2011 Chevy Silverado 1500 4x4 Crew Cab Pickup Truck, Super Nice! on 2040-cars
Malden, Missouri, United States
For sale is my personal 2011 Chevy Silverado 1500 4X4 crew cab pickup truck. I have currently been driving this truck and have not experienced any issues with it. Truck is loaded with black cloth interior, CD player, flip-up console for additional seating, rear-view backup camera, XM radio, On-Star, dual a/c & heat controls, cruise control, remote start, power driver seat, USB port, and more! Truck has 46,700 miles and tires are in good condition with about 1/2 tread still! We bought the truck wrecked from my father-in-law and we had professionally repaired the left rear door, left cab corner, and right bedside ONLY! Damage did not effect the way the truck rode or drove; there was no frame or running gear damage! Truck still drove like new! As for how the truck was damaged, the best way to describe it is that it appeared to have had a cable wrapped around part of it or if it had slide into a sign of some sort. It has been inspected by the Missouri State Hwy Patrol and was given a Prior Salvage title that can be licensed in all 50 states! For more information, please email or call us at (57three) 28one-58one1 or (57three) 27six-8one60. Thanks and best of luck bidding! God bless! Truck is sold as is with no warranty. |
Chevrolet C/K Pickup 1500 for Sale
Auto Services in Missouri
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Auto blog
Cruze Diesel Road Trip reveals the good and bad, but no ugly
Tue, Mar 31 2015Most of us have strong opinions on diesel-powered cars based on our perceptions of and experience with them. I used to thoroughly dislike oil burners for their noise, smoke and lackluster performance, and the fact that they ran on greasy, smelly stuff that was more expensive than gasoline, could be hard to find and was nasty to get on your hands when refueling. Those negatives, for me, trumped diesel's major positives of big torque for strong acceleration and better fuel economy. Are any of those knocks on diesel still valid today? I'm not talking semis, which continue to annoy me when their operators for some reason almost never shut them down. At any busy truck stop, the air seems always filled with the sound – and sometimes smell – of dozens of big-rig diesels idling endlessly and mindlessly. Or diesel heavy-duty pickups. Those muscular workhorses are far more refined than they once were and burn much less fuel than their gasoline counterparts. But good luck arriving home late at night, or departing early morning, without waking your housemates and neighbors with their clattery racket. No, I'm talking diesel-powered passenger cars, which account for more than half the market in Europe (diesel fuel is cheaper there) yet still barely bump the sales charts in North America. Diesel fuel remains more expensive here, too few stations carry it, and too many Americans remember when diesel cars were noisy, smelly slugs. Also, US emissions requirements make them substantially more expensive to certify, and therefore to buy. But put aside (if you can) higher vehicle purchase and fuel prices, and today's diesel cars can be delightful to drive while delivering much better fuel efficiency than gas-powered versions. So far in the US, all except Chevrolet's compact Cruze Diesel come from German brands, and all are amazingly quiet, visually clean (no smoke) and can be torquey-fun to drive. When a GM Powertrain engineering team set out to modify a tried-and-true GM of Europe turbodiesel four for North American Chevy Cruze compacts, says assistant chief engineer Mike Siegrist, it had a clear target in mind: the Volkswagen Jetta TDI 2.0-liter diesel. And they'll tell you that they beat it in nearly every way. "I believe we have a superior product," he says. "It's powerful, efficient and clean, and it will change perceptions of what a diesel car can be." The 2.0L Cruze turbodiesel pumps out 151 SAE certified horses and 264 pound-feet of torque (at just 2,000 rpm) vs.
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