest I will take is preferably $5,500 but I can negotiate some.
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Auto blog
Audi's next R8 snapped running the 'Ring nearly naked
Wed, 09 Apr 2014Following the debut of the Lamborghini Huracán, work is now well well under way on its cousin. That, of course, would be the next-generation Audi R8, the followup to the model that put Ingolstadt on the supercar map in 2006 and has been on the market ever since. That's an eight-year lifespan, though to be fair, for 2014 it has gotten a pretty meaningful update. Still, that's a long lifecycle, even if the Gallardo with which it shares its underpinnings was around even longer. In other words, it's about due for replacement.
Fortunately, that's just what Audi has in the cards. We've seen prototypes wearing heavy camouflage lapping the Nürburgring a couple of times over the past few weeks, but now it's been snapped nearly completely undisguised, with largely bare black bodywork giving us an even better look at what to anticipate.
So what are we looking at here? A sharper-looking take on the existing design, for starters, so onlookers and customers alike shouldn't have any trouble identifying this as an R8 - but a newer one at that. It seems to take some cues from the new TT, particularly around the headlights, with more squared-off elements throughout. There's an adaptive rear wing poking out the back and more pronounced side-blade intakes between the doors and the rear wheels, which themselves are wearing ultra low-profile rubber.
BMW says SUVs killed the sports car market
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According to Robertson, two factors seriously wounded the classic sports car market. First, the global economic crisis of a few years ago put a serious hurt on sales, according to Bloomberg. Further worsening the situation, the boom in popularity of luxury SUVs and crossovers in the past few years hasn't allowed for much recovery. Even car-hungry China hasn't helped much because of the smog in many cities and preference among some of the very rich there to be chauffeured.
Combined, Audi TT, BMW Z4 and Mercedes-Benz SLK sales peaked around 114,000 units a year in 2007, but they are only expected to reach 72,000 annually by the end of the decade. Robertson is pretty pessimistic about the market's comeback too. "Post-2008, it just collapsed. I'm not so sure it'll ever fully recover," he said to Bloomberg.
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Set to be unveiled in a couple of days at the Leipzig Auto Show to celebrate 25 years of the TDI engine, the concept ditches the gasoline-burning 4.2-liter V8 in the production RS5 in favor of a 3.0-liter V6 twin-turbo-diesel with an electric supercharger added on to combat turbo lag. Output comes in at 385 horsepower and 553 pound-feet of torque, which means that while it has 65 fewer horses than the gasoline model, it packs a staggering 236 lb-ft more torque.
The result of the triple-charged madness is a 0-62 time around four seconds flat, trumping the 4.6 seconds for the road-going model. Top speed, of course, is electronically limited to 155 miles per hour, which is a bit of a shame because we bet it'd be a kick to pass a Porsche on the Autobahn in a diesel, now wouldn't it?